Uruguay
- ️Sat Jan 11 2025
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Rep�blica Oriental del Uruguay; Oriental Republic of Uruguay
Last modified: 2025-01-11 by rob raeside
Keywords: uruguay | republica oriental del uruguay | sun: 16 rays | sun: face | stripes: 9 | canton: sun |
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![[Flag of Uruguay]](https://www.fotw.info/images/u/uy.gif)
- Official name of the country
- Description of the flag
- Colour specifications
- National coat of arms
- Current ceremonial usage of historical flags
- Uruguay: Variants of the national flag
- Departments of Uruguay
- Historical flags of Uruguay
- Government flags
- Uruguayan political flags
- Uruguayan labor unions
- Uruguayan sport flags
- Uruguayan yachting clubs
- House flags of Uruguayan shipping companies
- Education institutions in Uruguay
- Uruguayan co-operative flags
- Uruguayan non-governmental organizations� flags
- National Postal Administration
- S�mbolos
patrios (government page about the national symbols)
reported by Dov Gutterman, 24 August 1999
Official name of the country
Eastern Province (Provincia Oriental) was the name of Uruguay before independence and meant that our country was at the east of Buenos Aires Province. This "Eastern" adjective was kept when the Independence of our country was achieved in 1828, but with a different meaning. From then on it was known as the Rep�blica Oriental del Uruguay, i.e. the republic east side or the Uruguay River. This is still today the official name of Uruguay.
Jorge Cajarville, 16 June 1999
The official name of this country since the second constitution of 1917 is "Rep�blica Oriental del Uruguay" (in the first constitution of 1830 was "Estado Oriental del Uruguay").
Rodolfo Tizzi, 10 July 2002
The name "Rep�blica Oriental del Uruguay" with the article "el" contracted with the preposition "de". The reason is that the name comes from it being on the east bank of the Uruguay river. The literal English translation is really something pretty awkward like "The Republic of the East of Uruguay."
Michael Newman, 13 June 2004
Description of the flag
Ratio: 2:3
The constuction details make the 9 stripes of equal width and a square canton of 5 stripes in width.
The flag description that I used to have are: nine horizontal stripes of white and blue with white square canton covering five top stripes, including a yellow sun in splendor.
Željko Heimer, 20 July 2003
The external diameter of the Uruguayan sun is 11/15 the side of the square canton of the flag.
Francisco Gregoric, 5 July 2004
Design of the Sun of May (Sol de Mayo)
![[Detail of Uruguayan Flag Sun]](https://www.fotw.info/images/u/uy_sun1.gif)
The sun has sixteen rays, straight and wavy alternating.
Dov Gutterman, 13 May 2000
Each wavy ray is "divided" by a center wavy line. (in the same way each straight ray is divided by a center straight line). There is a
picture of the Capit�n Miranda, the school ship of the Uruguayan Navy with a Uruguayan National Flag with the "divided" wavy rays of the sun.
Francisco Gregoric, 5 July, 2004
Colour specifications
The specific color values of the flag are not officially defined by law. I haven�t found any legislation.
Other sources for colors:
The Album des
Pavillons 1990 [pay98] (Corr. No. 30.) gives
approximate colors in Pantone and CMYK systems:
Blue: Pantone 295c, CMYK
100-60-0-30
Yellow: Pantone 116c, CMYK 0-10-95-0
Red: Pantone 193c, CMYK
0-90-70-10
The Flag Manual - Beijing 2008 gives Pantone colors: PMS 125 (dark yellow), PMS 109 (yellow), and PMS 300 (blue).
The Album des
Pavillons 2000 [pay00] gives approximate colors
in Pantone and CMYK systems:
Blue: Pantone 295c, CMYK 100-60-0-30
Yellow:
Pantone 116c, CMYK 0-10-95-0
Red: Pantone 193c, CMYK 0-90-70-10
The Flags and Anthems Manual London 2012 [loc12] gives Pantone colors: PMS 116 (yellow), and PMS Reflex Blue.
The Album
des Pavillons 2023 specifies the colors of the flags in three color systems:
Blue: Pantone 295c, CMYK 100-86-36-24, RGB 0-45-98
Red: Pantone 193c, CMYK
10-100-64-6, RGB 195-12-62
Brown: Pantone 484c, CMYK 25-91-91-22, RGB
159-45-32
Yellow: Pantone 116c, CMYK 0-19-93-0, RGB 255-206-0
Vexilla Mundi gives colors in Pantone system: PMS White, PMS Reflex Blue C, PMS 116C (yellow), and PMS Black.
Wikipedia illustrates
the flag, and construction details, and gives color values as follows:
Yellow:
RGB 252-209-22, Hex
#FCD116, CMYK 0-17-91-1
Brown: RGB 123-63-0, Hex #7B3F00, CMYK
0-49-100-52
Blue: RGB 0-56-168, Hex #0038A8, CMYK 100-67-0-34
White: RGB 255-255-255, Hex #FFFFFF, CMYK 0-0-0-0
Flag Color Codes gives the following color
values:
Blue: Hex #001489, RGB 0-20-137, CMYK 100-87-0-20, Pantone Reflex Blue,
RAL 5002
White: Hex #FFFFFF, RGB 255-255-255, CMYK 0-0-0-0, Pantone
N/A, RAL N/A
Yellow: Hex #FFCD00, RGB 255-205-0, CMYK 0-10-98-0, Pantone 116,
RAL 2007
Brown: Hex #7B3F00, RGB 123-63-0, CMYK
0-63-100-57, Pantone 731, RAL 8008
Zoltan Horvath, 10 December 2024
National coat of arms
The arms consist of a quartered oval with blue in the first and fourth quarters and white in the second and third. There are scales for justice. The horse and ox represent liberty and plenty. There is a representation of a city on a hill. That city is Montevideo, and it symbolizes strength.
The sun is the "Sun of May" first used in Argentina and is derived from its historical ties with what was then the United Provinces of the River Plata. (Sources:
[smi80],
[tal82] and [cra90])
Calvin Paige Herring, 13 June 1998
My little flag book (French translation of [ing79]) refers to the suns as "Sun of May" for Argentina and "Star of May" for Uruguay. This obviously refers to the same astrological-legendary object, but is there such a difference in Spanish official descriptions?
Tham-T�m L�, 16 December 1998
The Coat of Arms appears in the Presidential naval rank ensign.
Francisco Gregoric, 7 August 2004
Current ceremonial usage of historical flags
These three flags are the official National Flags of Uruguay:
- the National Flag,
- the Artigas flag,
- and the 33 Orientals flag,
Blas Delgado Ortiz, 13 December 2001
In a recent visit of the Spanish Kings to Uruguay, the
Artigas flag, the national flag and the 33 Orientales flag shown togheter (as usual) in official acts and military parades.
Jaume Oll�, 10 June 1998