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The origin of the current flag of Spain is the naval ensign of 1785, Pabellón de la Marina de Guerra, by Decrée of Charles III of Spain, where it is also referred as national flag. It was chosen by Charles III himself from 12 different flags designed by Antonio Valdés y Bazán. [1]
He was the winner of a contest organized by Juana de Ibarbourou in 1932. The flag was first raised in Montevideo, at the Independence Square, on 12 October 1932. The flag was formerly known as "Flag of the Hispanic race" (Spanish: Bandera de la raza hispánica).
Ñ-shaped animation showing flags of some countries and territories where Spanish is spoken. Spanish is the official language (either by law or de facto) in 20 sovereign states (including Equatorial Guinea, where it is official but not a native language), one dependent territory, and one partially recognized state, totaling around 442 million people.
Spaniards created this separation as a similar government behaviour as the one back in their country, where only the top of the hierarchy didn't work or pay. In this case, the 'Republica de Españoles' was the top of the hierarchy and most took advantage of it to gain wealth without working just because of their ethnicity.
Histoire de Wasquehal; Usage on fr.wiktionary.org Pays-Bas espagnols; Países Bajos españoles; Spanish Netherlands; Usage on gl.wikipedia.org Ducado de Brabante; Países Baixos españois; Usage on he.wikipedia.org ארצות השפלה ההבסבורגיות; Usage on id.wikipedia.org Belanda Habsburg; Usage on ja.wikipedia.org ...
Español: Representación del Escudo Nacional de España durante la Segunda República, con el esquema de colores frecuentes en las banderas de guerra (filactelia de gules). [1] , [2] . [3] .
The three colors on the flag represent olive trees (green), orange groves (gold) and vineyards (red). [1] They also symbolize the history of the city, with gold and red representing Spain, the country who first colonized the city and green and red representing Mexico, who took over when New Spain achieved independence. [2]
Portal de Archivos Españoles (PARES) is a documentary archive established and hosted by the Spanish Ministry of Education. It offers free access to digitized images of the Spanish Archives. [1] It was opened in 2007. [2] On 10 May 2016 it was updated to PARES 2.0, with more than 33.9 million digital images and 8.6 million document archives. [3 ...