National flag
Encyclopedia : N : NA : NAT : National flag
A national flag is a flag that symbolises a country and that can usually be flown by citizens of that country.
Both public and private buildings such as schools and courthouses often fly the national flag. In some countries, the national flags are only flown from non-military buildings on certain flag days.
There are three distinct types of national flag for use on land, and three for use at sea, although many countries use identical designs for several (and sometimes all) of these types of flag.
National flags on land
On land, there is a distinction between civil flags (FIAV symbol ), state flags ( ), and war or military flags ( ). State flags are those used officially by government agencies, whereas civil flags may be flown by anyone irrespective of whether they are linked to government. War flags (also called military flags) are used by military organisations such as armies.In practice, many countries (including the United States and the United Kingdom) have identical flags for these three purposes; national flag is sometimes used as a vexillological term to refer to such a three-purpose flag ( ). In a number of countries, however — notably those in Latin America — there is a distinct difference between civil and state flags. In most cases, the civil flag is a simplified version of the state flag, the difference often being the presence of a coat of arms on the state flag which is absent from the civil flag.
Very few countries use a war flag that differs from the state flag.
National ensigns at sea
Many countries have special national flags for use at sea called national ensigns. Again, there are three varieties: the civil ensign ( ), flown by private vessels; state ensigns (also called government ensigns; ), flown by government ships; and war ensigns (also called naval ensigns; ), flown by naval vessels. The ensign is flown from an ensign-staff at the stern of the ship, or from a gaff when underway. Both these positions are superior to any other on the ship, even though the masthead is higher. In the absence of a gaff the ensign may be flown from the yardarm. (See Maritime flags.) National flags may also be flown by aircraft and the vehicles of important officials.In some countries, such as the United States and France, the national ensign is identical to the national flag, while in others, such as the United Kingdom and Japan, there are specific ensigns for maritime use. Most countries do not have a separate state ensign, although the United Kingdom is a rare exception, in having a red ensign for civil use, a white ensign as its naval ensign, and a blue ensign for government non-military vessels.
Similar flags
Although the national flag is meant to be a unique symbol for a country, it is possible that different countries do have similar or equal flags. An example of this are the flags of Monaco and Indonesia, which only differ slightly in size. Another pair of highly similar flags are the flags of the Netherlands and of Luxembourg; it is sometimes incorrectly stated that those countries use a slightly different shade of blue as a distinction whereas in fact their dimensions are a better differentiation. The flags of Romania and Chad are almost completely identical, with Andorra's also being very similar. Furthermore, it is also possible that a country's current flag is similar to flags that have been used by other countries earlier in history. A modern example is the flag of Albania, which was the war flag of Eastern Roman Empire or Byzantine Empire.Flag protocol
There is a great deal of protocol involved in the proper display of national flags. For example, national flags should never be flown upside down (where this is possible) except as a distress signal.There are many regulations concerning the display of national flags, but the general rule is that the national flag should be flown in the position of honor, and not in an inferior position to any other flag (although some countries make an exception for royal standards). The following regulations are typical.
- When a national flag is displayed together with any other flags, it must be hoisted first and lowered last.
- When a national flag is displayed together with the national flags of other countries, all the flags should be of approximately equal size and must be flown at an equal height, although the national flag of the host country should be flown in the position of honour (in the center of an odd number of flagstaffs or at the far right — left from an observer's point of view — of an even number of flagstaffs).
- When a national flag is displayed together with flags other than national flags, it should be flown on a separate flagstaff, either higher or in the position of honor.
- When a national flag is displayed together with any other flags on the same flagstaff, it must be at the top, though separate flagstaffs are preferable.
- When a national flag is displayed together with any other flag on crossed staffs, the national flag must be on the observer's left and its staff must be in front of the staff of the other flag.
- When a national flag is displayed together with another flag or flags in procession, the national flag must be on the marching right. If there is a row of flags, it should be in the position of honor.
Nation, country and state
In the English language, the terms nation (cultural), country (geographical) and state (political) do have precise meanings, but in daily speech and writing they are often used interchangeably, and are open to different interpretations. For example,
Cornwall is considered by some to be a nation in } which is a constituent country of the . The United Kingdom is an internationally recognised sovereign state. The terminology can be further complicated by the use of the word state to mean a non-sovereign sub-entity of a sovereign state, as is done in the and #redirect . In most English-speaking countries when the terms state, nation and country are used internally, they are understood by the context in which they are used and are not controversial. However, when these terms are used to describe the statehood aspirations of a people who do not currently live in the internationally recognised independent state they would like to inhabit, these terms can be controversial and open to misunderstanding.See also
- Flag terminology
- Gallery of sovereign-state flags
- Gallery of maritime flags
- List of sovereign states
- Gallery of sovereign state coats of arms
- National emblem
- Coat of arms
- Flag desecration
- Flag Day
- Flags of the World
External links
- [Flags of the World], a massive online vexillological database on national and many other kinds of flags
- [The World All Countries Flags], a website about national symbols
- [World Flag Database]
- [OpenClipart.org] collection includes flags of the world in vector graphics format (SVG)
- [National Flags database and History of flags]
| National flags | National coats of arms |
|---|---|
| Flags of sovereign states | Coats of arms of sovereign states |
| Flags of dependent territories Flags of unrecognized states | Coats of arms of dependent territories Coats of arms of unrecognized states |
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
