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![[Flag of Fraiburgo]](../images/b/br-sc-fr.gif) image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 February 2007
 
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 February 2007 The municipality of Fraiburgo (34,606 inhabitants in 2010; 54,600 ha) is 
located 375 km west of Florianópolis.
Fraiburgo was established in 1937 
by the brothers René and Arnoldo Frey on a territory once disputed between 
Fazendas Liberata and Buitá Verde. Carlos Guilherme Frey and four of his eight 
children (René, Arnoldo, Joana and Agnes aka Inês) emigrated from Alsace, 
arriving in Salvador on 12 October 1919. The family moved to Rio de Janeiro, 
Triunfo, Panambi, eventually settling in Castro in 1923. René Frey married Maria 
Damaski in 1925, while Arnoldo married Maria's sister, Lydia, in 1931. Following 
the death of Arnolodo in July 1980, Lydia and her children offered in 1988 to 
family's house to the municipality of Fraiburgo to establish a cultural center, 
now the Lydia Frey Culture Hall. Lydia Frey died less than one month after the 
donation.
The Frey established a first sawmill in Fraiburgo in 1938; 
twenty years later, they owned two sawmills, a mill, a wine cellar, a 
slaughterhouse, a pig farm and a pottery workshop. In 1943, they built a barrage 
on stream Passo Novo, forming a big man-made lake; water was used to feed the 
sawmill's boiler and steam engine and to fight blazes, which were common at the 
time.
The first apple stocks were imported to Fraiburgo from France in 
1963 and kept for another 5 months in cold rooms, under the supervision of the 
French agronomist Roger Biau (b. 1930), considered as the father of Brazilian 
apple cultivation. Large-scale production started in 1976. Now known as Apple 
Land, Fraiburgo accounts fro 30% of apple production in Santa Catarina and 16% 
of the national production. Some 10,000 people work in orchards during the 
harvest period.
Liberata was elevated to a district of Curitibanos. The 
municipality of Fraiburgo was established by State Law No. 797 promulgated on 20 
December 1961, separating from Curitibanos and Videira.
https://www.fraiburgo.sc.gov.br/
Municipal website
http://www.abpm.org.br/maca-e-tudo-de-bom/roger-biau-pai-da-maca-brasileira-se
ABPM
Ivan Sache, 3 November 2021
The flag of Fraiburgo is prescribed by Municipal Law No. 303 promulgated on 5 
September 1977.
Article 6.
The municipal flag of Fraiburgo, authored 
by Rui Vital Batagelo and Francisco Costella, assisted by the heraldist and 
vexillologist Arcinoé Antônio Peixoto de Faria, shall be tierced per bend 
sinister, in green, white and yellow colors, the coat of arms of the 
municipality applied to the white color.
§1. In compliance with the 
Portuguese heraldry tradition, and their inherited canons and rules, municipal 
flags have to be divided in eight, six, four or three parts, featuring the same 
colors as the field of the coat of arms and in the center or at hoist a 
geometrical figure inscribing the municipal coat of arms.
§2. The municipal 
flag of Fraiburgo obeys this general rule, being tierced per bend sinister. The 
coat of arms applied on the flag represents the municipal government. Green is a 
symbol of honor, civility, courtesy, glee, abundance and hope; hope is green 
since greening fields in spring promise profuse harvests. White is a symbol of 
peace, friendship, work, prosperity, purity and religious feeling. Yellow 
symbolizes industry, a source of income for the municipality.
Article 7.
In compliance with heraldic rules, the municipal flag shall have the official 
dimensions prescribed for the national flag, 14 units in width on 20 units in 
length.
https://leismunicipais.com.br/a/sc/f/fraiburgo/lei-ordinaria/1977/31/303/lei-ordinaria-n-303-1977-dispoe-sobre-a-reforma-e-apresentacao-dos-simbolos-do-municipio-de-fraiburgo-e-da-outras-providencias
Leis Municipais database
The coat of arms of Fraiburgo was elaborated 
in Paris in 1964 by the heraldic designer Robert Louis upon request of Albert 
Mahler, a French immigrant who worked with the brothers Frey in local 
viticulture and settled in Fraiburgo in the early age of the municipality.
The coat of arms consists in a shield horizontally divided into two equal parts. 
In the upper part, two crossed logs cuts by two axes, symbolizing timber 
extraction by the brothers Frey, the municipality's origin. In the lower part, 
St. Catherine's wheel and sword, recalling the state's patron saint. The flowers 
surrounding the wheel represents Fraibrugo's forests.
The shield surmounted 
by a fortification ("burgo") surmounted by nine stars meaning freedom (in 
German, "frei" means "free").
The storks supporting the shield recall Alsace, 
the country of origin of the brothers who founded the municipality. In Alsace, 
storks nesting on a house's chimney are considered as a good presage. Beneath 
the shield, a scroll inscribed "Fraiburgo" and a cogwheel, symbolizing industry. 
The shield surrounded by bunch of grapes, recalling one of the region's new 
sources of income.
The original coat of arms was subsequently amended. 
The stars were dropped and apple-trees were substituted to grapes as the 
shield's sinister supporters, recalling the substitution of apple orchards to 
vineyards. The municipality's date of foundation was added to the scroll.
http://www.fraiburgo.sc.gov.br/site/sites.aspx?s=333&n=344 
Municipal 
website
Photos
https://www.facebook.com/camarafraiburgo/photos/a.282784751877787/1156737054482548/?type=3&theater
https://www.facebook.com/camarafraiburgo/photos/a.283146225174973/1488177584671825/?type=3&theater
https://www.facebook.com/camarafraiburgo/photos/a.283146225174973/1302199799936272/?type=3&theater 
Ivan Sache, 3 November 2021
 
![[Flag of Fraiburgo]](../images/b/br-sc)fr.gif) image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 February 2007
 
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 February 2007 
The coat or arms was created in 1964 in Paris by heraldist Robert Louis on 
commission of Albert Mahler, an early German-ascent local, and later changed. It 
refers to Fraiburgo's woods and timber industry (logs and flowers) and St. 
Catherine's martyrdom tools, for the State's namesake, and includes also storks 
as supporters standing for Alsatia, whence come the first settlers; cogwheel and 
apples symbolize Fraiburgo's recent industries.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 
5 February 2007