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Venezuela - Historical Flags - Republican Age (1830 - 1930 )

Last modified: 2006-03-18 by dov gutterman
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Republican Age (1830 to Present Day)

1830 Flags


by Raul Orta, 9 May 2002

This is the Venezuelan Tricolori in 1830, right after the split of the República de Colombia. It sports the Venezuelan Coat of Arms under the "Great Colombia" (downward cornucopias, and a hoist-facing fasces and ax; as opposed to that of the "Great Colombia" [later adopted by Nueva Granada], which had upward cornucopias and a fly-facinf fasces and ax). It was a square flag, to diferentiate itself from those of Nueva Granada and Ecuador. Later, it adopted the same-width stripes we know today, for further differentiation).
Guillermo T. Aveledo, 4 November 1999

Provisional Flag of Venezuela, 1830 - It consisted of the Flag of 1811 in whose center it appeared a Coat of Arms derived from the Great-Columbian in which the cornucopias were overturning their fruits towards the base with the inscription ESTADO DE VENEZUELA (STATE OF VENEZUELA) in occasions and others, the one of REPÚBLICA DE VENEZUELA (REPUBLIC OF VENEZUELA).
Raul Orta, 9 May 2002


Venezuelan Coat of Arms, 1830
by Guillermo T. Aveledo, 4 November 1999

Adopted: 14 Octuber 1830 . Abolished: 16 April 1836. Is was reported also with the shield and inscription in the canton.
Jaume Ollé

State and War Flag


by Jaume Ollé, 5 October 2003

No. 1041 - Venezuela - War.
Source: [stb62].
Jaume Ollé, 5 October 2003

Presumed Venezuelan State and War Flag (1830): It's a free and particular interpretation registered in Mr. Steenbergen's book "Flags of all the Nations", published on 1862 by Weytingh & Brave Company: Amsterdam, Netherlands. Note the peculiar configuration of the Coat of Arms on the canton. The flag is uncertain and subject to further investigation.
Raul Orta, 8 June 2004

War Flag


by Jaume Ollé, 7 November 2003

No. 1157 - Venezuela - War.
Source: [stb62].
Jaume Ollé, 7 November 2003

Presumed Venezuelan State and War Flag (1830): It's a free and particular interpretation registered in Mr. Steenbergen's book "Flags of all the Nations", published on 1862 by Weytingh & Brave Company: Amsterdam, Netherlands. Note its similarity with the Uncertain Flag of the General Captainship of Venezuela (1777). The flag is uncertain and subject to further investigation.
Raul Orta, 8 June 2004

In the flagbook of Mr. W. Wezepoel, from 1862, which is stored in the Zeeuws Archief in Middelburg.(NL): Venezuela - green with yellow saltire.
Jarig Bakker and Ned Smith, 30 November 2004

Other Flags According to Steenbergen Book (1862)


by Jaume Ollé, 27 September 2003

No. 1016 - Venezuela State and Navy/Venezuela Navy (at the mainmast or mizenmast): General on board.
Source: [stb62].
Jaume Ollé, 27 September 2003


by Jaume Ollé, 28 September 2003

No. 1038 - Venezuela (at the mainmast): Captain - Commander of a squadron or in comission.
Source: [stb62].
Jaume Ollé, 28 September 2003


1836 Flags


State flag
by Jaume Ollé


Civil (merchant) ensign
by Jaume Ollé

Adopted: the shield was changed on 16 April 1836 ; four days later the stripes were declared to be in the same size.
Jaume Ollé

Concering <homes.acmecity.com>, This site, and every other source but one that I have seen, shows that Venezuela's flag has always been a version of the YBR Miranda flag. The Norrie/Hobbs Flags of All Seafaring Nations, 1848, shows Venezuela's flag as a yellow saltaire on green field (plate XXIII). I am sure that must an error, but does anyone have any information or speculation about how that error arose?
Ned Smith , 12 June 1999

Flag of the Republic of Venezuela, 1836 - Decreed by the National Congress, it consisted from top to bottom of equal and horizontal strips with colors yellow, blue and red in this order. The character distinction of the National Flag was established in addition because is determinate that for official use it would also bear the Coat of Arms of the Republic and therefore since then we can affirm the traditional existence of the State National Flag and the Civil National Flag although its use were indistinct.
Raul Orta, 9 May 2002


1859 Flags

Coro Federation


by Jaume Ollé

Adopted: February 1859 Abolished: June 1859.
Jaume Ollé

Flag of the Federation, February 1859 - The established Provisional Governing Corp in Coro, city on the Northwest of Venezuela and present capital of the Falcon State, is gone too far in its presumed faculties and decrees that the Flag of the Venezuelan Federation would be the same one of 1836 but with inclusion of seven five pointed and blue stars on the yellow stripe in memory of the Provinces that founded the Nation on 1811.
Raul Orta, 9 May 2002

Flags According to Steenbergen Book (1862)


by Jaume Ollé, 5 October 2003

No. 1042 - Coro, Venezuela.
Source: [stb62].
Jaume Ollé, 28 5 October 2003

Presumed Federal Flag of Coro (1859) : It's a free and particular interpretation registered in Mr. Steenbergen's book "Flags of all the Nations", published on 1862 by Weytingh & Brave Company: Amsterdam, Netherlands. Note the peculiar disposition of the stars on the canton. The flag is uncertain and subject to further investigation.
Raul Orta, 8 June 2004


by Jaume Ollé, 5 October 2003

No. 1043 - Uncaptioned [Must be a variant of Venezuela federalist].
Source: [stb62].
Jaume Ollé, 5 October 2003

Presumed Federal Flag of Coro (1859) : It's a free and particular interpretation registered in Mr. Steenbergen's book "Flags of all the Nations", published on 1862 by Weytingh & Brave Company: Amsterdam, Netherlands. Note the white canton and the peculiar disposition of the stars on the canton. The flag is uncertain and subject to further investigation.
Raul Orta, 8 June 2004

Barinas Federation


by Jaume Ollé

Adopted: June 1859. Abolished: 29 July 1863.
Jaume Ollé

In 1859, the Federation War revolutionaries resolved that all three bands in the flag had to be even. And then, changed the number of stars to twenty (in representation of the 20 federated states of Venezuela).
Jorge V. Alonso-Iglesias

Flag of the Federation, June 1859 - Triumphant in Barinas, region on the Southwest of Venezuela, General Ezequiel Zamora commits another excess decreeing that in successive the so called Federal State; Pavilion would take twenty five pointed and blue stars: one by each state that would conform the Venezuelan Federation. At this point the practical object of this Flag and its antecedent seems clear: to be different itself from which identified the troops of the Government who took or not the Coat of Arms and have not stars.
Raul Orta, 9 May 2002


1863 Flags


State flag
by Jaume Ollé , 7 August 1997


Civil (merchant) ensign
by Jaume Ollé , 7 August 1997

In 1863, Venezuela’s president, Juan Crisóstomo Falcón decides to restore the seven stars, but this time, in white and over the blue band. Also, 6 of the stars had to be placed in a circle, and one in the middle of it.
Jorge V. Alonso-Iglesias

In 1897 : Yellow blue red horizontal with 6 white stars in circle around the 7th in the middle. W the same with state arms in canton.
Željko Heimer , 26 September 1996

In a documentary about the river Orenoque, there were images from the late 50's showing a joint Venezuela-Brazil commission tagging the border between the two countries. The Venezuelan flag had an unknown-to-me star pattern, in an hexagonal way (a star on each vertex of the hexagon, the seventh in the middle of the hexagon), and no shield near the hoist in the yellow stripe. Was it a variant of the national flag ?"
Ivan Sache, 4 August 1997

The flag that was described is an old pattern. Was adopted 29 July 1863 by order of General Falcon. Was in use since 28 March 1905 when another General, Cipriano Castro, changed a little the pattern: the central star was arranged in circle togheter the rest. They are above. The state flag bear the shield in the upper hoist
Jaume Ollé, 7 August 1997

This pattern was obsolete by the 1950's. The 1917 National Geographic magazine Flag Number shows the Venezuelan national flag with the stars arranged in a cluster as Ivan described. The Ensign was the same except the arms are in the upper left corner.
The 1934 NatGeo flag issue,however, shows the current star pattern of the arch. The description in that issue says that it was recently adopted. (The USNavy's 1929 International Code of Signals has plates of flags of the world, and the stars are clustered in the center of Venezuela's flag in that book, too.)
Smith's 1975 FTTAAATW is silent on the adoption date of the current star arrangement.
Nick Artimovich, 6 August 1999

At "Nouveau Petit Larousse Illustre" (1924), Venezuela flag looks like the 1863 version. It does not have the stars near the hoist.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 29 October 2000

Flag of Venezuela, 1863 - Field Marshal Juan Crisóstomo Falcon, in exercise of the Presidency of the Republic, emits a decree signed by all his ministers in whom he establishes that the National flag would be yellow, blue and red in equal and horizontal strips with seven five pointed and white stars disposed on the center of the blue stripe: six in hexagon and seventh in the middle, reserving the addition of the National Coat of Arms only to the one of Official Use.
Raul Orta, 9 May 2002


1876 Flags


by Raul Orta, 15 May 2002

Flag of Tribute, (1876): This design was made as a special homage of the resident English Colony in Caracas with regard to the transfer of the rest of El Libertador from the Cathedral to the National Pantheon in Caracas. Consist in a horizontal tricolor yellow, blue and red that reproduces one of the projects of Coat of Arms for the Great Colombia, which appear since 1821 on the yellow stripe. The illustration is a representation of the original one that still is conserved in the Bolivarian Museum of Caracas.
Raul Orta, 15 May 2002


1905 Flags


State flag
by Jaume Ollé


Civil (merchant) ensign
by Jaume Ollé

Adopted: 28 March 1905. Abolished: 10 February 1954, when the current flag was adopted.
Jaume Ollé

In 1905, President Cipriano Castro orders to place the 7 stars in circle.
Jorge V. Alonso-Iglesias

Between 1913 and 1941: a yellow, blue and red horizontal tricolor with the arms in the canton and seven stars toward the hoist on the blue stripe with six surrounding the seventh. On the merchant ensign the state arms are absent.
Nathan Augustine
, 5 December 1995

Flag of the United States of Venezuela, 1905 - The President of the Republic, General Cipriano Castro, decrees that the National flag would take stars in circumference, maintaining its distinction of character.
Raul Orta, 9 May 2002

Flags in 1926 Flaggenbuch


War and State Flag
by Željko Heimer, 6 September 2003


National and Merchant Flag
by Željko Heimer, 6 September 2003

In the 1926 Flaggenbuch:
- War and State Flag (2:3 - In square form: Presidential Standard) - The Flaggenbuch showes the 1905 design that lasted until 1930, with seven stars in circle. The Coat of Arms is in artistic details different from the current one (which is not unusual, and probably acceptable variation), but the inscription on the ribbons is not what was ever actually used, I believe 
INDEPENDENCIA / LIBERTAD
(date) / (date)
DIOS Y FEDERACION
The dates might be read too, but I dificultly, and I am sure that these would be the same as today. Was this Coat of Arms ever official?
Accoerding to Christan Siemer's site, the Coat of Arms should have included stars in an arch above the cornucopias, and inscription in the lowest ribbon EE. UU. DE VENEZUELA.
And an other thing, the ribbons seems to be blue-white-red tribands, but this may be just a printing effect.
- National and Merchant Flag (2:3) - This one without the Coat of Arms.
by Željko Heimer, 6 September 2003


1929 Flags


by Raul Orta, 15 May 2002


by Raul Orta, 15 May 2002

Flag of the Falke's Expeditionary Corps (1929): The conspirators that under the command of Admiral Roman Delgado Chalbaud tried to take Cumana (city located at the North-West of Venezuela) with the purpose of initiating a revolt to overthrow the regime of General Juan Vicente Gomez, were organized in battalions identified with flags whose design we reconstructed in the graphic: on the obverse, the field appears divided on three diagonal stripes: yellow, blue and red, bearing in the middle of blue a constellation of seven white stars - six in hexagon and one at the center - while the National Coat of Arms with a yellow pennant and crested with stars appears on the superior canton near the staff, complementing itself with the word "LIBERTAD" (Liberty) on the yellow stripe and the word "JUSTICIA" (Justice) on the red stripe, both embroidered in gold and made in capital roman letters. To reverse, naturally divided in the same colors disposed on inverted sense appear the motto "HONOR Y PATRIA" (Honour and Homeland) and the denomination of the Battalion Nr. 6, in this case - also embroidered in gold and inscribed in the same type of letters already mentioned.
Raul Orta, 15 May 2002