Thursday 18 February 2016

History Of Chile Flag

By Bob Ned


It doesn't sound like much: a small child's footprint left in a marshy field. However, it took just one little huella found in Chile's Monte Verde, near Puerto Montt, to rock the foundations of archaeology in the Americas during the 1980s. The footprint was estimated to be 12,500 years old, and other evidence of human habitation in Chile dated back still further - perhaps as far as 33, 000 years.

The first Spanish settlements were established in the mid-sixteenth century: Santiago in 1541 and Concepcion in 1550. Spanish settlers, mainly from Andalucia, were attracted to central Chile because of the pleasant climate and fertile soil. The settlers had to face repeated assaults from the Araucanians and the on-and-off war with indigenous Indians continued into the second half of the nineteenth century.

The original Chilean flag, hoisted for the first time amongst the determined fight for independence from the Spanish Empire, looked nothing like today's version, which federal law requires Chileans to wave on all homes and businesses on certain yearly holidays. Today's national flag of Chile, adopted in 1817, does, however, bear a striking resemblance to a flag used by the indigenous Mapuche people of the Chilean region, as described in the epic poem La Araucana by the 16th-century soldier-poet Alonso de Ercilla.

The Chilean banner elements two level groups, the main one is white and the last one red. In the upper left corner of the banner, a solitary white star sits amidst a blue square. The banner might likewise be flown horizontally, in which case the blue square and white star must keep on showing up in the upper left corner.

Americans may easily mistake the flag of Chile for the Texan flag, the only difference being that the blue square of the Texan flag stretches to the bottom when displayed in a horizontal position and not just to the bottom of the white band. Their similarity is probably a coincidence, as the star and stripe features and their colors are common to flags around the world including the Cuban flag and the Liberian flag.

The star, alongside the red, white and blue of each of these banners speak of various individual components of social and chronicled criticalness. On account of Chile's banner hues, white generally speaks of the snow of the Andes Mountains, the blue symbolizes the sky while the red reviews the blood shed by Chileans battling for the nation's autonomy from Spain. The Flag Company Inc had some expertise in banner outlines offered an extraordinary release of decals and banners to remember the historical backdrop of Chilean Flag for the future generations.




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