
Last modified: 2012-02-11 by ian macdonald
Keywords: mato grosso | rondonopolis | quarters (red | blue) | cross (black) | disk (white) | coat of arms | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
![[Rondonópolis, MT (Brazil)]](../images/b/br-mt-rp.gif) image by Ivan Sache, 27 
January 2012
 image by Ivan Sache, 27 
January 2012
Quarterly red and blue with a white-fimbriated black cross; overall the 
municipal coat of arms on a white disk.  The coat of arms shows the Brazilian 
explorer and Indian rights advocate Marshal Cándido Rondón, for whom the 
city is named, between two cows' heads and above a factory.
Source: Official municipal website
Joseph McMillan, 13 March 2003
The municipality of Rondonópolis (198,949 inhabitants in 2010, therefore 
the 3rd most populous municipality in Mato Grosso; 4,165 sq. km) is located 
in southeastern Mato Grosso, 230 km of Cuiabá.
Rondonópolis is named for 
Marshal Cândido Rondon (1865-1958), who managed the set up of telegraphic 
lines linking Amazonas and Mato Grosso to the rest of the country. In 1922, a 
telegraph post was inaugurated on the bank of Rio Vermelho ("Red River").
State Decree-Law no. 395 of 10 August 1915 organized the colonization of the 
region of Rio Vermelho, setting up an area of 2,000 ha for the building of a 
future settlement. Municipal Law 2,777 of 22 October 1997 prescribed 10 
August 1915 as the official date of foundation of Rondonópolis. In 1918, 
Otávio Pitaluga obtained the renaming of the village as Rondonópolis.
Rondonópolis was made in 1920 a district of the municipality of Santo Antônio 
do Leverger. In the next decade, epidemics decreased the population of the 
district while the diamond rush (1924) caused the boost of Poxoréo. 
Accordingly, Poxoréo was made a municipality in 1938 by State Law No. 218, 
with Rondonópolis as one of its districts. Rondonópolis reemerged in 1947 as 
the agricultural "last frontier" of Mato Grosso, and was made a municipality 
on 10 December 1953. Agriculture was significantly modernized in the 
1960s-1980s, so that Rondonópolis became in 1990 the "Agribusiness Capital" 
of Brazil.
The municipal symbols of Rondonópolis, designed by Arcionoe 
Antônio Peixoto de Faria, are prescribed by Municipal Law No. 426 of 13 May
1975. They are mentioned in Article 11 of the Municipal Statutes, adopted on 
5 May 1990, which say that the municipal colors are the colors of the flag.
The Samnitic shield, introduced from France to Portugal, symbolizes the 
Latin race as the main colonist and founder of the Brazilian nation. The 
mural crown is the heraldic representation of power; its eight towers 
represent a town of second rank. The red gates represent the directions given 
by the leaders of the municipality. The blue color of the field is a symbol 
of justice, nobleness, perseverance, zeal and loyalty. In the upper part 
of the shield, a medallion argent is charged with a portrait proper of 
Marshal Rondon, the namesake of the municipality. The silver color represents 
peace, friendship, work, prosperity, purity and religious feeling.
Flanking the medallion, two beef cattle's heads represents cattle breeding, 
the main source of income of the municipality when the arms were created.
In the lower part of the shield, a red fess wavy represents Rio Vermelho. The 
fishes recalls that the rivers is highly prized by anglers. Gold is a 
symbol of glory, splendor, highness, wealth and sovereignty. The supporters, 
cotton and rice, represents the main products of the fertile soil.
http://www.rondonopolis.mt.gov.br/?pg=conteudo&intCatID=124 
- Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 27 
January 2012