The flag was designed by Cícero Pedro Leão and adopted 10 December 1977;
revised by Professor Arcinóe Antônio Peixoto de Faria. As usual, the coat
of arms represents the municipal government, the white circle the city
itself as seat of the municipality, the yellow rays the radiation of
municipal authority throughout the municipal territory, and the green field
the rural areas of the municipality. Color symbolism is given as:
white--peace, amity, labor, prosperity, purity, and religiousness
yellow--glory, splendor, greatness, wealth, and sovereignty
green--honor, civility, joy, abundance, and hope.
The coat of arms is green with a white jewel above a white barrulet wavy; in
base two hunting horns above two crossed arrows, all gold. Shield flanked
by black smoking chimneys with yellow anvils and hammers at their bases,
surrounded by sheaves of bean, soy, wheat and coffee. The scroll is
inscribed "ITAPORÃ" flanked by the date "10-12-1953," when Itaporã gained
its municipal status. The wavy bar is for the Rio Brilhante, while the
jewel is a canting charge representing the Tupi-Guarani' name Ita (stone)
porã (beautiful). The name is believed to have originated from the diamonds
present in the Rio Brilhante and its tributaries. The hunting horns are for
livestock raising and the arrows for the Indian village where the municipality now stands. Source:
http://www.itapora.com.br/simb_municipais/default.htm Joseph McMillan, 2 July 2002