Ikurriña

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Ikurriña
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Ikurriña

The Ikurriña flag is a Basque symbol and the official flag of the Basque Country Autonomous Community of Spain.

The flag was designed by the founders of the Basque Nationalist Party EAJ-PNV Luis and Sabino Arana, and is commonly regarded as the national but unofficial symbol of Euskal Herria, or the wider Basque Country. It is widely seen in the French Basque Country and forms part of the official flag of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, the French overseas community in North America that was settled by French Basque sailors. The Ikurriña is also the flag of the Basque Nationalist Party (EAJ-PNV).

The flag was designed in 1894 to represent the province of Biscay (Vizcaya in Spanish, Bizkaia in Basque) in a set of one flag for each of the seven Basque provinces and one for the whole country. However, since PNV activity was scarce outside of Biscay, only the Biscayne flag was publicly recognized. It was hoisted by the first time in the "Euzkeldun Batzokija", the club that preceded EAJ-PNV. The party adopted it in 1895 and, in 1933, proposed it as the flag of the whole Basque Country.

In 1936, due to the fact that the Basque people had accepted the "ikurrina" and at the suggestion of the socialistic counselor Aznar, the Basque Government adopted it as flag of the Basque Autonomous Community. The regime of General Franco prohibited it in 1938 (it kept being used in the Basque provinces under French sovereignty). It became a symbol of defiance, the first actions of the clandestine group ETA involved placing flags in public places. During the Spanish transition to democracy it was legalized in 1977. Two years later the Basque Government turned to adopt it as flag of the Basque A.C. It was also adopted by nationalists in the rest of the provinces.

The Guernica oak.
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The Guernica oak.

The red bottom symbolizes the Biscayan people (the race); the green saltire might represent the Oak of Guernica, a symbol of the old laws of Bizkaia, or Fueros; and over them, the white cross, God's symbol of Basque Catholic devotion. Thus, red, white and green have become the national Basque colors.

[edit] Name

The name is a neologism by the Aranas from ikur ("mark, sign", compare to Catalan senyera). It was intended to have the generic meaning of "flag" but ended with this specific meaning. Therefore, the current standard Basque word for "flag" is the Hispanism bandera. A similar process happened with other Basque nationalist neologisms, like lehendakari and ertzaintza, coined originally as generic terms, but then applied almost exclusively to the Basque President and the Basque Police. The original Biscayne spelling of the Aranas was ikuŕiñ (the final -a is the Basque definite article). The modern standard spelling is ikurrin.

[edit] See also

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