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The
flag of Spain in its current form was adopted on December 19, 1981.
It is also seen in a 'civil' variant without the coat of arms. The
flag is similar to those used between 1785 and 1931 (as the War
Ensign until 1843 when the War Ensign becames a national flag). |
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HISTORY
The closest variant of the current flag of Spain can be traced back to
1785 Naval Jack, Bandera de Proa o de Tajamar or Torrotito under Carlos
III of Spain. The kingdom, by then under the house of Bourbon, sought
a flag that would distinguish itself from the Bourbon royal banners from
the two other principal Bourbon kingdoms, France and the Two Sicilies.
Allegedly, there was a contest to design the new flag. Ultimately, the
flag that was chosen as war ensign is the direct ancestor of the current
flag. It was a triband red-yellow-red, of which the yellow band was twice
the width of the red bands, a unique feature that distinguished the Spanish
tribanded flag from other tribanded European flags. The flag chosen as
civil ensign, meanwhile, consisted of five stripes of yellow-red-yellow-red-yellow,
in proportions 1:1:2:1:1.
The origin of the colors is a source of controversy. One of the popular
theories is that this scheme is based on the heraldic schemes of the monarchs
of Crown of Aragon. Others claim it was Naples flag adopted by Carlos
III.
Throughout the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries, this color scheme remained
largely intact. The main changes to the flag centered on the coat of arms.
In the modern flag, the coat of arms are greatly simplified as compared
to previous variants. Each of the four quadrants represent one of the
four kingdoms that were merged to form a unified Spain at the end of the
15th century. Namely, the kingdoms are: Castile, represented by the castle,
León, represented by the lion, Aragon, represented by the vertical
alternating red and yellow stripes (four red stripes, five yellow stripes),
and Navarre, represented by the linked chains. Also the moorish kingdom
of Granada is represented by the pomegranate fruit in the bottom of the
coat of arms. The two columns with the "plus ultra" ensign (meaning
"further" in Latin) represent Spanish discovery and colonization
of America, the columns being the mythological Pillars of Hercules (of
the Strait of Gibraltar, gateway to the Atlantic Ocean).
The purple band on the flag of the Second Spanish Republic is due to the
flag of Castile having a purpure variant as well as a red one. The royalist
flag used red-yellow-red (the red-yellow for Aragon and the red for Castile),
while the republican one used red-yellow for Aragon and purpure for the
flag of the Castilian Comunero rebels during the Castilian War of the
Communities.
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