Last modified: 2006-01-21 by santiago dotor
Keywords: spain | catalonia | catalunya | cataluña | stripes: 9 (yellow-red) | senyera |
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The Catalonian flag is called the Senyera (flag).
Pascal Vagnat, 28 November 1995
The translation of the word senyera into English is "indicative" ["signal"] since senyal can be translated as "sign".
Jordi Pastalle, 1995
Some quotes in Tormo 1999 are very surprising:
Jaume Ollé, 18 December 1999
Strangely, while all of the Catalan flags that I saw [during a recent vacation in Barcelona] had horizontal stripes, I noticed that some of the bureaux de change had signs with a drawing of the Spanish flag next to Cambio, the French flag next to Change, the Union Jack next to Exchange, but with a drawing of the mistaken Roussillon flag next to Canvi. Others had the normal Catalan flag. I'd certainly be interested in hearing this anomaly explained...
Vincent Morley, 9 October 1999
This may have a partially heraldical explanation. The Catalan flag is more or less a banner-of-arms, "more or less" because the bars would have to be vertical (ie. pallets) for it to be a definite one. Maybe at a certain point in history the Catalan flag was displayed in a vertical manner, thus being a "correct" banner-of-arms. Perhaps later the method of display changed (but the flag itself didn't) and the pallets became bars. A later re-bannerisation (what a word!) of the arms would produce a flag with vertical pallets instead of horizontal bars. This also might have happened with Luzern and Ticino. In any case, this would be an explanation of the Catalan vs. Roussillon differences. If a bureaux de change uses a wrong flag, I wouldn't call that a vexillological anomaly but vexillological ignorance.
Santiago Dotor, 14 October 1999