
Last modified: 2015-01-17 by ivan sache
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The municipality of Villalobos (303 inhabitants in 2012; 4,320 ha) is located in the northwest of Zamora Province, 55 km of Zamora.
Ivan Sache, 5 March 2014
The flag and arms of Villalobos are prescribed by a Decree adopted on  
14 April 1993 by the Provincial Government, signed on 30 April 1993 by  
the President of the Government, and published on 21 May 1993 in the  
official gazette of   
Castilla y León, No. 95 (text).
The symbols are described as follows:
Flag: Flag of vertical display, rectangular, yellow with two red wolves [lobos] passant in the middle.
Coat of arms: Or (yellow) two wolves gules (red) passant. The shield surmounted by a Royal Spanish crown closed [detailed description skipped].
The flag is therefore a banner of the municipal arms.
The Royal Academy of History stated that historical memoir lacked  
references to the Villalobos lineage. Instead, the proposed municipal  
arms are those of the Osorio family, erroneously believed to have  
ruled Villalobos in the 11th century. The Villalobos family, famous in  
the 13th-14th centuries, consistently used canting arms (with wolves,  
lobos). They are shown on three seals dated from the late 13th  
century and on various funerary monuments of the time. None of these  
sources, of course, can give hint on the colours of the arms. The  
colours of the two wolves are known, but much later, after the  
transfer of Villalobos to the Osorio by Henry II. It is believed that  
the Osorio borrowed the arms of the Villalobos, including the colours.  
Granting to a municipality the arms of a lineage is not always  
suitable, but totally justified here, provided the arms used are those  
of the Villalobos and not of the Osorio. It is recommended to improve  
the representation of the wolves, using one of the several available  
models from the 13th century.
There is no objection to the proposed flag, rectangular, in  
proportions 2:3, yellow with two red wolves (Buletín de la Real Academia de la Historia, 1994, 191, 2:395-396).
Ivan Sache, 5 March 2014