Flag of Veneto explained

Regione del Veneto
Use:110000
Proportion:2:3
Adoption:20 May 1975
Design:The arms of Regione del Veneto on a Pompeian red background; on the fly edge, seven tails bearing the coat of arms of the seven province capitals of Veneto.

The flag of the Italian region of Veneto derives from the flag historically used by the Republic of Venice (697–1797), a maritime republic centered on the modern city of Venice. The modern flag was adopted by legge regionale (regional law) 20 maggio 1975, n. 56 and amended by L.R. del 22 febbraio 1999, which deleted the words "Regione del Veneto".[1] Regione del Veneto also has a banner (gonfalone), its design identical to the flag's except in its vertical orientation.

Design

The main overall layout and design of the Venetian banner was kept. The coat of arms of the Region is set in a square in the center of the flag: the Lion of Saint Mark with the opened gospel (reading the Latin motto Pax tibi Marce evangelista meus, "Peace to you Mark, my evangelist") rests its paws on the landscape of Veneto: sea (the Adriatic), land (the Venetian Plain) and mountains (the Alps).

Attached to the fly edge are seven tails. Each one bears in the middle the coat of arms of one of Veneto's seven province capitals, sorted in reverse alphabetical order:

Vicenza
Verona
Venice
Treviso
Rovigo
Padua
Belluno

A tricolour ribbon is to be knotted just below the flagpole finial.

Differences from the Republic of Venice flag

See also: Flag of the Republic of Venice.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Legge regionale 20 maggio 1975, n. 56 (BUR n. 22/1975). Consiglio regionale del Veneto official website. Italian. 14 July 2014. 13 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171213010652/http://www.consiglioveneto.it/crvportal/leggi/1975/75lr0056.html. dead.