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Last modified: 2021-08-24 by rob raeside
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Infantry colours were the Italian flag - the tricolour with,
in the centre of the white stripe, a red shield bearing a white
cross, surrounded by a blue border, all surmounted by a crown.
Each regiment bore a plain blue cravat with silver fringes; on
this were attached any medals awarded to the regiment. Silver
cords and tassels. The finial was a gilt hollow spear point with
the Royal arms in the centre. The sheet was nailed to the staff,
which was covered with blue velvet, with a spiral of nails with
round gilt heads running up its length. There was nothing on the
sheet or the cravat to indicate which regiment the colour
belonged to. The sheet was 1.2 metres square; the staff 2.5
metres long.
Cavalry standards were similar in appearance, but 0.4 metres
square, the staff 1.38 metres long.
Under Mussolini, engineers, supply etc carried small flags
(gagliardetto, pl. -etti) especially in the colonies, but they
were only introduced in 1923. A Red Cross flag for the hospital
sounds reasonable.
Ian Sumner, 21 and 22 September 2006
Pair Of Italian Air Force Flags Banners at eBay:
The smaller banner is
about 2 x 3 feet with the highest quality embroidery. It bears
the 1938 Italian National
Arms and is mainly done in bullion with some color accents.
The reverse has a fasces and Laurels. Other
than a few tiny scattered stains the piece is in excellent
condition, with no holes or tears. There is bullion fringe on
three sides The original ties are present also.
The flag is about 6x5
feet and the hand embroidery is phenomenal and the detail
exemplary. The front bears the National Arms and the
reverse bears the same in negative. The condition is the same at
the banner. Both bear the Madonna and Christ Child below the
center "Fert". This one also has bullion fringe and the
original ties.
William Garrison, 13 February 2008
image submitted by Stephen Schwartz, 26 June 2007
This resembles a realignment of the common
Catalan-Aragonese-Balearic "quatre barres."
Source: <www.wwii-collectibles.com>.
Stephen Schwartz, 26 June 2007
The language looks suspiciously like Italian- so presumably it
was for somewhere like Abyssinia/Somalia.
James Dignan, 3 July 2007
I think it is Italian, a colonial formation based in Italian
Somaliland before the Second World War. The red and yellow are
just the distinctive colours of the formation (others used
different colours), and not connected to Spain/Catalonia. There
are some similar flags illustrated at <www.uniformi.org>,
but the scans are so low resolution, I cannot make out all the
captions clearly.
Ian Sumner, 3 July 2007
It is a pennant of the colonial troops during World War II.
The units (detachments) of the colonial troops had these striped
flags (stripes) vertical with several colors. The number refers
to the number of the unit.
Alessandro Martinelli, 17 November 2007
It is a military colonial flag, of the First Colonial brigade
in Eritrea. This kind of flags were often stripped, had bright
colours with a Roman number indicating the battalion or the
brigade. You can see several examples of them on these two web
pages: <www.ilcornodafrica.it/fs-cart1.htm>
and <www.ilcornodafrica.it/fs-cart2.htm>.
Roberto Breschi, 18 November 2007
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