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The flag of Quebec City (French: drapeau de la ville de Québec) was officially adopted on January 12, 1987.
Adopted | 12 January 1987 |
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Design | An azure background with a white border (crenelated) and a gold ship in the center. |
Design and symbolism
editThe flag depicts a gold colored ship on a deep blue field surrounded by a crenelated white border representing its unique city walls. The border also signifies the fortified city its founder came from, Brouage in Saintonge, France.
The ship is Samuel de Champlain's ship, Don de Dieu, a reminder of the city's founder. The outward sails symbolize the bravery and strength of the population. The ship also signifies the city as being a major seaport in North America.
The heraldic colours used have the following meaning:
- Yellow (or) represents strength, justice, consistency, wealth, faith and luster.
- White (argent) stands for purity, truth, charity, humility, and victory.
- Blue (azure) means loyalty, clarity, sovereignty, majesty, good reputation, knowledge and serenity. Blue is also predominant in the city's coat of arms to emphasize its foundation by the French.[1]
Gallery
edit-
The flag of Quebec City shown in use
Historical flags
editHistorical flag | Duration | Description |
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1967-1987 | A white field with Quebec City's Coat of Arms and Quebec's flag in the canton. |
Notes
edit- ^ "Ville de Quebec - Symbols of Identity", Quebec City website, retrieved March 6, 2018,