When the states were dissolved and the Department of Santander was formed the symbols were obsolete and needed to change.
Modifications
In 1972, the Governor of Santander officially adopted the new flag of Santander by means of Decree No. 579 of 1972.
This flag served as the departmental flag until 2006 when it was modified by means of Decree No. 254 of 2006. The new flag would have eight stars instead of six, as in 2005, the Departmental Congress had modified the number of provinces from six to eight, and because the stars in the flag represented the provinces, the flag needed to be changed to represent its original meaning.[2]
Flag of the Federal State of Santander (1857-1863)
Flag of the Sovereign State of Santander (1863-1886)
Flag of Santander (1972-2004)
Flag of Santander (2004-2007)
Flag of Santander (2008-2019)
Description
The flag of Santander has a complicated design; it is a fimbriated horizontal bicolour triband, with a red stripe in the hoist that has eight stars.
Article 2 of Decree No. 579 of 1972 states that the flag of Santander would be a vertrectangle with two thirds the width in relation with its length, surmounted by a stripe of gules in the hoist, with a vertical line of six stars in argent. The field would be cut in the middle by a stripe of or of a quarter in width in respect to the flag, on top of this would be in the middle another horizontal stripe in sable, a third of the size of the previous stripe.
Due to the latest modifications, the stars would be eight, instead of six.
Meanings
The red hoist symbolizes the nobility and the vertical bravery of the Santanderian race.
The vert denotes loyalty, hope and the certainty with which the citizens of the department have worked its land and improved its industry with great effort.
The or and sable stripes, symbolize the natural resources of the land that have been exploited since the times of the colony, these are gold, coal and petroleum.[3]