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The following is a list of flag of Venezuela. For more information about the national flag, see Flag of Venezuela.
Flag | Date | Use | Description |
---|---|---|---|
2006–present | State and war flag, state and naval ensign | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red with the coat of arms on the hoist side of the yellow band and an arc of eight white five-pointed stars centered in the blue band. Ratio 2:3. | |
Civil flag and ensign | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red with an arc of eight white five-pointed stars, symbolizing the eight provinces that supported independence, centered in the blue band. Ratio 2:3. [1] |
Flag | Date | Use | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1506–1717 (211 years) | Cross of Burgundy, military flag of Spain used as banner of its overseas territories. | Cross of Burgundy on a white field. | |
1717–1785 (68 years) | Military banner of Spain used by the Viceroyalty of New Granada. | Coat of arms of Spain on a white field. | |
1785–1819 (34 years) | War flag of Spain, used by the Captaincy General of Venezuela | Spanish fess of red, gold and red with the lesser arms of Spain towards the hoist-side of the flag. | |
1806 | Flag hoisted by General Francisco de Miranda on the coast of Vela de Coro aboard the ship Leander in 1806 | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red | |
1811–1811 (11 months, 11 days) | Flag of the First Venezuelan Republic | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red in which the yellow band takes half of the flag; with a canton on the hoist side showing an indigenous woman, an Orinoco crocodile and the Caribbean Sea. | |
1813–1814 (1 year, 1 month) | Flag of the Second Venezuelan Republic. Commonly known as the "Bandera de Guerra a Muerte" ("flag of the War to the Death") | Red field with a white rhombus encasing a black rectangle. | |
1817 (6 months, 8 days) | Flag of the Third Venezuelan Republic | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red with seven blue stars on the yellow band. | |
1817–1819 (1 year, 11 months, 27 days) | Flag of the Third Venezuelan Republic | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red with eight blue stars on the yellow band. | |
1819–1820 (24 days) | First flag of Gran Colombia | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red in which the yellow band takes half of the flag, with the coat of arms of the Republic of Colombia on the hoist side of the yellow band. | |
1820–1821 (1 year, 8 months, 27 days) | Second flag of Gran Colombia | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red in which the yellow band takes half of the flag, with the coat of arms of the Republic of Colombia on the hoist side of the yellow band. | |
1821–1830 (9 years, 8 days) | Third flag of Gran Colombia | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with the coat of arms of the Republic of Colombia in the center. | |
1830–1836 (5 years, 6 months, 6 days) | Provisional flag of the State of Venezuela | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with the coat of arms of the State of Venezuela in the center. | |
1836–1859 (27 years, 3 months 9 days) | Flag of the State of Venezuela | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with the coat of arms of the State of Venezuela on the hoist side of the yellow band. | |
1859 (3 months, 20 days) | First flag of the Federation | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with seven blue stars on the yellow band. | |
1859–1863 (4 years, 1 month, 14 days) | Second flag of the Federation | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with the coat of arms of the State of Venezuela in the center. | |
1863–1905 (41 years, 7 months, 30 days) | Flag of the United States of Venezuela | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with seven white stars arranged in a hexagon in the center of the blue band. | |
1863–1905 (41 years, 7 months, 30 days) | State flag of the United States of Venezuela | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with seven white stars arranged in a hexagon in the center of the blue band and the country's coat of arms on the hoist side of the yellow band. | |
1905–1930 (25 years, 3 months, 18 days) | Flag of the United States of Venezuela under Juan Vicente Gómez | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with a circle of seven white stars in the center of the blue band. | |
1905–1930 (25 years, 3 months, 18 days) | State flag of the United States of Venezuela under Juan Vicente Gómez | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with a circle of seven white stars in the center of the blue band and the country's coat of arms on the hoist side of the yellow band. | |
1930–2006 [a] (23 years, 7 months, 2 days) | Flag of the Republic of Venezuela | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with an arc of seven white stars in the center of the blue band. | |
1930–1954 (23 years, 7 months, 2 days) | State flag of the Republic of Venezuela | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with an arc of seven white stars in the center of the blue band and the country's coat of arms on the hoist side of the yellow band. | |
1954–2006 [b] (51 years, 18 days) 2006–present [c] | Flag of the Republic of Venezuela (1954–1999) Flag of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (1999–2006) | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red, with an arc of seven white stars in the center of the blue band and the country's coat of arms on the hoist side of the yellow band. This flag is still in use by some Venezuelan diaspora in opposition to the current government. | |
Flag | Date | Use | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1970–1997 | Presidential standard | Square red field with the coat of arms in the center. | |
1997–2006 | Presidential standard | Square yellow field with the coat of arms in the center. | |
2006–present | Presidential standard | Square yellow field with the coat of arms in the center. | |
2006–present | Presidential standard (at sea) | Blue field with the coat of arms in the center and four white stars in each corner. Ratio 2:3. |
Flag | Date | Use | Description |
---|---|---|---|
2014–present | Supreme Commander's Honorary Colour | Used in all military ceremonies | |
2007-present | Defense ministry flag | ||
1951–2007 | Defense ministry flag | ||
1999–present | Army flag | A blue field with a red diagonal band with the coat of arms of the Army from the upper hoist side to the lower fly side. | |
Navy flag | |||
1930–present | Naval jack | Blue field with a white anchor under an arc of seven white stars. Ratio 2:3. | |
1995–present | Air force flag | ||
2007–present | National guard flag | ||
2011-present | Militia branch flag | ||
2005-present | Strategic command flag |
Flag | Date | Use | Description |
---|---|---|---|
2002–present | Amazonas | Horizontal tricolor of blue, green and red with a brown outline of the state (bordered in yellow) in the center. The map is charged with seven stars spread unevenly inside the map, showing the location of the state's seven municipalities, alongside an outline of Cerro Autana and a Yanomami's face. Ratio 2:3. | |
1999–present | Anzoátegui | Horizontal tricolor of light blue, yellow and green with a black border outlining the state in the center and the state's coat of arms on the hoist side of the blue band. Ratio 2:3. | |
1996–present | Apure | Horizontal triband of yellow, blue and green; with a white triangle based at the hoist side charged with the state's coat of arms and seven white stars on the blue band. Ratio 2:3. | |
1993–present | Aragua | Bicolor diagonal quartered of red and yellow with the state's coat of arms in the center. Ratio 2:3. | |
1997–present | Barinas | Horizontal tricolor of light blue, white and green, with a red square in the center of the white band, charged with a yellow rising sun, a road of the same color and a green palm tree. Ratio 2:3. | |
2000–present | Bolívar | Yellow field with a green circle in the center, superposed by three horizontal blue stripes. The state's coat of arms is on the upper hoist side of the yellow field and the central blue stripe is charged with eight white stars. Ratio 110:168. | |
2022–present | Capital District (Caracas) | Three triangles of red, blue and red, with a white star in the center. The base of the blue triangle contains in green the shape of Waraira Repano (Cerro El Ávila). Ratio 2:3. | |
1995–present | Carabobo | Horizontal triband of red, blue and red again, in which the upper red band takes three fifths of the flag. The red band is charged with a yellow sun based on the fly side of the blue band. The sun is charged with the Arc of Carabobo. The upper side of the blue band is bordered by a green line. Ratio 2:3. | |
1997–present | Cojedes | Horizontal triband of orange, black and blue in which the orange band takes four sixths of the flag; with a blue circle charged with a yellow sun on the hoist side of the orange band. Ratio 2:3. | |
2004–present | Delta Amacuro | Horizontal triband of light blue, green and blue; with a white, yellow, brown and black-edged blue triangle based on the hoist, charged with a green outline of the state. The proportion of the bands is 3:2:3; and the sky blue band is charged with an arc of four white stars. Ratio 2:3. | |
2006–present | Falcón | Blue field with a yellow rising sun on the upper hoist side and a white moon on the lower fly side; charged with a red chief bearing the words "Muera la Tiranía Viva la Libertad" ("Death to Tyranny and long live Freedom"). Based on Francisco de Miranda's naval flag. Ratio 2:3. | |
Unknown. First spotted in 2004 | Federal Dependencies (Probably unofficial) | Horizontal tricolor of green, white and blue, with a red fish in the center of the white band. Ratio 2:3. | |
1995–present | Guárico | Four horizontal bands of blue, white, yellow and green, with the state's coat of arms on the hoist side of the blue band; charged with a half-blue, half-green outline of the map bearing a cow's head sided by an ear of rice and an ear of sorghum, and an image of the Morros de San Juan. The map is surrounded by fourteen golden stars (seven on each side). Ratio 2:3. | |
2000–present | Lara | Two horizontal bands of red and green, the red twice the size of the green. The red band is charged with a setting sun with thirteen yellow-edged white rays based on the green band. Ratio 2:3. | |
1996–present | Mérida | Three triangles of green, white and light blue, with a red star in the center. The white central triangle is based on the bottom of the flag, dividing the green and light blue triangles. Ratio 2:3. | |
2006–present | Miranda | Horizontal tricolor of black, red and yellow, with an arc of six white stars in the center of the red band and a yellow sun on the hoist side of the black band, charged with two cocoa branches and the words "Libertad o Muerte" ("Liberty or Death"). Based on Francisco de Miranda's military flag. Ratio 2:3. | |
2003–present | Monagas | Light blue field superposed by three horizontal bands of blue, green and black, with a yellow sun based on the middle of the green band. The light blue field is charged with a stylized black outline of Juana Ramírez under an arc of thirteen white stars Ratio 2:3. | |
1998–present | Nueva Esparta | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, green and blue, in which the yellow band takes half of the flag; the green band is charged with three white stars and the yellow band is charged with a white semi-circle based on the fly side of the green band. Ratio 2:3. | |
1996–present | Portuguesa | Two horizontal bands of blue and green separated by a narrow white stripe; the blue band is slightly larger than the green and has a white-edged sun on its upper hoist side. Ratio 2:3. | |
2002–present | Sucre | Diagonal bisection of white and sky blue, with the state's coat of arms on the upper hoist side and fifteen white stars on the lower fly side. Ratio 2:3. | |
1997–present | Táchira | Horizontal tricolor of yellow, black and red, with two coffee branches under an arc of four white stars. Ratio 2:3. | |
1994–present | Trujillo | Two horizontal bands of red and white with a green triangle based on the hoist, charged with a white star bearing a pigeon. Ratio 2:3. | |
1999–present | La Guaira (formerly known as Vargas) | Two horizontal bands of white and blue with proportions of 3:1 on the hoist side; the white field charged with a red-edged yellow sun and the blue with four white stars. To the fly side, four vertical bands of yellow, red, white and blue. Based on the flag of José María España and Manuel Gual. Ratio 2:3. | |
1995–present | Yaracuy | A white diagonal band radiating from the lower hoist-side corner. The upper triangle is red, and the lower triangle is blue. On the center of the flag, a yellow sun with a circle showing a green field with brown mountains in the horizon, and a light blue sky with three white clouds. Ratio 2:3. | |
1991–present | Zulia | Two horizontal bands of blue and black, with a yellow sun in the center charged with a white thunder bolt. Ratio 2:3. |
Flag | Date | Use | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1989–2022 | Capital District (Caracas) | Red field with the former coat of arms of Caracas in the center. Ratio 2:3. | |
2006-2008 | Carabobo | Horizontal triband of wine, light blue and wine again. The upper wine band is charged with an orange sun with yellow rays based on the fly side of the light blue band. The sun is charged with the Arc of Carabobo. The upper side of the light blue band is bordered by a light green line. Ratio 2:3. | |
1997–2006 | Falcón | Horizontal tricolor of green, yellow, blue with the state's former coat of arms in the center. Ratio 2:3. | |
1996–2006 | Miranda | Two horizontal bands of blue and green, with a yellow rising sun charged with two cocoa branches in the center. Ratio 2:3. | |
1965–2002 | Sucre | Diagonal bisection of white and sky blue, with the state's coat of arms on the upper hoist side and eleven white stars arranged into two downward-facing triangles on the lower fly side. Ratio 2:3. | |
The Viceroyalty of the New Kingdom of Granada, also called Viceroyalty of New Granada or Viceroyalty of Santa Fe, was the name given on 27 May 1717 to the jurisdiction of the Spanish Empire in northern South America, corresponding to modern Colombia, Ecuador, Panama and Venezuela. Created in 1717 by King Felipe V, as part of a new territorial control policy, it was suspended in 1723 for financial problems and was restored in 1739 until the independence movement suspended it again in 1810. The territory corresponding to Panama was incorporated later in 1739, and the provinces of Venezuela were separated from the Viceroyalty and assigned to the Captaincy General of Venezuela in 1777. In addition to those core areas, the territory of the Viceroyalty of New Granada included Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago, southwestern Suriname, parts of northwestern Brazil, and northern Peru. A strip along the Atlantic Ocean in Mosquito Coast was added by the Royal Decree of 20 November 1803, but the British battled for administrative control.
Libertadores were the principal leaders of the Spanish American wars of independence from Spain and of the movement in support of Brazilian independence from Portugal. They are named that way in contrast with the Conquistadors.
The national flagof Colombia symbolizes that the nation gained its independence from Spain on 20 July 1810. It is a horizontal tricolor of yellow, blue and red in a 2:1:1 ratio. The yellow stripe takes up a half of the flag while the blue and red stripes take up a quarter of the space each.
The national flag of Ecuador, which consists of horizontal bands of yellow, blue and red, was first adopted by law in 1835 and later on 26 September 1860. The design of the current flag was finalized in 1900 with the addition of the coat of arms in the center of the flag. Before using the yellow, blue and red tricolor, Ecuador's former flag had three light blue stripes and two white stripes with three white stars for each province of the country. The design of the flag is very similar to those of Colombia and Venezuela, which are also former constituent territories of Gran Colombia. All three are based on a proposal by Venezuelan General Francisco de Miranda, which was adopted by Venezuela in 1811 and later Gran Colombia with some modifications. There is a variant of the flag that does not contain the coat of arms that is used by the merchant marine. This flag matches Colombia's in every aspect, but Colombia uses a different design when her merchant marine ships are at sail.
The current national flag of Venezuela was introduced in 2006. The basic design includes a horizontal tricolour of yellow, blue, and red, dating to the original flag introduced in 1811, in the Venezuelan War of Independence.
The Venezuela national football team, nicknamed La Vinotinto, represents Venezuela in men's international football and is controlled by the Venezuelan Football Federation (FVF), the governing body for football in Venezuela. Their nickname is a reference to the unique “red wine” team color that is used on their home jerseys. When playing at home in official games, they usually rotate between three stadiums: The Polideportivo Cachamay in Puerto Ordaz, the Estadio José Antonio Anzoátegui in Puerto La Cruz and the Estadio Pueblo Nuevo in San Cristóbal. In friendly matches, they tend to rotate between the rest of the stadiums in the country.
The current coat of arms of Venezuela was primarily approved by the Congress on April 18, 1836, undergoing small modifications through history, reaching the present version.
The following is an alphabetical list of topics related to Venezuela.
The Red Flag Party is a communist party in Venezuela. Formed in 1970 by anti-revisionist members of the Revolutionary Left Movement (MIR), the party initially supported the ideology of Enver Hoxha and the Party of Labour of Albania following the Sino-Albanian split, though in later years it gravitated back towards China. In the 1970s up until the 1990s, it was engaged in guerrilla warfare against the government. A young Hugo Chávez's first assignment in the Venezuelan Army was as commander of a communications platoon attached to a counter-insurgency force—the Manuel Cedeño Mountain Infantry Battalion, headquartered in Barinas and Cumaná. In 1976, under the presidency of Carlos Andrés Pérez it was tasked with suppressing the guerrilla insurgency staged by the party.
Venezuela sent a delegation to compete at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy from 10 to 26 February 2006. This was the third time Venezuela had competed at a Winter Olympic Games. The Venezuelan delegation consisted of one luge athlete, Werner Hoeger. He finished 32nd in his only event, the men's singles.
This is a gallery of flags of South American countries and affiliated international organizations.
An international incident is a dispute between two or more states that are not settled judicially.
Gran Colombia, also known as Greater Colombia and officially the Republic of Colombia, was a state that encompassed much of northern South America and part of southern North America from 1819 to 1831. It included present-day Colombia, mainland Ecuador, Panama, and Venezuela, along with parts of northern Peru, northwestern Brazil, and claimed the Essequibo region. The terms Gran Colombia and Greater Colombia are used historiographically to distinguish it from the current Republic of Colombia, which is also the official name of the former state.
Zulia Fútbol Club was a professional football club that last competed in the Primera División Venezolana. The club was based in Maracaibo, Zulia State, Venezuela, and it's internationally recognized for his participation in the 2019 Copa Sudamericana, where the club was eliminated by Colón de Santa Fe, Argentinian club, in quarter-finals.
A total 21 Venezuelan athletes participated in 9 sports at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore.