
Last modified: 2022-10-22 by bruce berry
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"Benguela (Săo Felipe de Benguela, formerly spelled Benguella) is a city in 
western Angola, south of Luanda, and capital of 
Benguela Province. It lies on a 
bay on the Atlantic Ocean of the same name.
Benguela was founded in 1617 by the Portuguese under Manuel Cerveira Pereira, 
8th Governor of Angola (1604-1607).  It was long the centre of an important 
trade, especially in slaves to Brazil and Cuba.  Ships have to anchor about a mile off 
the shore, in 4 to 6 fathoms (7 to 11 m) and transfer loads to smaller boats 
which use five or six jetties in the town. However, the nearby deep-water 
sheltered harbour of Lobito is a much larger port.
Benguela is Angola's second most famous city and self-appointed cultural capital.  
It 
is a charming muddle of low-rise apartment blocks and sputtering motorcycles 
that weave deftly between Benguela's famous crimson acacia trees.
The Benguela Railway was built in the early 20th century to connect the city and 
Lobito to the interior, and it achieved great success when it was linked to the Copperbelt of Katanga 
(in the DR Congo) and Zambia. Due to the civil war in Angola which followed 
independence in 1975 and last until 2001, this railway is no longer operating. Only the short distance of 30 km between Benguela and Lobito remains 
operational. In the last two years, rehabilitation of the railway between 
Benguela and Huambo has commenced.
In 1983 Benguela had a population of 155,000. During the civil war the city of 
Benguela increased its population due to refugees from the countryside. While 
the colonial part of the city consists of relatively good quality houses, most 
of the refugees are living today in slum areas." 
The city flag is shown in a photo 
here and 
again here. 
Valentin Poposki, 12 July 2008
The municipal flag has the municipal badge (or Arms) in the centre with a 
background of sky blue and medium blue in the typical Portuguese gyronny pattern .
Ron Lahav, 12 July 2008
This is an Angolan flag, not a Portuguese one. While it does follow the Portuguese vexillological tradition with the gyronny pattern, I suspect it's a purely Angolan creation (or perhaps evolution from a previous colonial Portuguese flag), because Portuguese flags would hardly be allowed with such un-heraldic choice of colours.
be1.gif) image by Valentin Poposki, 07 Sept 2020
 
image by Valentin Poposki, 07 Sept 2020
The symbol in the centre also does not follow in the traditional Portuguese 
heraldic tradition and appears to be a purely Angolan, despite having some 
continuity from the Portuguese arms of the city which was a silver elephant on a 
gold background (see
Wikipedia).
The words in the scroll (inverted in the photo) read "CIDADE DE BENGUELA", 
i.e., "City of Benguela".
Jorge Candeias,
17 July 2008
be.jpg) scan by
Bruce Berry, 20 July 2008
 scan by
Bruce Berry, 20 July 2008
This stamp from pre-independence Angola shows the municipal arms of Benguela 
with a shield comprising a red elephant against a gold background which is 
different from that shown on Wikipedia as indicated by Jorge above.
Bruce Berry, 20 July 2008
It is common that Portuguese civic flag backgrounds are taken from the the 
field and charges of the shield of the municipal, but I'd add a few comments:
Only basic colours and metals are used: No regular flag in the Portuguese civic 
heraldic/vexillological system has a background, gyronny or quarter filled with 
any other such pattern, which appear also relatively seldom in the shields. 
I also note that solid black flag backgrounds, while apparently acceptable, seem 
never  to have been used in Portuguese civic heraldic/vexillological 
system.
António MARTINS-Tuválkin, 27 July 2008