
Last modified: 2020-07-25 by ian macdonald
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 image by Ivan Sache, 18 July 2020
 image by Ivan Sache, 18 July 2020 
The municipality of Garibaldi (30,692 inhabitants in 2010; 168 sq. km) is located in northeastern Rio Grande do Sul, 110 km of Porto Alegre. Garibaldi was established in 24 May 1870 as the Conde D'Eu colony, named for the Count of Eu (Prince Gaston d'Orléans, 1842-1922), the husband of Princess Isabel and, therefore, the son-in-law of Emperor Peter II. The first colonists, all of Prussian origin, settled the place on 9 July 1870. Groups of Swiss, Italian, French, Austrian and Polish immigrants joined the colony in 1870-1874, using the bad road that Conde D'Eu to Montenegro via Maratá. Mostly populated with Italian colonists, Conde D'Eu was the first nucleus of colonization in the mountains of Rio Grande do Sul; population increased from 720 in 1875 to 870 in 1876. The municipality of Garibaldi was established on 31 October 1900. The new name of the place was a tribute to the Italian revolutionary Giuseppe Garibaldi, who fought during the Farroupilha Rebellion. Garibaldi is self-styled "The Land of Sparkling Wine". The first Brazilian Champagne was invented there in 1919 by Manoel Peterlongo, a colonist from Trentino (Italy). His son Armando succeeded him in 1924 and increased the production, building a 10,000 sq. m cellar; the products from "Estabelecimento Vinícola Armando Peterlongo" became nationally famous in 1930; President Getúlio Vargas offered such wines to his guests, including Queen Elizabeth.
Ivan Sache, 24 March 2012
A vertical blue-white-blue triband, with a narrow central horizontal stripe, resulting in an irregular upright white cross, with the municipal arms in the centre.
Official website at 
http://www.garibaldi.rs.gov.br
Dirk Schönberger, 
14 February 2012
The flag and arms of Garibaldi are prescribed by Municipal Law No. 1,127 
promulgated on 1 October 1971.
Article 6.
The municipal flag of 
Garibaldi is: Quartered by a cross in four blue quarters separated in the center 
by a wide white stripe charged in the center with the municipal flag, from which 
run the narrower lateral stripes forming the quarters.
§1. The style of the 
flag obeys the Portuguese heraldic traditions, and their inherited canons and 
rules, stating that municipal flags have to be divided in eight or six 
horizontal stripes, quartered or divided in three parts, featuring at hoist or 
in the center an using the same colors as the field of the coat of arms.
§2. 
The coat of arms applied in the flag's center represents the town proper as the 
municipal seat. The stripes running from its sides and quartering the flag 
represent the rural properties scattered all over the territory.
Article 
7.
In compliance with heraldic rules, the municipal flag shall have the 
official dimensions adopted for the national flag, that is, 14 units in width 
and 20 units in length.
Article 18.
The municipal coat of arms of 
Garibaldi is "A Samnite shield, surmounted by an eight-towered mural crown 
argent, on a field argent an escutcheon azure charged with three fleurs-de-lis 
or in chief a label gules the escutcheon surmounted by a count's coronet in 
cantons bunches of grapes proper. The shield surrounded dexter and sinister, a 
scroll gules inscribed in letters argent the toponym "GARIBALDI" surrounded by 
the years "1875" and "1900".
The coat of arms has the following meaning:
a) The Samnite shield used to represent the arms of Garibaldi was the first 
style of shield introduced to Portugal from French influence and was inherited 
by Brazilian heraldry as evoking the colonizing race and main builder of the 
nation.
b) The mural crown is the universal symbol of arms of domains; argent 
(silver) with eight towers, five visible in perspective, it classifies the town 
as of 2nd rank or county seat.
c) Argent (silver) is a symbol of peace, 
friendship, work, prosperity, purity and religious feeling.
d) In the center 
the escutcheon azure (blue) with fleurs-de-lis or (gold) and the label gules 
(red) reproduces the arms of the Count of Eu, recalling the colony of Conde d'Eu, 
at the origin of Garibaldi.
e) Azure (blue) represents justice, nobleness, 
perseverance, zeal, loyalty, recreation and beauty; or (gold) represents glory, 
greatness, wealth, splendor and sovereignty; red (gules) is a symbol of 
patriotic love, dedication, audacity, intrepidity, courage and valiance
f) In 
cantons, the grapes proper recall wine-growing, one of the municipality's main 
sources of income.
g) On the scroll gules (red) in letters argent (silver) is 
written the identifying toponym "GARIBALDI", given as a tribute to Giuseppe 
Garibaldi, hero of two continents and one of the most vigorous supporters of the 
Farroupilha Republic; year "1870" as the date of creation of the colonies of 
Conde d'Eu and Princesa Isabel, and, therefore of the municipality's foundation, 
and "1900", as the date of political emancipation.
https://leismunicipais.com.br/a/rs/g/garibaldi/lei-ordinaria/1971/113/1127/lei-ordinaria-n-1127-1971-dispoe-sobre-a-forma-e-a-apresentacao-dos-simbolos-do-municipio-de-garibaldi-e-da-outras-providencias
Leis Municipais database
Photos
https://www.facebook.com/998250880363812/ 
https://www.facebook.com/998250880363812/
The Count d'Eu was Prince 
Gaston of Orléans (1842-1922), grandson of King of the French Louis-Philippe I, 
who titled him Count of Eu (for a small town in Normandy) at birth. Trained at 
the Segovia Military School, Gaston brilliantly served in the Spanish army 
during the Morocco war. Upon proposal of his uncle, King Ferdinand II of 
Portugal, Gaston went to Brazil and married in 1864 Princess Isabel, the 
daughter of Emperor Peter II. The couple had to stop his honeymoon in Europe 
after Paraguay had invaded Rio Grande do Sul. Together with the emperor and 
president Mitre of Argentina, the Count of Eu contributed to the reconquest of 
Urugaiana, achieved on 19 November 1865. In 1869, he succeeded the Marquess of 
Caxias as the commander in chief of the Brazilian forces and led the victorious 
campaign against Paraguay.
The Count d'Eu provided a detailed account of the 
military coup that overthrew the Empire in November 1889. Banished, the imperial 
family was forced into exile at the castle of Eu. Gaston could return to Brazil 
only in 1921, one year before his death.
The arms shown on the escutcheon are 
those of the house of Orléans, a cadet branch of the House of Bourbon, as 
expressed by the red label as a mark of cadency.
Ivan Sache, 18 July 2020