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Flag of France - History

Flag of France - History: Encyclopedia II - Flag of France - History

During the Ancien Régime, the flag of Saint-Denis was used -- red, with 2, 3 or 5 spikes. Originally, it was the personal flag of Charlemagne, given to him by the Pope. Over the time, it became the royal banner under the Carolingians and the Capetians. It was stored in Saint-Denis abbey, where it was taken when war broke out. In the French military, every regiment had its own flag. The accidental attack of French regiment between each other at the Battle of Fleurus in 1690 let to the habit of attaching a white scarf to the flags of the regiments -- whit ...

See also:

Flag of France, Flag of France - Design, Flag of France - History, Flag of France - Influence, Flag of France - National flags, Flag of France - Flags of ethnic groups, Flag of France - Historic flags

Flag of France, Flag of France - Design, Flag of France - Flags of ethnic groups, Flag of France - Historic flags, Flag of France - History, Flag of France - Influence, Flag of France - National flags, French ensigns, French colonial flags, Marianne

Flag of France: Encyclopedia II - Flag of France - History



Flag of France - History

During the Ancien Régime, the flag of Saint-Denis was used -- red, with 2, 3 or 5 spikes. Originally, it was the personal flag of Charlemagne, given to him by the Pope. Over the time, it became the royal banner under the Carolingians and the Capetians. It was stored in Saint-Denis abbey, where it was taken when war broke out.

In the French military, every regiment had its own flag. The accidental attack of French regiment between each other at the Battle of Fleurus in 1690 let to the habit of attaching a white scarf to the flags of the regiments -- white being the colour of the kings of France.

The origins of the tricolore are said to be a rosette, created in July 1789 during the French Revolution, which (according to legend among vexillologists) used a combination of the colours of the coat of arms of Paris (red and blue), symbolically separated by the royal colour (white), with the combination often being credited to the Marquis de Lafayette. There are many theories and suppositions about the choice of colours and indeed Lafayette's involvement in the process. One theory says that Lafayette was inspired by the colours used by the American revolutionaries; another that it symbolized the control of the people over the monarchy (Paris' colours - blue and red - bording monarchy's colour - white) at a time when parliamentary monarchy was still seen as a possibility in France; another that the French design and scheme originated with the Dutch flag - the first tricolour.

The three colours in vertical stripes were first used as a canton on Naval flags in 1790, and extended to the whole field in 1794. The French National Convention adopted the modern blue-white-red flag as the national flag on February 15, 1794 (27 pluviôse an. II in the revolutionary calendar). The relevant part of the decree says, in translation:

The national flag shall be formed of the three national colours, set in three equal bands, vertically arranged so that the blue is nearest to the staff, the white in the middle, and the red flying.

It came into use on May 20, 1794, in order to avoid confusion in naval warfare. Its adoption was not universally welcomed; the navy threatened to mutiny, since they were at the time continuing to fight under the white flag of the monarchy. Even when the three colours had been used - for example by the army in 1791 and by the National Guard after 1789 - they were often used creatively. For example, at the Battle of Arcole Napoleon brandished a white standard, with a golden fasces lictoriae in the centre (a symbol of the former Roman Republic), and four red and blue lozenges at the corners. The vertical striped flag was adopted by the army in 1812, replacing the previous flags which were often a white cross on red and blue.

After the restoration of the Bourbon monarchy following the defeat of Napoleon in 1815 the tricolore was replaced by the royal white standard with fleur-de-lis which had been in use before the Revolution. However, the revolution of 1830 saw Louis-Philippe, the Citizen-King, ascend to the throne who again designated the tricolore as the national flag, which it has remained ever since.

During the Revolution of 1848, the red flag was raised by radicals supporting a socialist alternative government to the new French Second Republic while moderates rallied to the tricolore.

In World War II, Vichy France continued to use the traditional French standard. To distinguish themselves, Free French Forces under Charles De Gaulle bore a Tricolore with a red Cross of Lorraine superimposed in the centre.

For the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France, Adidas designed the official match ball with a triode blue, white and red design and called it the "Tricolore".

Other related archives

17 May, 1789, 1791, 1794, 1798, 1799, 1812, 1815, 1830, 1840, 1853, 1861, 1884, 1919, 1986, 1998, Acadians, Adidas, American English, Ancien Régime, Battle of Arcole, Battle of Fleurus, Belgium, Bourbon monarchy, British English, Capetians, Carolingians, Chad, Charlemagne, Charles De Gaulle, Cross of Lorraine, Dutch flag, English, FIFA World Cup, February 15, Flag of, Flag of Belgium, Flag of Cameroon, Flag of Chad, Flag of Côte d'Ivoire, Flag of Ireland, Flag of Italy, Flag of Lebanon, Flag of Louisiana, Flag of Mexico, Flag of Romania, France, Free French Forces, French, French Mandate of Lebanon, French Revolution, French Second Republic, French colonial flags, French ensigns, Ireland, Italy, Louis-Philippe, Marianne, Marquis de Lafayette, May 20, Mexico, Napoleon, National Convention, National Guard, Newfoundland, Norway, Paris, Parthenopaean Republic, Revolution of 1848, Roman Republic, Romania, Saint-Denis, Southern Africa, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, Vexillological symbol, Vichy France, World War II, canton, colours used by the American revolutionaries, fasces lictoriae, fleur-de-lis, lozenges, national flag, navy, red flag, rosette, tricolour, vexillologists



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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