The Cantabrian labarum (Cantabrian: lábaru cántabru or Spanish: lábaro cántabro) is a modern interpretation of the ancient military standard known by the Romans as Cantabrum. It consists of a purple cloth on which there is what would be called in heraldry a "saltire voided" made up of curved lines, with knobs at the end of each line.

Cantabrian labarum
Lábaru
UseCivil and state flag Small vexillological symbol or pictogram in black and white showing the different uses of the flag
ProportionNot defined
AdoptedMarch 15, 2016[1][2][n 1][3]
DesignPurple cloth on which there is what would be called in heraldry a "saltire voided" made up of curved lines, with knobs at the end of each line.
Cantabrian labarum genesis

The name and design of the flag is in the theory advocated by several authors[4] of a relationship between the genesis of labarum and the military standard called Cantabrum, thereby identifying both as a same thing; and the alleged relationship the Codex Theodosianus established between the Labarum and the Cantabrarii, the school of Roman soldiers in charge of carrying the Cantabrum.

Additionally, and according to the definition of the Royal Academy of the Spanish language, labarum is the Roman standard (as in military ceremonial flag) on which, under Emperor Constantine's rule, the cross and the Monogram of Christ (Chi-Rho) was drawn. By association of ideas, labarum can refer just to the monogram itself, or even just the cross.

Etymologically, the word comes from (p)lab- which means to speak in a number of Celtic languages, many of which have derivatives. For example, in Welsh llafar means "speech", "language", "voice". Ancient Cornish and Breton have lavar, "word", and ancient Irish has labrad: "language", "speech".[5]

Cantabrian stele of Barros, Cantabria from around the 2nd century BC. Carved in sandstone and over a pier base, its dimensions are 1.70 m in diameter and 0.32 m thick.
edit

The plenary session of the Parliament of Cantabria, at its meeting of March 14 2016, approved a resolution as a result of the processing of the non-legislative proposal No. 9L/4300-0056 relative to the recognition of the Lábaro.[6]

"The Parliament of Cantabria:

1. Recognizes the lábaro as a representative and identity symbol of the Cantabrian people and the values they represent.

2. Urges the institutions and civil society of Cantabria to actively promote and participate in their knowledge and dissemination as an iconographic expression of the identity of the Cantabrian people. Keeping the official character of the flag of the Community of Cantabria and the rest of the institutional symbols of Cantabria."[1]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b Boletín Oficial del Parlamento de Cantabria, page 2128, 15 March 2016, No. 85
  2. ^ “El lábaro es reconocido como símbolo del pueblo cántabro”, El Diario Montañés, 14 March 2016.
  3. ^ "Actas y Acuerdos Municipales", Ayuntamiento de Comillas, July 2006
  4. ^ Dictionnaire des antiquités grecques et romaines - Daremberg et Saglio 1920.
  5. ^ Maroñas García, Jesús J. (1999). Onomástica de Cantabria. Los nombres cántabros de persona. Santander: Ed. C.D.E.S.C. pp. 89–90. ISBN 84-931031-0-1.
  6. ^ Boletín Oficial del Parlamento de Cantabria, page 1978, 7 March 2016, No. 81

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Support for the flag was voted and approved by the Comillas Town Council on July 21, 2006. Fluttered for the first time in a public building in Comillas town hall, Cantabria.
edit