Last modified: 2011-06-11 by ian macdonald
Keywords: brazil | bahia | alfaiates | conjuração | stars: 6 (red) | triband |
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The first flag of Bahia was that of the so-called Conjuração Baiana, or Bahian Conspiracy,
also called the Alfaiates Rebellion, launched in 1798 under the influence of French revolutionary ideas.
On the morning of 12 August 1798, demonstrators collected in public areas of Salvador, the capital
of the captaincy of Bahia, proclaiming a republic, abolishing slavery, abolishing noble privileges,
and reducing taxation, and inviting the governor to side with the people. The uprising was quickly
crushed by Portuguese authorities. According to Clovis Ribeiro and later flag historians, the flag used
by the revolutionaries was a vertical triband, blue-white-blue, with a large red five-pointed star
on the center surrounded by five smaller red stars. Ribeiro shows the large star with one point
down and the small ones with one point up. Luponi shows all the stars with one point up, while
Klein shows the large star point up and the small ones point down. The image above follows Ribeiro.
Sources: Ribeiro, Brazões e bandeiras do Brasil;
Arthur Luponi, "The Flags of the States of Brazil: Bahia," Flag Bulletin
10:35-39 (Winter 1971); Klauss Erich Klein, "Bandeiras Históricas," at
Agulhas Negras Military Academy website
Joseph McMillan, 21 August 2002