Last modified: 2003-03-01 by joe mcmillan
Keywords: army | lozenge | military | corps | division | general | southern cross | cruzeiro |
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The flags of general officers in the Brazilian Army as of 1944 were referred to as
"distinctive signals of large commands" and followed the German system of
representing the command position rather than the officer's rank. All of
them are (or were) divided vertically, red in the hoist with a white lozenge
throughout, and horizontally striped in the fly, green and golden yellow, with
the number of stripes representing the level of the command (five for an army, four
for a corps, three for a division, and two for a brigade). Red numbers and
symbols on the lozenge indicated the specific command.
Source: Prints entitled Sinais Distintivos (Bandeirolas e Lanternas): Altas Autoridades - Grandes Comandos,
published by the Photo-Cartographic Office of the Brazilian Ministry of War , in the files of the U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry.
Joseph McMillan, 2 May 2001
The commander of an army had the number of the army in Roman numerals, and three green and two yellow
stripes. The
illustration is the command flag for the 3rd Army, traditionally the most
important,
posted in southern Brazil near the Argentine, Paraguayan, and
Uruguayan
borders.
Joseph McMillan, 2 May 2001
Commander of the artillery of an army: a flaming grenade above the
number of the army in Roman numerals; in the fly, three green and two yellow stripes.
Joseph McMillan, May 2001
Commander of an army corps: the number of the corps in Arabic
numerals; in the fly, two green and two yellow stripes.
Joseph McMillan, 3 May 2001