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Italy - Houseflags of Italian Maritime Companies (A-B)

Last modified: 2007-09-08 by dov gutterman
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Achille & Vincenzo Onorato


image by Jarig Bakker, 18 November 2005

Achille & Vincenzo Onorato, Naples - blue flag, two white wings with in center a white oval fimbriated black charged with intertwined green "A" and red "O".
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World, compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995.
Jarig Bakker, 18 November 2005


Adria


image by Željko Heimer, 27 March 2004

The 1930 "Larousse Commercial" lists this company as Italian, based as it was in Fiume, but we all know that Fiume is now Rijeka, Croatia.
"Adria" S.A. di Navigazione Marittima has a blue flag with a red saltire (the arms equal to 1/5 of the flag's width), over all a yellow anchor (without rope) which bears a letter A, also yellow: its apex has been flattened to run parallel to, and immediately below, the anchor's stock. Incidentally, the A rests completely within the saltire, you could say it sits astride on it. The anchor itself takes up about 1/3 of the flag's length and almost completely fills up the flag's width. Funnel: black.
See also previous flag below, showing an earlier, pre-WWI version (technically, a Hungarian house flag).
The blue in the 1930 flag could refer to Italy, whereas the central emblem survived in a adapted form. I believe the firm helped to make up a new company to be called Adriatica di Navigazione.
Jan Mertens, 31 October 2003

In "All about Ships and Shipping", 1938 I found about the same image, with minor differences: the legs of the "A" are in blue; the anchor takes 2/3 flagheight, and there's a yellow 5-pointed star in the top.
Caption: "Adria", Soc. Anon. di Nav. Marittima (I sailed by one of their ships from Palermo to Tunis in 1965).
Jarig Bakker, 31 October 2003

I did see a very small yellow speck on the 1930 image... I thought it was due to bad printing...
Jan Mertens, 31 October 2003

My deductions, which are only guesswork, are that it originated as the Austro-Hungarian company shown by Griffin 1895 as Adriatic Hungarian Sea Navigation Co. or Adria-Hungarian Sea Navigation Co., by Lloyds 1904, 1912 and Reed 1912 as Royal Hungarian Sea Navigation Co. "Adria" Ltd., and by Merchant Ships 1942 as the Hungarian company Adria Regia Ungarica which after WWI became the Italian Adria company [i.e. "Adria" Società Anonima di Navigazione Marittima] which merged into Società Anonima di Navigazione "Tirrenia" in 1938.
For the "Previous Flag" four sources show flags differing slightly in each case. Griffin 1895 has the emblem in black outline on the white oval comprising a foul anchor with above it a crown and below a scroll. Lloyds 1904 shows basically the same except it is in red and the crown looks more like a mitre and touches the top of the anchor and there is a suggestion (possibly imagination) that a red "A" surmounts the anchor stock with the scroll shown as red with white print. Lloyds 1912 shows a blue anchor but the crown and scroll look more like printing blots or possibly misprinting of the anchor cable [I am working from an actual edition which I assume is also clearer than the web version], and I presume that fairly enough they have been ignored when producing the previous flag shown as what they actually are only becomes clear when comparing with the other sources. Finally Reed 1912 gives a larger oval touching top and bottom which is basically the same with the red "A" appearing to exist and the scroll being red with black letters. None of the scrolls can be read of course.
Neale Rosanoski, 24 March 2004

The item atop the emblem would be, most probably the St. Stephen's crown (I think it is a safe guess), but I decided to ignore it for the moment, just as I did with the scroll (that would read, no doubt either "ADRIA" or "FIUME"). Anyway, the details for the emblem were of little significance for the books of the kind we use as sources here (they were meant for recognizing purposes and not to be fully faitful), and we would probably need to get hold of a real flag or at least some other material containing the Adrial logo (like the headers of writing paper or the time tables). Anyway, it seems to me that the letter A and the cable was red, while the anchor was blue.
Željko Heimer, 27 March 2004

Previous Flag ?


image by Željko Heimer, 27 March 2004

After looking at the Lloyd's 1912 on the Net, I found the drawing of the previous company of the same name (it's listed under number 188 there).
Željko Heimer, 26 December 2003

The post 1918 flag of the S.A. di Navigazione Maritima "Adria" - Fiume is blue with red saltire and overall an anchor and a letter A topped with a yellow five-pointed star. My image is prepaired based on Larousse Commercial, 1930 (thanks to Jan Mertens) and "All about Ships and Shipping", 1938 (thanks to Jarig Bakker).
This only makes the assumption of the crown above the pre-1918 emblem more probably - the five-pointed "star of freedom" was the emblem of Fiume that replaced the Hungarian emblems "as a mater of default", if I am not much mistaken.
Željko Heimer, 27 March 2004


Adriatica di Navigazione


image by Jorge Candeias, 5 Febuary 1999

A white-red vertical bicolour with the lion of St. Marcus centered.
Jorge Candeias, 5 Febuary 1999

The flag of this maritime company based in Venice , Italy (as can see also from its flag) is based on http://www.adriatica.it/inglese/index.html (defunct) and can be seen here.
Dov Gutterman , 16 January 1999

Formed 1932 by the merger of several companies as Compagnia di Navigazione Adriatica with subsequent changes leading to the current title of Adriatica di Navigazione S.p.A.
Neale Rosanoski, 11 April 2003


Almare di Navigazione 


image by Jarig Bakker, 18 November 2005

Almare di Navigazione  S.P.A., Genoa; blue flag, a white device (anchor with Lorraine cross?).
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World, compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995.
Jarig Bakker, 18 November 2005


Alpha Trading


image by Jarig Bakker, 11 July 2004

Alpha Trading SpA (Milan, Genoa; also Monaco) is an Italian firm founded in 1985 dealing in various petroleum-based products, active on the home market (ports, for instance) and also internationally.
The firm's flag with company logo at <www.alphatrading.it> is showing a white sunburst on a red panel in the center of a white flag.
Jan Mertens, 18 January 2004


Angelo Parodi


image by Jarig Bakker, 14 January 2005

Angelo Parodi, Genoa - white flag; red intertwined "AP".
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship Companies, compiled by F.J.N. Wedge, Glasgow, 1926 [wed26].
Jarig Bakker, 14 January 2005


image by Ivan Sache, 21 February 2005


image by Ivan Sache, 21 February 2005

Angelo Parodi - Appears to have become Società Anonima Emanuele V. Parodi by the 1930s [a later ship was name "Angelo Parodi"] with the flag first of all having a small horizontal biband canton of yellow and blue [see here] as shown by Talbot-Booth in 1936-1938, or by adding the canton and changing the letter to a single "P" [see here] as shown by Brown 1934 onwards and Talbot-Booth agreeing by 1942. Dating from 1896 the company sold its last ships in 1965.
Neale Rosanoski, 20 February 2005


Aretusa


image by Jarig Bakker, 20 February 2006

Aretusa S.p.A., Rome; white flag, red hoist-diagonal stripe; in canton "CCG" over two wavy bars, all black.
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World, compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995.
Jarig Bakker, 20 February 2006

Aretusa was a nymph in the ancient mythology.
Ivan Sache, 21 February 2006


Atlantica


image by Jarig Bakker, 18 November 2005

Atlantica S.p.A. di Navigazione, Genoa - blue flag, white "A".
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World, compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995.
Jarig Bakker, 18 November 2005


Attilio Milesi, Fu Pietro


image by Ivan Sache, 1 Febuary 2004

Following the link found by Joe Mc Millan - The Mystic Seaport Foundation <www.mysticseaport.org>, we can reach the 1911 Lloyd's flagbook, whose full title is (after the scan of the cover): 'Lloyd's book of house flags and funnels of the principal steamship lines of the world and the house flags of various lines of sailing vessels', published at Lloyd's Royal Exchange. London. E.C. On p. 134, we have:
#2052. Attilio Milesi, Fu Pietro, Genoa. The flag is swallow-tailed, blue with a M (white) near the hoist and two white stars placed vertically near the fly.
Ivan Sache, 1 Febuary 2004


Ausonia Crociere


image by Jarig Bakker, 1 September 2005

Ausonia Crociere S.p.A., Genova - white burgee, top red border; in bottom green wavy stripe.
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World, compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995.
Jarig Bakker, 1 September 2005


Becchi & Calcagno


image by Jarig Bakker, 19 February 2004

Becchi & Calcagno, Savona - horizontal triband RWR, proportioned 1:2:1; on white contoured "B.C.".
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels of British and Foreign Steamship Companies, compiled by F.J.N. Wedge, Glasgow, 1926 [wed26]
Jarig Bakker, 19 February 2004


Bibolini


image by Jarig Bakker, 1 September 2005

Bibolini Societa di Navigazione S.p.A., Genoa - blue flag, "B" between two 5-pointed stars, all white.
Source: Brown's Flags and Funnels Shipping Companies of the World, compiled by J.L. Loughran, Glasgow, 1995.
Jarig Bakker, 1 September 2005

See also: Carboflotta