The Coat of arms of Catalonia is based on four red pallets on gold background which have been used since the Middle Ages on several coats of arms. Its origin is strongly related to that of the arms of the Crown of Aragon.
The blazon of the arms is: Or, four pallets of gules, ensigned with a royal crown. [9] In heraldry, the escutcheon is traditionally called as of the King of Aragon, altought some medieval armories display the same arms also on the entry for the Count of Barcelona. Modernly called of Aragon [10] or of Barcelona. [11]
It has been described during the years as in "Armorial du Hérault Vermandois", 1285-1300[12], These are the arms of the Counts of Barcelona who acquired Aragón[13], in Armorial de Gelre, 1370-1395, D'or, à quatre pals de gueules (Barcelone). [14] or the Armorial d'Urfé, 1380, sont les armes de le Conte de Cathalogne, and in armorial de Charolais, 1425, arms conte de Barselongne and armorial Le Blanq (sources from 1420-1450) venant des contes de Barselone.[15]
History
Seal of Ramon Berenguer IV, count of Barcelona
Version of the coat of arms of the kings, created by the king Peter the third, the Ceremonious, on 14thCentury with the blue and white cross flag of the old Aragonian kings and the pales of Barcelonian counts. [14]
Originally it was the familiar emblem of the counts of Barcelona. [3][1][2] It was adopted by his descendents as Kings of Aragon, the main branch, Counts of Provence, Counts of Foix[1], Judges of Arborea in Sardinia (party per saltire), Kings of Mallorques, Kings of Sicily (party per saltire)[4].
As a pre-heraldic symbol, the bars red and yellow was found on the Romanesque tombs of Barcelona’s Count Ramon Berenguer II Cap d’estopes, (†1082), and his great-grandmother Ermessenda, (†1058), wife of Count Ramon Borrell I[16], both of whose tombs were at the portico of the old Romanesque Cathedral of Girona. The analysis of the painting showed that it coincided with paintings of the same times[17] and the pre-heraldic forms indicate pre-heraldic times, before the second Third of the 12th Century. [18]
The oldest seal where the arms can be seen is from 1150, in a seal of Raymond Berengar IV, Count of Barcelona. [1][6][19][7][8] The arms where inherited by all the three sons of Raymond Berengar, and they appear on the seal of Ramon Berenguer, count of Provence, from 1178, on the seal of Sanç, from 1180, and the oldest one, the seal of Alfons, the Chast, king of Aragon and count of Barcelona, from 1186. The seal evidence is disputed by some authors, who claim that the first documented evidence dates from the time of Alfonso II (king of Aragon and count of Barcelona) reign[5].
The chronicle of the king Peter the Ceremonious, over 1359, say that the king-count Alfons, the chast, left the arms and signals of Aragon and took pales[20] and the genealogy of the kings ordered by the future king John I, on 1380, states that Raymond Berengar IV did not changed the comital arms[21].
The Queen Maria de Luna, on 1396, in the catalan Parliament stated that the arms of the County of Barcelona were "bars reds and yellows" and the King Martin I on 1406 stated that the Royal flag was the flag of the old Principalty of Catalonia."
^ abcdef " Léon Jéquier. Actes du II Colloque international d'héraldique". Breassone.1981. Académie internationale d'héraldique. Les Origines des armoiries. Paris. ISBN 2-86377-030-6.
^ ab Ottfried Neubecker, JP Brooke-Little. Le grand livre de l'héraldique.p.233. Elsevier Séquoia.1977. Paris-Brussels. ISBN 2-8003-0140-6
^ ab Paul Adam Even."L'heraldique catalane au moyen age" in Hidalguia, 22, Mayo-Junio 1957. Madrid. p465.
^ ab Martí de Riquer. "Heràldica catalana: des l'any 1150 al 1550". Quaderns Crema.1982. ISBN 84-85704-34-7
^ ab Michel Pastoureau. L'origine des armoiries de la Catalogne" in II Simposi numismàtic de Barcelona. 1980.E.Cymys SCEN ISBN 84-85060-16-4
^ Ampelio Alonso de Cadenas y López; Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent. (1985a). Heráldica de las Comunidades Autónomas y de las capitales de provincia. Ediciciones Hidalguía: Madrid (Spain). ISBN 840006047
^ ab(French) "Folio 62r 637.Pierre IV, R. d'Aragon". “"637. Pierre IV, R. d'Aragon (...) Description : D'or, à quatre pals de gueules (Barcelone). Cimier: Un buste de dragon d'or, lampassé de gueules, dans un vol de chauve-souris du même, issant d'une couronne sur une capeline d'Aragon ancien. (638)"”
^ Michel Poppof. "L'heraldique espagnole et catalane a la fin du Moyen-âge". Editions Leopard d'Or. 1989. ISBN 2-86377-078-0. Paris.
^ Frederic Udina Martorell. Problemática acerca de los palos de gules.
^ Marti de Riquer. "Llegendes històriques catalanes. Quaderns Crema. 2000.pag.16. Barcelona. ISBN 84-7727-296-4
^ Faustino Menéndez-Pidal. "Palos de oro y gules" in Studia in honorem prof. M. de Riquer (pars quarta). Quaderns Crema.1991.p669. ISBN 84-7727-067-8
^ Carmen Orcastegui. "Crónica de san Juan de la Peña(versión aragonesa).Edición crítica". Inst.Fernando el Católico.1986.Zaragoza. ISBN 84-00-06144-6
^ Pedro lópez Elum. "J.Domenech crónica. Textos medievales 42".Anubar ediciones.1975.Valencia ISBN 84-7013-067-6
References
Fatás, Guillermo; Guillermo Redondo [1978]. La bandera de Aragón (in Spanish). Zaragoza: Colección Básica Aragonesa, 3. Retrieved on 9 September2007.
Fatás, Guillermo; Guillermo Redondo [1995]. Blasón de Aragón : el escudo y la bandera Zaragoza (in Spanish). Diputación General de Aragón, D.L.. Retrieved on 9 September2007.
Fluvià I Escorsa, Armand de [1994]. Els quatre pals: l'escut dels comtes de Barcelona (in Spanish). Barcelona: Episodis de la Història, 300. Retrieved on 9 September2007.
Menéndez Pidal de Navascués, Faustino [1991]. Palos de oro y gules, vol. IV (in Spanish), Barcelona: Episodis de la Història, 300, pp. 669-704. Retrieved on 9 September2007.
Montaner Frutos, Alberto [1995]. El señal real del rey de Aragón: historia y significado, vol. IV (in Spanish), Zaragoza: Fernando el Católico, pp. 669-704. Retrieved on 9 September2007.