Estelada

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A estelada ("starred"), which may also be known as estrelada, is a flag with a star adopted as a battle flag by some independentist movements. This often refers to the original and derived flags from the four-stripped Senyera adopted by Catalan independentism movement.

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[edit] History

The blue estelada flag
The blue estelada flag

3rd Article of the provisional Constitution of the Catalan Republic, written and approved in 1928 in Cuba by the “Assemblea Constituent” (Constituent Assembly) of Catalan separatism, specifically provides that the official flag of the Catalan Republic consists of four red bars on a yellow field, superimposed with a blue triangle and white five-pointed star.

The fact of having a star in the fighting flag comes from the early days. The lone star signifies national freedom and independence. Looking at the flags of independent states and stateless nations, in many of them one finds stars. Of all these independent states, the oldest is Cuba, which was a Spanish colony until 1898. Cuba's fight for its independence was already being followed with attention by the Catalanists of the nineteenth century. Therefore it is not strange that the symbols of the Cuban rebels had influence among the separatists that blossomed inside the Catalanist groups. Once the War of Independence was finished in Cuba, it was created, in Santiago, in the year 1906, the “Centre Catalanista de Santiago de Cuba” (Catalanist Centre of Santiago de Cuba), where one could already see the primitive Catalan “estelada” flag: in the middle of a “senyera” there was a white star with five points.

The first star with a clear nationalist intention known in Catalonia is of a date before 1904, and it has to do with the “Unió Catalanista” (Catalanist Union). It is a stamp commemorating the ownership process of “Pi de les Tres Branques” (The Three Branches Pine) by the Catalanist Union.

Later, in 1906, a star appears in the headers of the magazine Fora Grillons! (Breaking Chains!), made in Santiago de Cuba by Catalan exiles (a publication that already claimed clearly the independence of Catalonia).

During the twenties, once the First World War is over, Europe sees a wave of creation of nation-states, helped by the American president Woodrow Wilson.

The politics of the League of Nations allow many nations to see their historical opportunity to free themselves, and so did Czechoslovakia, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Armenia during the year 1918; other nations like Ukraine, Belarus and Georgia, are declared independent but occupied by the Soviets straight away.

In all these nations that have the hope of freedom, pressure groups start to mobilize in international spheres. In the Catalan case, the Comitè Pro-Catalunya (Pro-Catalonia Committee) was one of the most active. It was in these circumstances that a need was seen to have a symbol able to represent the Catalan aspirations and, of course, a star appeared on it.

It was since then that one started to hear about the “estelada” flag. Its design is, probably, of Vicenç Albert Ballester, where the blue triangle signifies the blue sky of humanity, and in its centre, the white star symbolizes freedom.

The first photograph where the flag appears is in a publication dated in 1918. It is the bulletin “L’intransigent” (The Intransigent), where a photo is reproduced of a group of young Americans and Catalan separatists holding both flags.

Also in 1918, there is in circulation a comic strip – a stamp without postal value – dedicated to the future Society of Nations, where there was also an “estelada”.

There are several kinds of “estelada”. One is in the last number of “La Tralla” (a radical separatist magazine from the 1920s), before the coup d'etat by Miguel Primo de Rivera. The other is in a document published by the Comitè Pro-Catalunya written in Catalan and Arabic, to greet and encourage one of the Moroccan leaders who revolted against Spain.

In Cuba, appears for first time the headers of the magazine “La Nova Catalunya” (1920), (The New Catalonia).

The “estelada” flag goes on to appear in other Catalan separatist publications.

The “estelada” was in the possession of Francesc Macià during the failed invasion of Prats de Molló in 1926. It appears between the Catalan volunteers in prison and the time when they were taken to Paris to be put on trial. There are also photos of the volunteers with the “estelada” in many other different places.

In 1928, with the presidency of Francesc Macià in the Constituent Assembly of the Catalan separatism, the “estelada” is again with them, and the Catalan separatists make it theirs.

Red estelada
Red estelada

During this period a new habit starts and it is present until those days. Every time a prominent Catalan nationalist dies, in a sign of grievance, his comrades cover with a black cloth the part in the “estelada” with the four bars of the Catalan flag, leaving the star visible as a sign that they will continue pursuing the same ideals.

Later, during the period from 1931 to 1936, the “estelada” still appears numerous times. Some of these flags only have two colours due to the shortage of money, but the traditional “estelada” with the blue triangle and white star was kept.

After the Francoist dictatorship came to power, the Front Nacional de Catalunya (National Front of Catalonia), or FNC, which used the Catalan flag and the “estelada”, is formed as an answer to the new Spanish nationalist regime.

During the sixties, in the university section of the FNC, there was a split named Partit Socialista d’Alliberament Nacional dels Països Catalans, (Socialist Party for the National Liberation of the Catalan Countries) (PSAN). Because this party wanted to make its own socialist and Marxist ideas clear, it decided to change the colour of the star to red. So, in 1969, a new version of the estelada started to appear at PSAN meetings.

In the mid-seventies, the PSAN had, in turn, its own splits. They led to the creation of a new movement, the Moviment d’Unificació Marxista, (Movement of Marxist Unification), which started to use the red star inside a white triangle, while the PSAN kept the red star inside a yellow triangle.

The unification of the two verions of the flag only could take place when the Movement of Marxist Unification and the Bloc d’Esquerra d’Alliberament Nacional (Bloc of the Left for the National Liberation) (BEAN) both disbanded. Ever since, the flag with the red star and the yellow triangle is the symbol of the socialist and communist separatists.

Still, As of 2005 both kinds of estelada flag (the classic and the red) are used at the same time.

[edit] Valencian nationalist senyera

The Valencian nationalist senyera, also known simply as estrelada, is a flag of the Land of Valencia that evolved from the flag of Valencia based on the former Catalan estelada.

The white star version is used by Valencian nationalist groups since the early 20th century. Some of these groups may even be of blaver ideology, especially those with more pro-sovereign positions.

The oldest conserved document with a reference, with a red star, is a war poster of Valencian Left.

[edit] Other estelades

Aragon Galiza

Since its creation, different estelades, or estrelades have been adopted by independentist movements all around the world, such as the Aragonese, Galician, Occitan, Andalusian, or Saharawi versions.

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