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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
We have 6,000 municipalities in Brazil, each with its flag (although normally
they fly only at the respective city hall).  Each state is divided into a number
of smaller regions for administrative purposes, as "departments" or
"microregions."  The main city of each smaller region is the sede [seat]. 
As a general rule, these cities happen to be those with much history and the others are 
older districts that were emancipated.  For example, the state of Rio de Janeiro, one of the smallest,
evolved from 5 municipalities in the 19th century to ten or so at the
beginning of the 20th century.  This ten or so became the sedes of
microregions, which have since been subdivided into 90 municipalities! 
Günter Zibell, 5 February 2001
The standard organic law by which Brazilian municipalities are chartered gives 
each municipality the right to select its own symbols--a coat of arms, 
flag, and hymn.  This is normally done by law passed by the municipal chamber 
and approved by the prefect (elected executive).  There is no central authority 
for these symbols and, as far as I can determine, no authoritative set of rules that 
must be followed.  Nevertheless, some professional heraldists have attempted with 
some success to persuade a number of municipalities that there are in fact rules that 
must (or should) be followed).
Joseph McMillan, 4 June 2002
Mural Crowns are sometimes assigned fanciful explanations (recalling that the 
original settlement was fortified, for example), but in most cases are simply explained 
as the accoutrement proper to arms of dominion.  Some designers attempt to equate 
the color and number of towers to Portuguese usage, which differentiates between 
the crown used by the capital, other cities, towns (vilas), and villages (freguesias). 
Brazilian law does not make these distinctions and many cities use arms 
with crowns that do not follow these "rules."
Shields in Brazilian municipal coats of arms are usually described as either "Iberian" 
or "Samnitic."  Both are claimed to symbolize the Portuguese heritage of Brazil.
 I suppose this [the Samnitic shield] is the one that was present on the 
Portuguese national flag from 1706 to 1910. Portuguese heraldry calls it 
precisely a "French shield." I wonder what is it called in French. "Samnitic?" 
Well, that's a fancy name, all right!
António Martins, 6 March 1998
A common statement beginning the legal description of Brazilian municipal 
flags, especially those designed by Arcinóe Antônio Peixoto de Faria or Lauro 
Ribeiro Escobar, runs more or less as follows: "The style of the flag follows 
Portuguese heraldic tradition, whose rules and canons we inherit, that municipal 
flags should be divided into eighths, sixths, quarters, or thirds, having for 
their colors the same colors as the field of the coat of arms, this coat of arms 
being applied on a geometric figure on the flag, placed in the center or the 
hoist." In fact, 
Portuguese municipal flags actually are solid or divided into quarters or 
eighths (gyronny). Brazilian flags that claim to follow this rule are usually 
not parted into different colors like Portuguese flags but rather consist of a 
solid field with stripes overlaid on it, sometimes in cross or saltire, often in 
cross and saltire (Union Jack-style), and in many cases horizontally. Thus a 
blue flag with three narrow yellow horizontal stripes is said incorrectly to be 
divided "quarterly per fess." On flags with stripes emanating from the area 
where the coat of arms is placed (either on the center or in the hoist), the 
stripes are usually said to symbolize the radiation of municipal power 
throughout the territory of the municipality. The coat of arms represents the 
municipal government itself, while the geometric figure on which it is placed 
represents the city that is the seat of the municipality. This concept obviously 
results in many flags of remarkable similar design.
Joseph McMillan, 4 
June 2002
Let me stress very clearly that there is no such thing as a Portuguese 
heraldic tradition for municipal flags, as the
principles currently 
used were laid out in the late 1920s--a date irreparably too late for 
Brazilians to follow them out of any "inheritance." Furthermore, let me utter an 
authoritative assertion: traditional or not, Portuguese municipal flag 
backgrounds are either plain, quartered or gyronny of eight--all patterns seldom 
found in Brazilian municipal flags. Finally, the wording used used in Portuguese 
laws describing municipal flags is almost always gironada or sometimes 
gironada de oito partes (divided gyronny of eight parts), not oitavada 
as in Brazilian descriptions. 
António Martins-Tuválkin, 9 June 2002
 image by Ivan Sache, 
12 May 2013
 image by Ivan Sache, 
12 May 2013
In Brazilian municipalities, the executive and the legislative are exerted by two different entities. The executive is exerted by the "Prefeitura", led by an elected "Prefeito". In front of the matching building and in the office of the "prefeito" are often displayed the national, State and municipal flags. The legislative is exerted by the "Câmara Municipal de Vereadores" (Municipal Chamber of Councillors), made of elected "vereadores" (Councillors), who subsequently elect a "Presidente" (President).
In the meeting room of the "câmara" are most often displayed the first three 
aforementioned flags, sometimes together with a fourth flag, white with a coat 
of arms - not to be mistaken with the municipal flag, which is sometimes also 
white with a coat of arms. The fourth flag is the flag of the legislative. The 
coat of arms of the legislative follows a six-itemed national template:
1. 
The shield in Portuguese shape recalls the historical origin of our country, 
discovered and colonized by the Portuguese.
2. The shield is vertically 
divided green and yellow, matching the national coat of arms.
3. in the 
middle, the Southern Cross constellation recalls the Christian origin of the 
Brazilian people. Whatever anyone's religion, we are an eminently Christian 
people.
4. The shield is topped with a Liberty Cap, a headgear used by the 
French revolutionaries in 1789. Lacking uniforms, the revolutionaries used that 
cap as a rallying sign. When the imperial regime was suppressed and the Republic 
proclaimed, the Liberty Cap was adopted by heraldry science as the symbol of the 
Republican regime that rules our country.
5. The map of Brazil is surrounded 
by two staffs, the one red and the other white. In Ancient Rome, the "Ediles 
Romanus" from which the word "edil" comes, appointed by the Emperor, were given 
two staffs symbolizing their legislative and judiciary powers. The councillors 
or aediles at the time always bore one of these staffs, the red one in their own 
town and the white one hen visiting another town of the Roman Empire. 
6. The 
motto "O Poder Unido é Mais Forte" [United Power is Stronger] to emphasize the 
political power of united councillors.
This description is found on the 
website of several Municipal Councils, therefore it should have some official 
status.
 http://www.acanor.org.br/simbologia-brasao-legislativo.htm
On the flag, the aforementioned coat of arms is surmounted with the 
writing "PODER LEGISLATIVO MUNICIPAL" in an arched pattern. 
Examples:
http://www.camaraconchas.sp.gov.br - Conchas (São Paulo)
http://www.camarajeriquara.sp.gov.br/vereadores.asp - Jeriquara (São Paulo)
Ivan Sache, 12 May 2013