Last modified: 2001-12-29 by jarig bakker
Keywords: angola | portugal | welwitschia | overseas province |
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Angola was divided into two colonies. In the 1920s stamps were issued
separately for Angola and for Portuguese Congo (this last colony consisting
of Cabinda and Zaïre provinces, Zaïre lying to the south of the
Congo River mouth). The colony of Congo Portuguesa would seem to have been
an attempt to revive the BaKongo state - I see you illustrate a flag for
Kakongo, although it is not surprising that
you have no illustrations of flags for earlier states of the BaKongo.
Mike Oettle, 20 Dec 2001
The General Army Command of Angola (Comando Geral Militar de Angola)
used the Welwitschia mirabilis (which grows in Namibia and Southern
Angola, red.) as its coat of arms' (COA's) main charge, instead of the
1935 colonial COA's sinister mantel, like the commands of Mozambique, São
Tomé and Principe, [Portuguese] Guinea and Cape Verde. This is a
putative banner of arms of the Army Command.
Antonio Martins, 21 April 1998
Heraldist F. P. de Almeida Langhans published in p. 67 of his Armorial
do Ultramar Português (Lisbon, 1965) a general model for the
overseas "provinces"' flags: The national flag defaced with the shield
of the lesser arms of each province centered in the lower fly quarter of
the red field. This proposal was approved in 1967, but never came into
effect. The colonial COAs, decreed on 8 June 1935, had a shield of the
same pattern, tierced in mantel, the dexter silver, five escutcheons in
saltire, each charged with five bezants, gold, in cross; and the point
silver, five waves green. The remaining sinister mantel had some local
emblem: Angola: Purple, an elephant and a zebra, both proper, passant dexter,
per pale.
Antonio Martins, 8 July 1997, corrected 14 September 1997
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