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Use | Civil and state flag, civil and state ensign |
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Proportion | 2:3 |
Adopted | August 3, 1995 | by elected Puerto Rican government after issuing regulation identifying colors but not specifying color shades; medium blue replaced dark blue as de facto shade of triangle[1]
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Use | Civil and state flag, civil and state ensign |
Proportion | 2:3 |
Adopted | July 24, 1952 | by elected Puerto Rican government with the establishment of the commonwealth after issuing law identifying colors but not specifying color shades; dark blue became de facto shade of triangle, replacing presumed original light blue[2][3]
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Use | Civil and state flag, civil and state ensign |
Proportion | 2:3 |
Adopted | December 22, 1895 | by pro-independence members of the Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico exiled in New York City; members identified colors as red, white, and blue but did not specify color shades; some historians have presumed members adopted light blue shade based on the unauthenticated light blue flag of the Grito de Lares (Cry of Lares) revolt[4]
Design | Five equal horizontal stripes, alternating from red to white, with a blue equilateral triangle based on the hoist side bearing a large, white, upright five-pointed star in the center; see specifications in Colors and Dimensions |
Designed by | Disputed between Puerto Ricans Francisco Gonzalo Marín in 1895 and Antonio Vélez Alvarado in 1892; based on Cuban flag by Venezuelan Narciso López and Cuban Miguel Teurbe Tolón in 1849 |
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The flag of Puerto Rico (Spanish: Bandera de Puerto Rico) represents Puerto Rico and its people. It consists of five equal horizontal stripes, alternating from red to white, with a blue equilateral triangle based on the hoist side bearing a large, white, upright five-pointed star in the center. The white star stands for the island, the three sides of the triangle for the three branches of the government, the blue for the sky and the coastal waters, the red for the blood shed by warriors, and the white for liberty, victory, and peace.[5] The flag is popularly known as La Monoestrellada (The Monostarred), meaning having one star, a single star, or a lone star.[6][7] It is in the Stars and Stripes flag family.
In September 1868, the Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico launched the Grito de Lares (Cry of Lares) revolt against Spanish rule in the island, carrying as their emblem the Bandera del Grito de Lares (Cry of Lares Flag), most commonly known as the Bandera de Lares (Lares flag).[8] In December 1895, 27 years after the short-lived, failed revolt in Lares, exiled members of the Puerto Rican revolutionary committee, settled in New York City and in partnership with exiled Cuban rebels, replaced the Lares flag with the current flag of Puerto Rico, a new revolutionary flag to represent a prospective independent Puerto Rico based on the flag of Cuba, the battle flag carried by Cubans during their war of independence against Spain. The adoption of the Cuban flag with inverted colors as the new revolutionary flag of Puerto Rico symbolized the united independence struggle of Cuba and Puerto Rico, the last two Spanish territories that remained from Spain’s once extensive American empire since 1825.[9][10]
Members of the Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico identified the colors of their new flag as "red", "white", and "blue" but failed to specify any color shades.[11] Relying on contemporaneous but secondary, oral sources, some historians have presumed that light blue was the color shade specifically adopted by the committee members, as their sources claim this was the same shade used on the Lares flag, the first revolutionary flag many of said members had rallied around in 1868.[4] However, like with the flag of 1895, which appears in one of its oldest color depictions in the early 1900s with a medium blue shade, there is no written primary source account specifying the original color shade of blue used on the Lares flag, the only two surviving original renditions of which feature different color shades of blue: the unauthenticated uses light blue and the authenticated dark blue.[12][13][14]
In July 1952, after several failed attempts by the insular elected government of Puerto Rico in 1916, 1922, 1927, and 1932 to formalize the revolutionary flag of 1895 as the flag of Puerto Rico, the government finally adopted it as the island’s official standard with the establishment of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (Spanish: Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico, lit. 'Free Associated State of Puerto Rico'), identifying its colors by law as "red", "white", and "blue" but not specifying any official color shades.[2][9][15] In August 1995, the government of Puerto Rico issued a regulation regarding the use of the flag in which it identified the colors to be used as "red", "white", and "blue" but did not specify any official color shades once again.[1]
To this day, the color shades of the flag of Puerto Rico have never been officially determined by law in Puerto Rico, making all shades of blue legally legitimate and acceptable. Therefore, it is common to see the equilateral triangle of the flag of Puerto Rico with different color shades of blue. Occasionally, the shade of blue displayed on the flag is used to show preference on the issue of Puerto Rico’s political status, with light blue, the shade presumably used by pro-independence revolutionaries in 1868 and 1895, representing independence from the U.S., dark blue, the shade used by most functionaries since 1952, representing statehood or integration into the U.S. as a state, and medium blue, the shade in-between pro-independence light blue and pro-statehood dark blue most commonly used by the government and people since the 1990s, representing the current intermediary status of commonwealth as an unincorporated and organized U.S. territory.
Puerto Rico's flag ranked seventh out of 72 entries in a poll regarding flags of subdivisions of Canada and the United States conducted by the North American Vexillological Association in 2001.[16]
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