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Tricolour Day

Tricolour Day (Italian: Festa del Tricolore), officially National Flag Day (Italian: Giornata Nazionale della Bandiera), is the flag day of Italy. Celebrated on 7 January, it was established by Law 671 on 31 December 1996. It is intended as a celebration, though not a public holiday.[1] The official celebration of the day is held in Reggio Emilia, the city where the Italian tricolour was first adopted as flag by an Italian sovereign state, the Cispadane Republic, on 7 January 1797.

Tricolour Day
Official nameItalian: Giornata Nazionale della Bandiera
Observed by Italy
Liturgical colorgreen, white and red
SignificanceCelebrates the birth of the flag of Italy
Date7 January
Next time7 January 2025 (2025-01-07)
Frequencyannual
First time7 January 1997
Related to

History edit

 
Flag of the Cispadane Republic

The day was established by law n. 671 of 31 December 1996 with the intention of celebrating the bicentenary of the birth in Reggio nell'Emilia of the Italian flag, which officially took place, as already mentioned, on 7 January 1797 with the official adoption of the Tricolour by the Cispadana Republic, a sister republic of the French First Republic born the previous year.[2]

Previously, the Italian national colours had already appeared on the tricolour cockades and on some military banners but on 7 January 1797, for the first time, the Tricolour was officially adopted by an Italian sovereign State. To suggest the adoption of a green, white and red flag was Giuseppe Compagnoni, who for this reason is known as the "Father of the Tricolour".[3] In the minutes of the meeting of 7 January 1797 which was convened by the founding committee of the Cispadane Republic and which took place in a room of the town hall later renamed Sala del Tricolore, it can be read:[2]

[...] From the minutes of the XIV Session of the Cispadan Congress: Reggio Emilia, 7 January 1797, 11 am. Patriotic Hall. The participants are 100, deputies of the populations of Bologna, Ferrara, Modena and Reggio Emilia. Giuseppe Compagnoni also motioned that the standard or Cispadan Flag of three colours, Green, White and Red, should be rendered Universal and that these three colours should also be used in the Cispadan Cockade, which should be worn by everyone. It is decreed. [...][4]

— Decree of adoption of the tricolor flag by the Cispadane Republic
 
The eighteenth-century Sala del Tricolore, later to become the council hall of the municipality of Reggio Emilia, where the first Italian flag was adopted
 
The former President of Italy Carlo Azeglio Ciampi honors the flag of Cispadane Republic, first Italian flag, during the Tricolour Day on 7 January 2004 in Reggio Emilia
 
The President of Italy Sergio Mattarella during his entry into the Sala del Tricolore on the occasion of the Tricolour Day on 7 January 2017

The congress decision to adopt a green, white and red tricolour flag was then greeted by a jubilant atmosphere, such was the enthusiasm of the delegates, and by a peal of applause.[5] In France, due to the Revolution, the flag went from having a "dynastic" and "military" meaning to a "national" one, and this concept, still unknown in Italy, was transmitted by the French to the Italians.[6] In the assembly of 21 January, which was instead convened in Modena, the adoption of the Tricolour was confirmed. The flag of the Cispadane Republic was in horizontal bands with the top red, the white in the center and the green at the bottom. In the center was also the emblem of the republic, while on the sides the letters "R" and "C" were shown, the initials of the two words that form the name of the "Repubblica Cispadana".[3]

The Cispadane and Transpadana republics merged a few months later to form the Cisalpine Republic, whose Grand Council, on 11 May 1798, adopted a tricolour flag in vertical bands with no crests, emblems or letters.[3][7] The flag of the Cisalpine Republic was maintained until 1802, when it was renamed the Napoleonic Italian Republic (1802–1805), and a new flag was adopted, this time with a red field carrying a green square within a white lozenge; the Presidential Standard of Italy in use since 14 October 2000 was inspired by this flag.[8] It was during this period that the green, white and red tricolour predominantly penetrated the collective imagination of the Italians, becoming an unequivocal symbol of Italianness.[9][10] In less than 20 years, the red, white and green flag had acquired its own peculiarity from a simple flag derived from the French one, becoming very famous and known.[9]

In the same year, after Napoleon had crowned himself as the first French Emperor, the Italian Republic was transformed into the first Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy (1805–1814), or Italico, under his direct rule. The flag of the Kingdom of Italy was that of the Republic in rectangular form, charged with the golden Napoleonic eagle.[11] This remained in use until the fall of Napoleon in 1814.

With the fall of Napoleon and the restoration of the absolutist monarchical regimes, the Italian tricolour went underground, becoming the symbol of the patriotic ferments that began to spread in Italy[9][12] and the symbol which united all the efforts of the Italian people towards freedom and independence.[13] In the Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, a state dependent on the Austrian Empire born after the fall of Napoleon, those who exhibited the Italian tricolour were subject to the death penalty.[14] The Austrians' objective was in fact, quoting the textual words of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria: "[The tricolour was banned to] make people forget that they are Italian."[15]

After the Napoleonic era, the Tricolour became a symbol of the Unification of Italy struggle. It was in fact adopted during the revolutions of 1820,[16] the revolutions of 1830,[16] the revolutions of 1848,[17][18] the First Italian War of Independence,[19] the Second Italian War of Independence,[20] the Expedition of the Thousand[21] and the Third Italian War of Independence.[22] With the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy, the green, white and red flag became the national flag of a united Italy.[23] The Tricolour had a universal, transversal meaning, shared by both monarchists and republicans, progressives and conservatives and Guelphs as well as by the Ghibellines. The Tricolour was chosen as the flag of a united Italy also for this reason.[24]

On 13 June 1946, the Italian Republic was officially founded. The Italian flag was modified with the decree of the President of the Council of Ministers No. 1 of 19 June 1946. Compared to the monarchic banner, the Savoy coat of arms was eliminated.[25][26][27] This decision was later confirmed in the session of 24 March 1947 by the Constituent Assembly, which decreed the insertion of article 12 of the Italian Constitution, subsequently ratified by the Italian Parliament, which states:[26][28][29]

The flag of the Republic is the Italian tricolour: green, white, and red, in three vertical bands of equal dimensions.

— Article 12 of Constitution of Italy

The members of the Constituent Assembly were deeply moved when they approved this article, and as a sign of joy and respect, stood up and applauded at length shortly after the approval.[26]

Celebrations edit

 
Solemn change of the Guard of honour of the Corazzieri Regiment at the Quirinale Palace in Rome on the occasion of the Tricolour Day on 7 January 2016

On 31 December 1996, with the same law that established the Tricolour Festival, a National Committee of twenty members was set up with the aim of organizing the first solemn commemoration of the birth of the Italian flag.[30] The committee was composed of institutional personalities, including the presidents of the chambers, and members from civil society, particularly from the historical and cultural sphere.[30] At that time it was also proposed not to celebrate the date, or even to modify the flag itself, hypotheses scarcely accepted by the members of the Parliament.[31]

In Reggio nell'Emilia, the Festa del Tricolore is celebrated in Piazza Prampolini, in front of the town hall, in the presence of one of the most important officers of the State (the President of Italy or the president of one of the chambers), who attends the 'flag-raising on the notes of Il Canto degli Italiani and which renders military honors a reproduction of the flag of the Cispadane Republic.[32]

In Rome, at the Quirinal Palace, the ceremonial foresees instead the change of the Guard of honour in solemn form with the deployment and the parade of the Corazzieri Regiment in gala uniform and the Fanfare of the Carabinieri Cavalry Regiment.[33] This solemn rite is carried out only on three other occasions, during the celebrations of the Anniversary of the Unification of Italy (17 March), of the Festa della Repubblica (2 June) and of the National Unity and Armed Forces Day (4 November).[33]

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Celebrazione nazionale del bicentenario della prima bandiera nazionale Legge n. 671 del 31 dicembre 1996 (GU 1 del 2 gennaio 1997)
  2. ^ a b The tri-coloured standard.Getting to Know Italy, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (retrieved 5 October 2008) 23 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b c Vecchio 2003, p. 42.
  4. ^ [...] Dal verbale della Sessione XIV del Congresso Cispadano: Reggio Emilia, 7 gennaio 1797, ore 11. Sala Patriottica. Gli intervenuti sono 100, deputati delle popolazioni di Bologna, Ferrara, Modena e Reggio Emilia. Giuseppe Compagnoni fa pure mozione che si renda Universale lo Stendardo o Bandiera Cispadana di tre colori, Verde, Bianco e Rosso e che questi tre colori si usino anche nella Coccarda Cispadana, la quale debba portarsi da tutti. Viene decretato. [...]
  5. ^ Maiorino, Marchetti Tricamo & Zagami 2002, p. 158.
  6. ^ Fiorini 1897, p. 685.
  7. ^ Maiorino, Marchetti Tricamo & Zagami 2002, p. 159.
  8. ^ "Lo Stendardo presidenziale" (in Italian). Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  9. ^ a b c Maiorino, Marchetti Tricamo & Zagami 2002, p. 169.
  10. ^ Villa 2010, p. 15.
  11. ^ Bovio 1996, p. 37.
  12. ^ Villa 2010, p. 10.
  13. ^ Ghisi, Enrico Il tricolore italiano (1796–1870) Milano: Anonima per l'Arte della Stampa, 1931; see Gay, H. Nelson in The American Historical Review Vol. 37 No. 4 (pp. 750–751), July 1932 JSTOR 1843352
  14. ^ Colangeli 1965, p. 17.
  15. ^ Bronzini 1986, p. 137.
  16. ^ a b Villa 2010, p. 18.
  17. ^ Bellocchi 2008, p. 38.
  18. ^ Busico 2005, p. 33.
  19. ^ Bellocchi 2008, p. 49.
  20. ^ Busico 2005, p. 41.
  21. ^ Busico 2005, p. 197.
  22. ^ Maiorino, Marchetti Tricamo & Zagami 2002, p. 212.
  23. ^ "Storia della bandiera italiana" (in Italian). Retrieved 14 January 2016.
  24. ^ Maiorino, Marchetti Tricamo & Zagami 2002, p. 207.
  25. ^ Maiorino, Marchetti Tricamo & Zagami 2002, p. 273.
  26. ^ a b c Villa 2010, p. 33.
  27. ^ Tarozzi & Vecchio 1999, p. 333.
  28. ^ Tarozzi & Vecchio 1999, pp. 337–338.
  29. ^ Busico 2005, p. 71.
  30. ^ a b Article 1 of the law n. 671 of 31 December 1996 ("National celebration of the bicentenary of the first national flag")
  31. ^ "Il Tricolore compie duecentodieci anni" (in Italian). Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  32. ^ "7 gennaio, ecco la festa del Tricolore" (in Italian). Retrieved 11 February 2017.
  33. ^ a b "Al via al Quirinale le celebrazioni per il 2 giugno con il Cambio della Guardia d'onore" (in Italian). 31 May 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2016.

References edit

  • Bellocchi, Ugo (2008). Bandiera madre - I tre colori della vita (in Italian). Scripta Maneant. ISBN 978-88-95847-01-6.
  • Bovio, Oreste (1996). Due secoli di tricolore (in Italian). Ufficio storico dello Stato Maggiore dell'Esercito. SBN IT\ICCU\BVE\0116837.
  • Bronzini, Giovanni Battista; Dal Mestre, Luigi (1986). "La restaurazione austriaca a Milano nel 1814". Lares (in Italian). Casa Editrice Leo S. Olschki. LII (3): 425–464.
  • Busico, Augusta (2005). Il tricolore: il simbolo la storia (in Italian). Presidenza del Consiglio dei Ministri, Dipartimento per l'informazione e l'editoria. SBN IT\ICCU\UBO\2771748.
  • Colangeli, Oronzo (1965). Simboli e bandiere nella storia del Risorgimento italiano (PDF) (in Italian). Patron. SBN IT\ICCU\SBL\0395583.
  • Fiorini, Vittorio (1897). "Le origini del tricolore italiano". Nuova Antologia di Scienze Lettere e Arti (in Italian). LXVII (fourth series): 239–267 and 676–710. SBN IT\ICCU\UBO\3928254.
  • Maiorino, Tarquinio; Marchetti Tricamo, Giuseppe; Zagami, Andrea (2002). Il tricolore degli italiani. Storia avventurosa della nostra bandiera (in Italian). Arnoldo Mondadori Editore. ISBN 978-88-04-50946-2.
  • Tarozzi, Fiorenza; Vecchio, Giorgio (1999). Gli italiani e il tricolore (in Italian). Il Mulino. ISBN 88-15-07163-6.
  • Vecchio, Giorgio (2003). "Il tricolore". Almanacco della Repubblica (in Italian). Bruno Mondadori. pp. 42–55. ISBN 88-424-9499-2.
  • Villa, Claudio (2010). I simboli della Repubblica: la bandiera tricolore, il canto degli italiani, l'emblema (in Italian). Comune di Vanzago. SBN IT\ICCU\LO1\1355389.

External links edit

  • "'La Bandiera degli italiani' dal sito del Quirinale" (in Italian).
  • "'Lo stendardo presidenziale' dal sito del Quirinale" (in Italian).
  • (in Italian). Archived from the original on 3 December 2013.
  • "Cronologia degli avvenimenti che furono alle origini del tricolore della bandiera nazionale italiana" (in Italian).
  • "Per approfondire l'origine della bandiera tricolore si consiglia di consultare alcuni testi segnalati qui" (in Italian).

tricolour, italian, festa, tricolore, officially, national, flag, italian, giornata, nazionale, della, bandiera, flag, italy, celebrated, january, established, december, 1996, intended, celebration, though, public, holiday, official, celebration, held, reggio,. Tricolour Day Italian Festa del Tricolore officially National Flag Day Italian Giornata Nazionale della Bandiera is the flag day of Italy Celebrated on 7 January it was established by Law 671 on 31 December 1996 It is intended as a celebration though not a public holiday 1 The official celebration of the day is held in Reggio Emilia the city where the Italian tricolour was first adopted as flag by an Italian sovereign state the Cispadane Republic on 7 January 1797 Tricolour DayFlag of ItalyOfficial nameItalian Giornata Nazionale della BandieraObserved by ItalyLiturgical colorgreen white and redSignificanceCelebrates the birth of the flag of ItalyDate7 JanuaryNext time7 January 2025 2025 01 07 FrequencyannualFirst time7 January 1997Related toNational Memorial Day of the Exiles and Foibe 10 February Anniversary of the Unification of Italy 17 March Anniversary of the Liberation 25 April Festa della Repubblica 2 June National Unity and Armed Forces Day 4 November Contents 1 History 2 Celebrations 3 See also 4 Citations 5 References 6 External linksHistory editMain article Flag of Italy Further information Flags of Napoleonic Italy See also Sala del Tricolore nbsp Flag of the Cispadane RepublicThe day was established by law n 671 of 31 December 1996 with the intention of celebrating the bicentenary of the birth in Reggio nell Emilia of the Italian flag which officially took place as already mentioned on 7 January 1797 with the official adoption of the Tricolour by the Cispadana Republic a sister republic of the French First Republic born the previous year 2 Previously the Italian national colours had already appeared on the tricolour cockades and on some military banners but on 7 January 1797 for the first time the Tricolour was officially adopted by an Italian sovereign State To suggest the adoption of a green white and red flag was Giuseppe Compagnoni who for this reason is known as the Father of the Tricolour 3 In the minutes of the meeting of 7 January 1797 which was convened by the founding committee of the Cispadane Republic and which took place in a room of the town hall later renamed Sala del Tricolore it can be read 2 From the minutes of the XIV Session of the Cispadan Congress Reggio Emilia 7 January 1797 11 am Patriotic Hall The participants are 100 deputies of the populations of Bologna Ferrara Modena and Reggio Emilia Giuseppe Compagnoni also motioned that the standard or Cispadan Flag of three colours Green White and Red should be rendered Universal and that these three colours should also be used in the Cispadan Cockade which should be worn by everyone It is decreed 4 Decree of adoption of the tricolor flag by the Cispadane Republic nbsp The eighteenth century Sala del Tricolore later to become the council hall of the municipality of Reggio Emilia where the first Italian flag was adopted nbsp The former President of Italy Carlo Azeglio Ciampi honors the flag of Cispadane Republic first Italian flag during the Tricolour Day on 7 January 2004 in Reggio Emilia nbsp The President of Italy Sergio Mattarella during his entry into the Sala del Tricolore on the occasion of the Tricolour Day on 7 January 2017The congress decision to adopt a green white and red tricolour flag was then greeted by a jubilant atmosphere such was the enthusiasm of the delegates and by a peal of applause 5 In France due to the Revolution the flag went from having a dynastic and military meaning to a national one and this concept still unknown in Italy was transmitted by the French to the Italians 6 In the assembly of 21 January which was instead convened in Modena the adoption of the Tricolour was confirmed The flag of the Cispadane Republic was in horizontal bands with the top red the white in the center and the green at the bottom In the center was also the emblem of the republic while on the sides the letters R and C were shown the initials of the two words that form the name of the Repubblica Cispadana 3 The Cispadane and Transpadana republics merged a few months later to form the Cisalpine Republic whose Grand Council on 11 May 1798 adopted a tricolour flag in vertical bands with no crests emblems or letters 3 7 The flag of the Cisalpine Republic was maintained until 1802 when it was renamed the Napoleonic Italian Republic 1802 1805 and a new flag was adopted this time with a red field carrying a green square within a white lozenge the Presidential Standard of Italy in use since 14 October 2000 was inspired by this flag 8 It was during this period that the green white and red tricolour predominantly penetrated the collective imagination of the Italians becoming an unequivocal symbol of Italianness 9 10 In less than 20 years the red white and green flag had acquired its own peculiarity from a simple flag derived from the French one becoming very famous and known 9 In the same year after Napoleon had crowned himself as the first French Emperor the Italian Republic was transformed into the first Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy 1805 1814 or Italico under his direct rule The flag of the Kingdom of Italy was that of the Republic in rectangular form charged with the golden Napoleonic eagle 11 This remained in use until the fall of Napoleon in 1814 With the fall of Napoleon and the restoration of the absolutist monarchical regimes the Italian tricolour went underground becoming the symbol of the patriotic ferments that began to spread in Italy 9 12 and the symbol which united all the efforts of the Italian people towards freedom and independence 13 In the Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia a state dependent on the Austrian Empire born after the fall of Napoleon those who exhibited the Italian tricolour were subject to the death penalty 14 The Austrians objective was in fact quoting the textual words of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria The tricolour was banned to make people forget that they are Italian 15 After the Napoleonic era the Tricolour became a symbol of the Unification of Italy struggle It was in fact adopted during the revolutions of 1820 16 the revolutions of 1830 16 the revolutions of 1848 17 18 the First Italian War of Independence 19 the Second Italian War of Independence 20 the Expedition of the Thousand 21 and the Third Italian War of Independence 22 With the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy the green white and red flag became the national flag of a united Italy 23 The Tricolour had a universal transversal meaning shared by both monarchists and republicans progressives and conservatives and Guelphs as well as by the Ghibellines The Tricolour was chosen as the flag of a united Italy also for this reason 24 On 13 June 1946 the Italian Republic was officially founded The Italian flag was modified with the decree of the President of the Council of Ministers No 1 of 19 June 1946 Compared to the monarchic banner the Savoy coat of arms was eliminated 25 26 27 This decision was later confirmed in the session of 24 March 1947 by the Constituent Assembly which decreed the insertion of article 12 of the Italian Constitution subsequently ratified by the Italian Parliament which states 26 28 29 The flag of the Republic is the Italian tricolour green white and red in three vertical bands of equal dimensions Article 12 of Constitution of Italy The members of the Constituent Assembly were deeply moved when they approved this article and as a sign of joy and respect stood up and applauded at length shortly after the approval 26 Celebrations edit nbsp Solemn change of the Guard of honour of the Corazzieri Regiment at the Quirinale Palace in Rome on the occasion of the Tricolour Day on 7 January 2016On 31 December 1996 with the same law that established the Tricolour Festival a National Committee of twenty members was set up with the aim of organizing the first solemn commemoration of the birth of the Italian flag 30 The committee was composed of institutional personalities including the presidents of the chambers and members from civil society particularly from the historical and cultural sphere 30 At that time it was also proposed not to celebrate the date or even to modify the flag itself hypotheses scarcely accepted by the members of the Parliament 31 In Reggio nell Emilia the Festa del Tricolore is celebrated in Piazza Prampolini in front of the town hall in the presence of one of the most important officers of the State the President of Italy or the president of one of the chambers who attends the flag raising on the notes of Il Canto degli Italiani and which renders military honors a reproduction of the flag of the Cispadane Republic 32 In Rome at the Quirinal Palace the ceremonial foresees instead the change of the Guard of honour in solemn form with the deployment and the parade of the Corazzieri Regiment in gala uniform and the Fanfare of the Carabinieri Cavalry Regiment 33 This solemn rite is carried out only on three other occasions during the celebrations of the Anniversary of the Unification of Italy 17 March of the Festa della Repubblica 2 June and of the National Unity and Armed Forces Day 4 November 33 See also edit nbsp Holidays portal nbsp Italy portalFlag of Italy Flags of Napoleonic Italy National colours of Italy Public holidays in Italy Anniversary of the Unification of Italy Anniversary of the Liberation Festa della Repubblica National Memorial Day of the Exiles and Foibe National Unity and Armed Forces DayCitations edit Celebrazione nazionale del bicentenario della prima bandiera nazionale Legge n 671 del 31 dicembre 1996 GU 1 del 2 gennaio 1997 a b The tri coloured standard Getting to Know Italy Ministry of Foreign Affairs retrieved 5 October 2008 Archived 23 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b c Vecchio 2003 p 42 Dal verbale della Sessione XIV del Congresso Cispadano Reggio Emilia 7 gennaio 1797 ore 11 Sala Patriottica Gli intervenuti sono 100 deputati delle popolazioni di Bologna Ferrara Modena e Reggio Emilia Giuseppe Compagnoni fa pure mozione che si renda Universale lo Stendardo o Bandiera Cispadana di tre colori Verde Bianco e Rosso e che questi tre colori si usino anche nella Coccarda Cispadana la quale debba portarsi da tutti Viene decretato Maiorino Marchetti Tricamo amp Zagami 2002 p 158 Fiorini 1897 p 685 Maiorino Marchetti Tricamo amp Zagami 2002 p 159 Lo Stendardo presidenziale in Italian Retrieved 4 March 2017 a b c Maiorino Marchetti Tricamo amp Zagami 2002 p 169 Villa 2010 p 15 Bovio 1996 p 37 Villa 2010 p 10 Ghisi Enrico Il tricolore italiano 1796 1870 Milano Anonima per l Arte della Stampa 1931 see Gay H Nelson in The American Historical Review Vol 37 No 4 pp 750 751 July 1932 JSTOR 1843352 Colangeli 1965 p 17 Bronzini 1986 p 137 a b Villa 2010 p 18 Bellocchi 2008 p 38 Busico 2005 p 33 Bellocchi 2008 p 49 Busico 2005 p 41 Busico 2005 p 197 Maiorino Marchetti Tricamo amp Zagami 2002 p 212 Storia della bandiera italiana in Italian Retrieved 14 January 2016 Maiorino Marchetti Tricamo amp Zagami 2002 p 207 Maiorino Marchetti Tricamo amp Zagami 2002 p 273 a b c Villa 2010 p 33 Tarozzi amp Vecchio 1999 p 333 Tarozzi amp Vecchio 1999 pp 337 338 Busico 2005 p 71 a b Article 1 of the law n 671 of 31 December 1996 National celebration of the bicentenary of the first national flag Il Tricolore compie duecentodieci anni in Italian Retrieved 21 January 2016 7 gennaio ecco la festa del Tricolore in Italian Retrieved 11 February 2017 a b Al via al Quirinale le celebrazioni per il 2 giugno con il Cambio della Guardia d onore in Italian 31 May 2015 Retrieved 21 January 2016 References editBellocchi Ugo 2008 Bandiera madre I tre colori della vita in Italian Scripta Maneant ISBN 978 88 95847 01 6 Bovio Oreste 1996 Due secoli di tricolore in Italian Ufficio storico dello Stato Maggiore dell Esercito SBN IT ICCU BVE 0116837 Bronzini Giovanni Battista Dal Mestre Luigi 1986 La restaurazione austriaca a Milano nel 1814 Lares in Italian Casa Editrice Leo S Olschki LII 3 425 464 Busico Augusta 2005 Il tricolore il simbolo la storia in Italian Presidenza del Consiglio dei Ministri Dipartimento per l informazione e l editoria SBN IT ICCU UBO 2771748 Colangeli Oronzo 1965 Simboli e bandiere nella storia del Risorgimento italiano PDF in Italian Patron SBN IT ICCU SBL 0395583 Fiorini Vittorio 1897 Le origini del tricolore italiano Nuova Antologia di Scienze Lettere e Arti in Italian LXVII fourth series 239 267 and 676 710 SBN IT ICCU UBO 3928254 Maiorino Tarquinio Marchetti Tricamo Giuseppe Zagami Andrea 2002 Il tricolore degli italiani Storia avventurosa della nostra bandiera in Italian Arnoldo Mondadori Editore ISBN 978 88 04 50946 2 Tarozzi Fiorenza Vecchio Giorgio 1999 Gli italiani e il tricolore in Italian Il Mulino ISBN 88 15 07163 6 Vecchio Giorgio 2003 Il tricolore Almanacco della Repubblica in Italian Bruno Mondadori pp 42 55 ISBN 88 424 9499 2 Villa Claudio 2010 I simboli della Repubblica la bandiera tricolore il canto degli italiani l emblema in Italian Comune di Vanzago SBN IT ICCU LO1 1355389 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tricolour Day La Bandiera degli italiani dal sito del Quirinale in Italian Lo stendardo presidenziale dal sito del Quirinale in Italian Il Museo del Tricolore in Italian Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Cronologia degli avvenimenti che furono alle origini del tricolore della bandiera nazionale italiana in Italian Per approfondire l origine della bandiera tricolore si consiglia di consultare alcuni testi segnalati qui in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tricolour Day amp oldid 1146531096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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