
Last modified: 2021-12-24 by rob raeside
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![[municipal flag]](../images/a/ar-w-it.gif) image by Ivan Sache, 5 May 2017
image by Ivan Sache, 5 May 2017
The municipality of Itatí (7,902 inhabitants in 2010) is located 70 km east 
of Corrientes, on the southern bank of river Paraná, here the border with 
Paraguay.
Itatí was established on 7 December 1615 by the Franciscan 
friar Luís de Bolaños, as the mission of Pueblo de Indios de la Pura y Limpia 
Concepción de Nuestra Señora de Itatí.
Natives opposed to evangelization once 
robbed a statue of the Blessed Virgin in the neighbouring village of Yaguarí. 
Other natives discovered the statue standing on a white rock lit by a bright 
light and heard music coming from the sky. Brought back several times to Yaguarí, 
the statue came back the next day to the white rock, so that it was eventually 
decided to move the village to the miraculous site. The new mission was named 
Itatí, from the Guarani words "ita", "a rock", and "tí", "white". The "white 
rock" refers to the limestone deposits located near brook Caleira (itself named 
for Spanish "cal", "limestone").
The original statue, brought in 1589 by 
Friar Luís de Bolaños, was black-skinned and of unusual height (1.26 m). The 
body of the Virgin was made of local timbó (Pacara earpod tree, Enterolobium
contorsiliquum (Vell.) Morong) wood, while its face was made 
of European nut tree wood. The clothes of the Virgin (a blue cloak and a white 
tunica) were also imported from Europe.
The first transfiguration of the 
statue was reported in 1624, during the Holy Week, by Friar Luis de Gamarra. 
Several miracles were subsequently recorded. In 1700, the inhabitants of 
Corrientes, threatened by hostile natives, implored the help of the Virgin, who 
opened a deep ravine between Yaguarí and San José, stopping the advance of the 
assaulters.
The statue was canonically crowned on 16 July 1900 by Pope Leo 
XIII under the name of Queen of Paraná and Queen of Love. The Virgin of Itatí 
was proclaimed on 23 April 1918 by Pope Benedict XV the patron saint of 
Corrientes, a diocese established on 3 February 1910 by Pope Pius X.
The 
monumental basilica dedicated to the Virgin of Itatí was consecrated on 16 July 
1950, 50 years after the pontifical coronation of the statue. The sanctuary is 
among the most important places of Marian pilgrimage in Argentina.
The 
structure of the monument, made of reinforced concrete, weights 12,200 tons. The 
cupola, of more than 26 m in diameter was the 8th biggest cupola in the word at 
the time, superseding San Lorenzo de El Escorial (21.13 m) and the Panthéon in 
Paris (20.30 m). The cupola was covered in 1947 with copper sheets.
http://forosdelavirgen.org/161/nuestra-senora-de-itati-corrientes-argentina-9-de-julio
The flag of Itatí is divided celestial blue-white by the descending 
diagonal. In the middle is placed a red disk charged with a golden Marian crown 
and surrounded by the words "PATRIA", "DIOS" and 
"FAMILIA" in black letters.br>
TThe celestial blue colour evokes the national 
flag, while the white colour evokes the provincial flag [but the two colours are 
used on both flags].
The arrangement of the fields is a reference to the 
provincial flag [?].
The motto uses the fundamental postulates of the life of 
every inhabitant of the town: unwavering devotion, faith and Catholic and Marian 
beliefs, sworn loyalty to the homeland and its flag, reverent respect for the 
family and its blood.
The crown is odelled on 
the crown of the statue of the Virgin of Itatí.
TThe red disk evokes 
departmental heraldry and the Federal ideals: Homeland, Liberty, and 
Constitution.
http://noticiasitati.blogspot.fr/2015/03/la-bandera-de-itati-flamea-en-la.html 
- Noticias Itateñas, 12 March 2015
The flag was inaugurated on 20 June 
(the Argentine Flag Day) 2013 and blessed by Roberto Simionato, Rector of the 
basilica.
http://www.diarioellibertador.com.ar/notix/imprimir.php?id=56816&seccion=Desplegada 
Ivan Sache, 5 May 2017