Buy State Flags from Allstate FlagsBuy US flags from Five Star Flags
This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website

Christ Knights’ Order (Portugal)

Last modified: 2006-02-25 by antonio martins
Keywords: christ knights’ order | ordem dos cavaleiros de cristo | templar | cross: patté (red) | cross: christ knights |
Links: FOTW homepage | search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors



Flag of the Order of Christ
image by António Martins, 19 Feb 1998
See also:

Description and symbolism

The cross of the Order of the Knights of Christ (Ordem dos Cavaleiros de Cristo, yet another medieaval warrior-monk order) is always red with white core. It was used in the Discovery sail ships, both as flag and painted on the sails, and has been used as an ubiquous symbol of Portugal ever since. (In fact, it would have give a great national emblem, even in a flag, — simple, striking, distinct — but somehow it never resulted that way…)
António Martins, 14 Jan 1997

Real flags of the order had this cross over a number of backgrounds, being most frequent white, green, and white/green gyronny — the later said to be the most “correct”.
António Martins, 19 Feb 1998

This symbol, cross potent-formy gules voided argent has currently official usage in the flag and arms of the Madeira Autonomous Region, in the roundel of the Portuguese Air Force, and in some municipal and sub-municipal arms and flags.
António Martins, 10 Dec 2001


Green background

Green background
image by António Martins, 01 Dec 1999

The square green flag with Christ Knight’s Order cross, said to have been used by the re-independentist in the revolution of 1640. In that date Portugal become regained independence after 60 years of spanish domination, and the flag, originally a naval pendon, reminded of a glorious age that had then already passed by.
António Martins, 01 Dec 1999

Historische Fahnen [neu32] has an image of the Banner des Christordens: Green over white and slightly longer than wide with a red with white Cross of Christ, the red-white-red of the cross’ arms in ≅1:1:1, and the arms 1/6 of the hoist in width (or maybe slightly less), and the ends of the arms extending no more than to twice their width.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 18 Apr 2002

Shown in [qpt94], referencing a painting of Jan Huygen van Linschoten, 1638: Chist Order cross on green. Also used as “national” flag in 1495-1521 (King Manuel’s reign) along with an arms-on-white flag. Also known as the Restoration Flag, used as revolution banner in 1640 (regain of independence from Spain).
António Martins, 22 May 1997


About the Order

The Portugese Order of Knights of Christ, as I understand, originates from the Portugese priory of the Templars, which simply changed its name when the order was suppressed by Pope Clement, and everyone pretended not to notice that his “new” order just happened to have all the same members.
Will Linden, 11 May 1997

Historische Fahnen [neu32] tells us something like (my translation):

Following the dissolution of the Order of the Templars on instigation of the King of France in 1312, King Dionysius of Portugal in 1319 used their possesions to found the Order of Christ, which also took over the order’s symbol.

In 1494 the right to conquer the new world was divided between Portugal and Spain. In America the division placed Brazil in the Portuguese Zone, where the introduction of Christianity was primarily due to the Order of Christ, whose Cross Brazil bore in its arms until 1889.

Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 18 Apr 2002

The Treaty of Tordesillas (7 June 1494) placed the limit 370 leagues west of Cape Verde islands. According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, the Tordesillas meridian is ca. 48°30’W.
Ivan Sache, 19 Apr 2002, and Santiago Dotor, 23 Apr 2002

This Order had a major role in the early seafaring expeditions, its red on white pointy patent hollow cross being ultimately the symbol of the portuguese expansion — a symbol that outlived the Order itself and its very original meaning.
António Martins, 19 Feb 1998