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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Imperial period  





3 Republic  





4 References  














National Seal of Brazil






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


National Seal of Brazil
Versions
Colored seal
ArmigerFederative Republic of Brazil
Adopted19 November 1899; 124 years ago (1899-11-19)
MottoOrdem e Progresso (Order and Progress)
UseGraduation diplomas, consular and diplomatic papers, etc.

The National Seal of Brazil (Portuguese: Selo Nacional do Brasil) is one of Brazil's national symbols, displayed on several official documents, such as graduation diplomas, consular and diplomatic papers, military conscription forms, etc. Most documents, however, feature the National Coat of Arms instead of the National Seal.

History[edit]

A national stamp of 1871

Imperial period[edit]

The use of seal in official documents derives from the Empire of Brazil, in which the stamp in relief stamp in the shape of the imperial coat of arms was used. This was packed in a wrapper and commonly made with sayings in Latin or in Portuguese about the emperor, for example: "Pedro II, Constitutional Emperor of Brazil" or "Pedro II - perpetual defender of Brazil". the seal of the imperial era was created by the ministerial notice signed by Luís Pereira da Nóbrega de Sousa Coutinho on October 24, 1822.[1]

Republic[edit]

The design of the National Seal is also represented on the reverse side of the Great Seal of the Arms of the Federative Republic of Brazil (that bears the image of the country's coat of arms on the obverse side), and is used by the Presidency of the Republic to authenticate solemn documents together with the President's signature, such as instruments of ratification of international treaties.

The wax or printed impression of the National Seal is also used to authenticate the original version of Laws promulgated by the President of Brazil.

The National Seal, together with the nation's flag, anthem and coat of arms, is officially recognised as a national symbol since the Brazilian Republic was formed; its appearance and design is regulated by law.

References[edit]

  1. ^ CORREIA FILHO, Jonas de Moraes. Símbolos Nacionais na Independência. [Rio de janeiro]: Edição do autor, 1994. Pág. 50 (in portuguese)


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    This page was last edited on 20 May 2024, at 07:04 (UTC).

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