Last modified: 2003-02-01 by dov gutterman
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by Guillermo T. Aveledo, 12 July 2000
See also:
I located FAV flag - Logo on
Azure at: http://www.fav.mil.ve/cmtegral.htm
Dov Gutterman , 22 April 2000
About the Coat of Arms of the Venezuelan
Air Force, it has a German shape derivates from the Military
Aviation School of Venezuela Shield and presents a simple field
in Azure (dark blue) gold embroidered, where appears the
"Winged Crown of the Venezuelan Military Aviation"
conformed by the field of the National Coat of Arms of Venezuela
with wings rounding an unfastening its flanques, with the
Venezuelan roundel above. Over this crown appear seven silvered
stars disposed in arch. The cimier it's a Sky-blue and Or
(yellow) pennant charging the "war voice" "FUERZA
AEREA VENEZOLANA" (Venezuelan Air Force), name of the
organization and its motto wrote in Latin "SPATIUM SUPERANUS
PALATINUS" (Paladin of the Sovereign Space) appears in
another pennant with the same colors under the shield. In
heraldically terms, this Coat of Arms are qualified how
"Canting Arms" because itself represents directly the
Venezuelan Air Force by means of the Winged Crown of Venezuelan
Military Aviation. The stars reminds those of the Venezuelan flag
and also represents the seven highest entities of command an
direction in the organization: The General Command, the General
Inspector Command, the General Staff, The Personnel Command, the
Air Operations Command, the Logistics Command and the Aerial
Defense Command. The azure field represents the dominion of this
force: the sky and space of Venezuela. The pennants are the
reaffirmation of the identity and ideals, which found the
Venezuelan Air Force. So, this Coat of Arms and the emblematic
colors Sky-blue and Or (yellow) was appointed for the VAF by the
Superior Council of the Venezuelan Armed Force in September 7th,
1995
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, Chief of Department of Heraldry,
Venezuelan Air Force, 19 July 2000
1. Since Dec10, 1995, the Venezuelan Air Force adopted its
current Coat of Arms.
2. May be opportune to mention, in addition, that since its
adoption began a process of heraldic standardization and
symbollogical regularization without precedents not only in the
Institution but in all the Venezuelan Armed Force. One of its
fundamental guidelines is the resetting and adaptation of the
Coat of Arms of the FAV's Units to the contour of which it
identifies it to confer order and uniformity to the set.
3. The Venezuelan Air Force has a so called "Greater
Standard" that consists of a Sky-Blue field blue cloth with
a gilded fringe in whose center appears the Coat of Arms of the
Institution and its denomination in golden embroidered capital
roman letters describing an arc of circumference with the
convexity upwards. Taking like model this generic design, the
VAF's Units which has been authorized use an own Standard; this
is, a celestial blue field with the corresponding CoA or Emblem
of the Unit along with its denomination in analogous way to which
appears on "Greater Standard"
4. Since World War II, almost all the nations that had Military
Aviations adopted thus called "roundels" in order
to identify its flying inventories adapting mainly its national
symbols on a circular configuration. In the case of
Venezuela, the roundel derives from the national cockade
and consists in three concentric circles: yellow (outside), blue
(center) and red (inside) with two horizontal extensions that
reproduce the same colors in equal stripes upwards to downwards.
5. The Combat Air Group Nš 16 is the "nest" of the
Fighting Falcons F-16: the in good condition more modern military
aircraft in service on Latin America and prop of the Venezuelan
national defense. This elite Unit of our Air Force has an emblem
consisting of a heraldic English shape divided per fess in two
quarters: the superior one or chief in Azure (Blue) loads a
flaming and smoky dragoon armed with a sword whereas the inferior
quarter or of the base is a chessboard on Silver (White) and
Sable (Black). The Dragoon symbolizes what it 's shaped in the
motto of the Unit: "TUTOR ET ULTOR" ("Protectors
and Avengers") whereas the chessboard remembers strategy and
Military Art.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 28 January 2003
by Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 19 July 2000
by Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
Apparently, it had origin in World War II along with most of
the emblems used at the moment for the same object. It consists
of three concentric circles of equal width with the colors yellow
outside, dark blue at center and red inside, completed with two
horizontal extensions at both sides that have the same colors
placed up to down in equal thirds.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
It is very probable that all Venezuelan roundels finds a
common origin in the Tricolor Cockade (Cap badge) which
reproduces under analogue form the National flag, whose
antecedent was that one approved on 1811 as result of the
Declaration of Independence and consisted of three concentric
circles: blue outside; yellow wider to the center and red inside.
The Cockade is used mainly as military emblem although that does
not exclude its civil use.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 22 January 2002
by Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
A derivate of the Venezuelan Air Force Roundel, it consists of
three concentric circles of equal width with the colors yellow
outside, dark blue at center and red inside, completed in their
superior part with a white ribbon with the inscription
"EJERCITO" (ARMY) in black capital letters. In some
occasions also it does without the ribbon.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
by Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
A derivate of the Venezuelan Air Force Roundel, it consists of
three concentric circles of equal width with the colors yellow
outside, dark blue at center and red inside, completed in their
superior part with a white ribbon with the inscription
"ARMADA" (NAVY) in black capital letters.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
by Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
A derivate of the Venezuelan Air Force Roundel, it consists of
three concentric circles of equal width with the colors yellow
outside, dark blue at center and red inside, completed in their
superior part with a white ribbon with the inscription
"GUARDIA NACIONAL" (NATIONAL GUARD) in black capital
letters.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
by Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
Is an adaptation of the Venezuelan Civil Flag disposed on the
tail of some military and civilian aircrafts, although usually
these ones reproduces the national flag without the National Coat
of Arms in the fuselage.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
by Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002
Originally called "Venezuelan Air Force Combat Aircraft
Symbol", it was product of the creativity and collaboration
of Mr. JULIO DELGADO FLORES, Graphic Designer of the Department
of Engineering of the Logistic Command and incorporated like
attribute for characterize the combat component of the VAF flying
inventory under the administration of General of Division
(VAF) MAXIMILIANO HERNANDEZ VASQUEZ on 1982.
EMBLEMATIC DESCRIPTION:
1. - Attributes: It iss a pennant with shape of isosceles
triangle enameled in red, which loads in its center the figure of
a turbine in silver with two golden rays at its right side and a
number eleven in capital Roman digits in black with yellow
shades.
2.- Meaning: The red field symbolizes the Courage, the
Intrepidity, the Warlike Spirit, the Honesty and Discretion
required to obtain the Victory, with the purpose of preserving in
every critical moment the National Sovereignty, arriving to the
bloodshed even to be necessary. The rays remember the Speed and
Precision required in the war actions, on the one hand and by the
other, the Power and the Force of the weapon systems, represented
properly by the silver turbine, that in addition remembers the
Clarity, the Integrity and the Shine of Human and Professional
Virtues of our Combat Aviators. Number eleven constitutes a
tribute to the same number of the Venezuelan Independence War
Chief Commanders who demonstrated Determination, Tenacity,
Tactical Sense and Strategy in the Command of the Patriotic
Forces that bequeathed Autonomy to our Country.
Raul Jesus Orta Pardo, 18 January 2002