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Vila do Porto Municipality (Portugal)

Last modified: 2010-12-03 by antónio martins
Keywords: vila do porto | coat of arms: st. mary | coat of arms (chief: eagle) | goshhawk (brown) | quinas: 2 | sails |
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Vila do Porto municipality
image by Sérgio Horta, 11 Oct 2007
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About the flag

It is a fairily typical portuguese municipal flag, with the coat of arms centered on a quartered background (town status) of white and red.
António Martins, 11 Oct 2007

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Coat of arms

Vila do Porto municipality
image by Sérgio Horta, 12 Oct 2007

The arms are Argent the Virgin Mary clad and complexioned Argent and mantled Azure with edges Or and crowned Or and on a chief Gules a goshawk Proper holding an escutcheon Azure charged with five plates Argent set in saltire. Mural crown argent with four visible towers (town rank) and white scroll reading in black upper case letters "Vila do Porto".
António Martins, 11 Oct 2007

I think the chief prevents the coat of arms from being too empty graphically and being a tad blasfemous, too…
António Martins, 12 Oct 2007

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Version without the coat of arms

Vila do Porto plain flag
image by António Martins, 2010

Plain (monocolored) portuguese subnational flags are not allowed to have armless variations: plain flags always carry the coat of arms.
Jorge Candeias, 18 Jul 1999

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Previous flag

Previous Vila do Porto municipality
image by António Martins, 11 Oct 2007

Sérgio Horta mentions a previous design with a red and white gyronny flag (and differently worded blazon, though for identical arms) adopted and published in the official journal Diário do Governo : II Série in 1956.05.15, an unusually late date.
António Martins, 11 Oct 2007

The gyronny pattern means city status for the municipality seat, which is not the case of Vila do Porto; this previous legal prescription (and use?) was therefore a mistake. Along with the confusing situation of some Portuguese cities include in their names the word "vila" ("town"), and the name word "porto" being identical to the Oporto city name in Portuguese, vexillologist Adolf Duran in one of his articles about flags in Portugal [drn94] states incorrectly that Oporto is both a city and a town (perhaps influenced by the curious status of Madrid, which is officially a town (villa), in spite of being Spain’s largest settlement).
António Martins, 11 Oct 2007

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Presentation of Vila do Porto

Vila do Porto municipality had 5578 inhabitants in 2001 and consists of 5 communes covering 97,18 km², taking up the whole of St. Mary Island (Santa Maria). It is part of Azores Region (also a NUTS II and traditional province), former Ponta Delgada District. "Vila do porto" is Portuguese for "harbour town" or "port town", of which there’s no reflection on the arms; these instead are canting for the name of the island.
António Martins, 11 Oct 2007


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