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Star (heraldry)

In heraldry, the term star may refer to any star-shaped charge with any number of rays, which may appear straight or wavy, and may or may not be pierced. While there has been much confusion between the two due to their similar shape, a star with straight-sided rays is usually called a mullet in English heraldry while one with wavy rays is usually called an estoile.[1]

1545 depiction of the flag of the city of Maastricht in the Netherlands (gules, a six-pointed mullet, argent)

While a mullet may have any number of points, it is presumed to have five unless otherwise specified in the blazon, and pierced mullets are common; estoiles, however, are presumed to have six rays and (as of 1909) had not been found pierced.[1] In Scottish heraldry, an estoile is the same as in English heraldry, but mullet refers only to a mullet pierced (also called a spur revel), while one that is not pierced is called a star.[1]

Terminology edit

The use of the word star in blazons, and how that charge appears in coat armory, varies from one jurisdiction to another. In Scots heraldry, both star and mullet interchangeably mean a star with five straight rays;[citation needed] the official record from 1673 gives Murray of Ochtertyre azur three Starrs argent ... (Public Register, vol 1 p 188), while the Ordinary of Arms produced by a late 19th century Lyon King of Arms 'modernizes' the original as Az. three mullets arg. .... In Canadian heraldry the usual term is mullet, but there is also the occasional six-pointed star (e.g. in Vol. IV, at p. 274 and in online version of the Canadian Public Register), which is what others would blazon as a six-pointed mullet. The United States Army Institute of Heraldry, the official heraldic authority in the United States, uses the term mullet in its blazons,[2] but elsewhere, as in US government documents describing the flag of the United States and the Great Seal of the United States, the term star is constantly used, and these nearly always appear with five straight-sided points.

The term mullet or molet refers to a star with straight sides, typically having five or six points, but may have any number of points specified in the blazon. If the number of points is not specified, five points are presumed in Gallo-British heraldry, and six points are presumed in German-Nordic heraldry.[citation needed]

Unlike estoiles, mullets have straight (rather than wavy) rays and may have originally represented the rowel of a spur, rather than a celestial star.[3] The term is said to be derived from French molette, a spur-rowel,[3] although it was in use in heraldry even before rowel spurs.[4]

The term estoile refers to wavy-sided stars, usually of six points, though they may also be blazoned with a different number of points, often eight (e.g. "Portsmouth County Council" pictured here 2016-11-20 at the Wayback Machine), and many variants feature alternating straight and wavy rays (e.g. "Honford" pictured here). The term derives from Old French estoile 'star', in reference to a celestial star (cf. Modern French étoile), from Latin stella 'star'.

Classical heraldry edit

 
The Washington coat of arms at Selby Abbey (mid 15th century)

Stars are comparatively rare in European heraldry during the medieval period. An early reference of dubious historicity is reported by Johannes Letzner, who cites Conradus Fontanus (an otherwise unknown authority) to the effect that one Curtis von Meinbrechthausen, a knight of Saxony, in 1169 after committing a murder lost his rank and arms, described as an eight-pointed star beneath a chevron. In Scotland, the armigers of Clan Murray and Clan Douglas used arms with stars as early as the 12th or 13th century. Examples of stars in a late medieval heraldry of the Holy Roman Empire include those of Wentz von Niederlanstein (1350), Gemm (attested 1352), Geyer von Osterberg (1370), Enolff Ritter von Leyen (d. 1392).[5]

Under the system of cadency in use in England and Ireland since the late 15th century, a third son bears a mullet (unpierced) as a difference.[6]

Stars become much more popular as heraldic charges in the early modern era, especially in then-recent family coats of arms of burghers and patricians, as well as in coats of arms of cities (e.g. Maastricht, Bozen, Kaufbeuren).[7] The coat of arms of Valais originates in the 16th century, when seven stars representing its Seven Tithings were added to the party per pale coat of arms of the Bishop of Sion. Of the higher nobility in Siebmachers Wappenbuch (1605), the landgrave of Hessen and the counts of Waldeck and Erbach have stars in their coats of arms, as do several Swiss knights.[8]

United States edit

 
The American flag as described in the Flag Resolution passed by the Second Continental Congress on 14 June 1777.

Stars are nearly ubiquitous in United States heraldry and vexillology and nearly always appear unpierced with five straight-sided points. In the flag of the United States, each star represents one state.[9] The flag adopted in 1777 is the attributed origin of the thirteen stars, representing the thirteen United States, appearing on the Great Seal since 1780.[10]

A mullet "barbed to chief" appears in the arms of the 240th Signal Battalion of the 40th Infantry Division of the California Army National Guard United States Army.[11]

Modern use edit

In the design of modern flags and emblems, the stars (mullets, usually five-pointed) when standing alone often represent concepts like "unity" or "independence". When arranged in groups, they often enumerate provinces or other components of the nation (such as ethnic groups). In the flags of Nauru and the Marshall Islands, this enumeration is done by the points of a single star rather than by multiple number of stars.[citation needed]

Some flags of countries on the southern hemisphere show a depiction of the Southern Cross consisting of four or five stars. The star and crescent symbol is found in flags of states succeeding the Ottoman Empire, which used flags with this symbol during 1793-1923.

The twelve stars on the Flag of Europe (1955) symbolize unity.[12]

The green five-pointed star on the Esperanto flag (1890) symbolizes the five inhabited continents.

The 50 stars of the US flag is the largest number on any national flag. The second-largest is 27, on the flag of Brazil.

The current national flags featuring stars include:

Flag Date # of stars Points Stars represent Description/comment
  United States 1777; 1960 50 5 enumerate US states originally 13 stars, 50 stars since 1960, see timeline of the flag of the United States
  Chile 1817 1 5 ideal "The star represents a guide to progress and honor"
  Brazil 1822; 1992 27 5 enumerate States of Brazil originally 19 stars, 27 stars since 1992, see Flag of Brazil
  Tunisia 1831; 1956 1 5 star and crescent based on the Ottoman flag[citation needed]
  Turkey 1844; 1936 1 5 star and crescent the Republic of Turkey was established in 1923 and its Flag Law was passed in 1936, declaring the continued use of the Ottoman flag that had been flown since 1844 (an earlier variant with an eight-pointed star dates to ca. 1793).
  Cuba 1849;

1902

1 5 ideal "The white star in the triangle stands for independence". Based on the flag carried by Narciso López in 1850.
  Venezuela 1859; 1930 8 5 enumerate provinces various arrangement of the stars in design changes since 1859. Twenty stars during 1859–1863.
  Honduras 1866 5 5 enumerate provinces based on the flag of the Federal Republic of Central America. The five stars also represent the historical provinces of that state, not subdivisions of Honduras itself.
  New Zealand 1869; 1902 4 5 Southern Cross used as a governmental ensign since 1869, made the official national flag in 1902. Designed by Albert Hastings Markham under a request from Governor George Bowen.
  Puerto Rico 1895; 1952 1 5 ideal The white star in the triangle represents the island of Puerto Rico. Based on the design of the Cuban flag, see Flag of Puerto Rico
  Philippines 1898 3 5 enumerate island groups the three stars represent the three major geographical island groups that compose the Philippines: Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.
  Australia 1901 6 7; 5 Southern Cross; Commonwealth Star seven-pointed stars for the Commonwealth Star and the main stars of the constellation, plus a smaller five-pointed star representing Epsilon Crucis. Based on the winning design in the 1901 Federal Flag Design Competition.
  Azerbaijan 1918 1 8 star and crescent "the eight-pointed star points to the eight letters of the name Azerbaijan (in Arabic script)"[13]
  Panama 1925 2 5 ideal "the blue star stands for the purity and honesty of the life of the country; the red star represents the authority and law in the country"
  Jordan 1928 1 7 ideal "The seven points symbolize the seven verses of the first surah of the Qur’an. The seven points also represent faith in one God, humanity, humility, national spirit, virtue, social justice, and aspiration. The star also stands for the unity of the Arab nation."
  Vietnam 1945 1 5 ideal the Communist Star; "The five-pointed yellow star represents the unity of workers, peasants, intellectuals, traders and soldiers in building socialism"
  Pakistan 1947 1 5 ideal the star represents "light". The crescent and star symbolize progress and light respectively.
  North Korea 1948 1 5 ideal the Communist Star
  People's Republic of China 1949 5 5 ideal "Five-starred Red Flag" (五星红旗, Wǔxīng Hóngqí), one large star representing the Communist Party surrounded by four smaller ones depicting the four then social classes
  Samoa 1949 5 5 Southern Cross
  Somalia 1954 1 5 ideal "Star of Unity"
  European Union 1955; 1985 12 5 ideal "unity among Europeans". Believed to also be a reference to the Catholic iconographic tradition of showing the Blessed Virgin Mary as the Woman of the Apocalypse, wearing a "crown of twelve stars".[14]
  Ghana 1957 1 5 ideal "the lodestar of African freedom"
  Central African Republic 1958 1 5 ideal The star "guides the steps of the Central African people towards freedom and emancipation."
  Syrian Republic 1958; 1980 2 5 enumerate states The 1958 flag was that of the United Arab Republic. The two stars originally represented Syria and Egypt as member states of that entity.
  Mauritania 1959 1 5 star and crescent
  Senegal 1960 1 5 The five points of the star are said to recall the human ideogram which was displayed in the middle of the flag of the former Mali Federation.[citation needed]
  Togo 1960 1 5 ideal "hope"[citation needed]
  Algeria 1962 1 5 star and crescent
  Malaysia 1963 1 14 enumerate states a 14-pointed star alongside a crescent, representing the 13 member states plus the federal government
  Singapore 1965 5 5 ideal five stars alongside a crescent, representing "democracy, peace, progress, justice and equality". According to Lee Kuan Yew, the Chinese population wanted five stars (influenced by the flag of the People's Republic of China) and the Muslim population wanted a crescent moon.
  Burundi 1967 3 6 ideal "Unity, Work, Progress"
  Nauru 1967 1 12 enumerate tribes
  Papua New Guinea 1971 5 5 Southern Cross
  Guinea-Bissau 1973 1 5 ideal "the Black Star of Africa"
  Grenada 1974 7 5 enumerate parishes
  Angola 1975 1 5 ideal in origin imitating the Communist Star
  Cameroon 1975 1 5 ideal "star of unity"
  Suriname 1975 1 5 ideal "The star represents the unity of all ethnic groups"
  São Tomé and Príncipe 1975 2 5 enumerate islands
  Tuvalu 1976 9 5 enumerate islands The stars are arranged in imitation of the geographic location of the islands of Tuvalu
  Djibouti 1977 1 5 ideal "The red star signifies the unity of the diverse state."
  Solomon Islands 1977 5 5 enumerate islands
  Dominica 1978 10 5 enumerate parishes
  Marshall Islands 1979 1 24 enumerate districts the points of the stars enumerate the electoral districts
  Federated States of Micronesia 1979 4 5 enumerate states Based on the Flag of the US Trust Territory of the Pacific, each star represents a constitutional State (Yap, Chuuk, Pohnpei, and Kosrae)
  Saint Kitts and Nevis 1983 2 5 ideal / enumerate islands "hope and liberty, or Saint Kitts and Nevis"
  Burkina Faso 1984 1 5 ideal "the guiding light of the revolution"
  Croatia 1990 2 6 morning star The stars are part of the coat of arms of Croatia. One star is part of the coat of arms of the Illyrian movement, and the other is part of the coat of arms of Slavonia.
  Slovenia 1991 3 6 ideal "democracy", inspired by the historical coat of arms of the Counts of Celje[15]
  Uzbekistan 1991 12 5 ideal a crescent and twelve stars, representing the "ancient calendar cycle"
  Tajikistan 1992 7 5 seven stars on heaven's mountains
  Cape Verde 1992 10 5 enumerate islands
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 1998 8 ("∞") 5 ideal a diagonal line of seven five-pointed stars, plus two half-stars cut off by the flag boundary. The stars represent "Europe" and are intended to be "infinite" in number.
  Comoros 2001 4 5 enumerate islands four stars alongside a crescent
  Turkmenistan 2001 5 5 enumerate provinces five stars alongside a crescent
  East Timor 2002 1 5 ideal "the light that guides"
  South Sudan 2005 1 5 ideal "the Star of Bethlehem, represents the unity of the states of South Sudan"
  Democratic Republic of the Congo 2007 1 5 ideal derived from the flag of Congo Free State (1885)
  Myanmar 2010 1 5 ideal "unity"

Not bearing heraldic stars as such, the 1915 Flag of Morocco and the 1996 flag of Ethiopia have a pentagram each, and the 1948 flag of Israel a hexagram or "star of David". The 1962 Flag of Nepal has what would technically be described as a 12-pointed mullet, but is intended to depict the Sun.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Fox-Davies, Arthur Charles; Graham Johnston (1909). A Complete Guide to Heraldry. pp. 295–296.
  2. ^ . The Institute of Heraldry. Archived from the original on October 26, 2017.
  3. ^ a b Volborth, Carl Alexander (1981). Heraldry: Customs, Rules and Styles. Poole, England: Blandford Press. p. 48. ISBN 0-7137-0940-5.
  4. ^ . Pimbley's Dictionary of Heraldry. 2008-03-12. Archived from the original on 2012-04-05. Retrieved 2008-02-07.
  5. ^ Christian Friedrich August von Meding, Nachrichten von adelichen Wapen, 1786.
  6. ^ Volborth, 1981. p. 80.
  7. ^ Siebmachers Wappenbuch (1605), p. 219-224
  8. ^ Siebmachers Wappenbuch (1605) pp.197-204
  9. ^ "Our Flag" (PDF). United States Government Printing Office. 1998. S. Doc 105-013. Retrieved 2009-02-07.
  10. ^ "The Great Seal of the United States" (PDF). U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs. Retrieved 2009-02-07.
  11. ^ The Institute of Heraldry, ed. (2010-11-01). "240th Signal Battalion". Department of the Army. Retrieved 2010-11-01.
  12. ^ "The European Flag, Europa (web portal)". 4 August 2007. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  13. ^ Сабухи Ахмедов, Государственный флаг Азербайджанской Республики ("The national flag of the Republic of Azerbaijan") (in Russian), citing Мярданов М., Гулийев Я., Азярбайъан Республикасынын дювлят рямзляри. Б., 2001, pp. 74-75.
  14. ^ Carlo Curti Gialdino, I Simboli dell'Unione europea, Bandiera – Inno – Motto – Moneta – Giornata. Roma: Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato S.p.A., 2005. ISBN 88-240-2503-X, pp. 80–85. Gialdino is here cited after a translation of the Italian text published by the Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l'Europe (cvce.eu):

    Irrespective of the statements by Paul M. G. Levy and the recent reconstruction by Susan Hood, crediting Arsène Heitz with the original design still seems to me the soundest option. In particular, Arsène Heitz himself, in 1987, laid claim to his own role in designing the flag and to its religious inspiration when he said that 'the flag of Europe is the flag of Our Lady' [Magnificat magazine, 1987].

    Secondly, it is worth noting the testimony of Father Pierre Caillon, who refers to a meeting with Arsène Heitz. Caillon tells of having met the former Council of Europe employee by chance in August 1987 at Lisieux in front of the Carmelite monastery. It was Heitz who stopped him and declared "I was the one who designed the European flag. I suddenly had the idea of putting the 12 stars of the Miraculous Medal of the Rue du Bac on a blue field. My proposal was adopted unanimously on 8 December 1955, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. I am telling you this, Father, because you are wearing the little blue cross of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima".

  15. ^ "Državni simboli niso čarovnija, so pa silen potencial" [National Symbols are not Magic, but Are a Strong Potential]. Primorske.si (in Slovenian). Primorske novice, d.o.o. 26 June 2011. ISSN 1580-4747.

External links edit

  • "star" at flagspot.net
  • Star Symbol 2021-04-02 at the Wayback Machine Collection

star, heraldry, heraldry, term, star, refer, star, shaped, charge, with, number, rays, which, appear, straight, wavy, pierced, while, there, been, much, confusion, between, their, similar, shape, star, with, straight, sided, rays, usually, called, mullet, engl. In heraldry the term star may refer to any star shaped charge with any number of rays which may appear straight or wavy and may or may not be pierced While there has been much confusion between the two due to their similar shape a star with straight sided rays is usually called a mullet in English heraldry while one with wavy rays is usually called an estoile 1 1545 depiction of the flag of the city of Maastricht in the Netherlands gules a six pointed mullet argent While a mullet may have any number of points it is presumed to have five unless otherwise specified in the blazon and pierced mullets are common estoiles however are presumed to have six rays and as of 1909 had not been found pierced 1 In Scottish heraldry an estoile is the same as in English heraldry but mullet refers only to a mullet pierced also called a spur revel while one that is not pierced is called a star 1 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Classical heraldry 3 United States 4 Modern use 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksTerminology editThe use of the word star in blazons and how that charge appears in coat armory varies from one jurisdiction to another In Scots heraldry both star and mullet interchangeably mean a star with five straight rays citation needed the official record from 1673 gives Murray of Ochtertyre azur three Starrs argent Public Register vol 1 p 188 while the Ordinary of Arms produced by a late 19th century Lyon King of Arms modernizes the original as Az three mullets arg In Canadian heraldry the usual term is mullet but there is also the occasional six pointed star e g in Vol IV at p 274 and in online version of the Canadian Public Register which is what others would blazon as a six pointed mullet The United States Army Institute of Heraldry the official heraldic authority in the United States uses the term mullet in its blazons 2 but elsewhere as in US government documents describing the flag of the United States and the Great Seal of the United States the term star is constantly used and these nearly always appear with five straight sided points The term mullet or molet refers to a star with straight sides typically having five or six points but may have any number of points specified in the blazon If the number of points is not specified five points are presumed in Gallo British heraldry and six points are presumed in German Nordic heraldry citation needed Unlike estoiles mullets have straight rather than wavy rays and may have originally represented the rowel of a spur rather than a celestial star 3 The term is said to be derived from French molette a spur rowel 3 although it was in use in heraldry even before rowel spurs 4 The term estoile refers to wavy sided stars usually of six points though they may also be blazoned with a different number of points often eight e g Portsmouth County Council pictured here Archived 2016 11 20 at the Wayback Machine and many variants feature alternating straight and wavy rays e g Honford pictured here The term derives from Old French estoile star in reference to a celestial star cf Modern French etoile from Latin stella star nbsp Mullet English type nbsp Mullet German type nbsp Mullet of six points pierced nbsp EstoileClassical heraldry edit nbsp The Washington coat of arms at Selby Abbey mid 15th century Stars are comparatively rare in European heraldry during the medieval period An early reference of dubious historicity is reported by Johannes Letzner who cites Conradus Fontanus an otherwise unknown authority to the effect that one Curtis von Meinbrechthausen a knight of Saxony in 1169 after committing a murder lost his rank and arms described as an eight pointed star beneath a chevron In Scotland the armigers of Clan Murray and Clan Douglas used arms with stars as early as the 12th or 13th century Examples of stars in a late medieval heraldry of the Holy Roman Empire include those of Wentz von Niederlanstein 1350 Gemm attested 1352 Geyer von Osterberg 1370 Enolff Ritter von Leyen d 1392 5 Under the system of cadency in use in England and Ireland since the late 15th century a third son bears a mullet unpierced as a difference 6 Stars become much more popular as heraldic charges in the early modern era especially in then recent family coats of arms of burghers and patricians as well as in coats of arms of cities e g Maastricht Bozen Kaufbeuren 7 The coat of arms of Valais originates in the 16th century when seven stars representing its Seven Tithings were added to the party per pale coat of arms of the Bishop of Sion Of the higher nobility in Siebmachers Wappenbuch 1605 the landgrave of Hessen and the counts of Waldeck and Erbach have stars in their coats of arms as do several Swiss knights 8 Examples of stars in heraldry nbsp Municipal arms of Thury sous Clermont in France nbsp Coat of arms of Valga County Estonia nbsp Coat of arms from the Zimmerische Chronik nbsp Arms of Alfoz de Quintanaduenas nbsp Coat of arms of the de Bethune family fr nbsp Coat of arms of the Douglas family nbsp Coat of arms of the Szekelys depicting a sun star United States edit nbsp The American flag as described in the Flag Resolution passed by the Second Continental Congress on 14 June 1777 Stars are nearly ubiquitous in United States heraldry and vexillology and nearly always appear unpierced with five straight sided points In the flag of the United States each star represents one state 9 The flag adopted in 1777 is the attributed origin of the thirteen stars representing the thirteen United States appearing on the Great Seal since 1780 10 A mullet barbed to chief appears in the arms of the 240th Signal Battalion of the 40th Infantry Division of the California Army National Guard United States Army 11 Examples of stars in US heraldry and vexillology nbsp Coat of arms of the U S 16th Field Artillery Regiment nbsp The Great Seal of the U S nbsp A depiction of Betsy Ross sewing her eponymous flag nbsp Flag of the city of El Paso Modern use editFurther information Star polygon and Five pointed star In the design of modern flags and emblems the stars mullets usually five pointed when standing alone often represent concepts like unity or independence When arranged in groups they often enumerate provinces or other components of the nation such as ethnic groups In the flags of Nauru and the Marshall Islands this enumeration is done by the points of a single star rather than by multiple number of stars citation needed Some flags of countries on the southern hemisphere show a depiction of the Southern Cross consisting of four or five stars The star and crescent symbol is found in flags of states succeeding the Ottoman Empire which used flags with this symbol during 1793 1923 The twelve stars on the Flag of Europe 1955 symbolize unity 12 The green five pointed star on the Esperanto flag 1890 symbolizes the five inhabited continents The 50 stars of the US flag is the largest number on any national flag The second largest is 27 on the flag of Brazil The current national flags featuring stars include Flag Date of stars Points Stars represent Description comment nbsp United States 1777 1960 50 5 enumerate US states originally 13 stars 50 stars since 1960 see timeline of the flag of the United States nbsp Chile 1817 1 5 ideal The star represents a guide to progress and honor nbsp Brazil 1822 1992 27 5 enumerate States of Brazil originally 19 stars 27 stars since 1992 see Flag of Brazil nbsp Tunisia 1831 1956 1 5 star and crescent based on the Ottoman flag citation needed nbsp Turkey 1844 1936 1 5 star and crescent the Republic of Turkey was established in 1923 and its Flag Law was passed in 1936 declaring the continued use of the Ottoman flag that had been flown since 1844 an earlier variant with an eight pointed star dates to ca 1793 nbsp Cuba 1849 1902 1 5 ideal The white star in the triangle stands for independence Based on the flag carried by Narciso Lopez in 1850 nbsp Venezuela 1859 1930 8 5 enumerate provinces various arrangement of the stars in design changes since 1859 Twenty stars during 1859 1863 nbsp Honduras 1866 5 5 enumerate provinces based on the flag of the Federal Republic of Central America The five stars also represent the historical provinces of that state not subdivisions of Honduras itself nbsp New Zealand 1869 1902 4 5 Southern Cross used as a governmental ensign since 1869 made the official national flag in 1902 Designed by Albert Hastings Markham under a request from Governor George Bowen nbsp Puerto Rico 1895 1952 1 5 ideal The white star in the triangle represents the island of Puerto Rico Based on the design of the Cuban flag see Flag of Puerto Rico nbsp Philippines 1898 3 5 enumerate island groups the three stars represent the three major geographical island groups that compose the Philippines Luzon Visayas and Mindanao nbsp Australia 1901 6 7 5 Southern Cross Commonwealth Star seven pointed stars for the Commonwealth Star and the main stars of the constellation plus a smaller five pointed star representing Epsilon Crucis Based on the winning design in the 1901 Federal Flag Design Competition nbsp Azerbaijan 1918 1 8 star and crescent the eight pointed star points to the eight letters of the name Azerbaijan in Arabic script 13 nbsp Panama 1925 2 5 ideal the blue star stands for the purity and honesty of the life of the country the red star represents the authority and law in the country nbsp Jordan 1928 1 7 ideal The seven points symbolize the seven verses of the first surah of the Qur an The seven points also represent faith in one God humanity humility national spirit virtue social justice and aspiration The star also stands for the unity of the Arab nation nbsp Vietnam 1945 1 5 ideal the Communist Star The five pointed yellow star represents the unity of workers peasants intellectuals traders and soldiers in building socialism nbsp Pakistan 1947 1 5 ideal the star represents light The crescent and star symbolize progress and light respectively nbsp North Korea 1948 1 5 ideal the Communist Star nbsp People s Republic of China 1949 5 5 ideal Five starred Red Flag 五星红旗 Wǔxing Hongqi one large star representing the Communist Party surrounded by four smaller ones depicting the four then social classes nbsp Samoa 1949 5 5 Southern Cross nbsp Somalia 1954 1 5 ideal Star of Unity nbsp European Union 1955 1985 12 5 ideal unity among Europeans Believed to also be a reference to the Catholic iconographic tradition of showing the Blessed Virgin Mary as the Woman of the Apocalypse wearing a crown of twelve stars 14 nbsp Ghana 1957 1 5 ideal the lodestar of African freedom nbsp Central African Republic 1958 1 5 ideal The star guides the steps of the Central African people towards freedom and emancipation nbsp Syrian Republic 1958 1980 2 5 enumerate states The 1958 flag was that of the United Arab Republic The two stars originally represented Syria and Egypt as member states of that entity nbsp Mauritania 1959 1 5 star and crescent nbsp Senegal 1960 1 5 The five points of the star are said to recall the human ideogram which was displayed in the middle of the flag of the former Mali Federation citation needed nbsp Togo 1960 1 5 ideal hope citation needed nbsp Algeria 1962 1 5 star and crescent nbsp Malaysia 1963 1 14 enumerate states a 14 pointed star alongside a crescent representing the 13 member states plus the federal government nbsp Singapore 1965 5 5 ideal five stars alongside a crescent representing democracy peace progress justice and equality According to Lee Kuan Yew the Chinese population wanted five stars influenced by the flag of the People s Republic of China and the Muslim population wanted a crescent moon nbsp Burundi 1967 3 6 ideal Unity Work Progress nbsp Nauru 1967 1 12 enumerate tribes nbsp Papua New Guinea 1971 5 5 Southern Cross nbsp Guinea Bissau 1973 1 5 ideal the Black Star of Africa nbsp Grenada 1974 7 5 enumerate parishes nbsp Angola 1975 1 5 ideal in origin imitating the Communist Star nbsp Cameroon 1975 1 5 ideal star of unity nbsp Suriname 1975 1 5 ideal The star represents the unity of all ethnic groups nbsp Sao Tome and Principe 1975 2 5 enumerate islands nbsp Tuvalu 1976 9 5 enumerate islands The stars are arranged in imitation of the geographic location of the islands of Tuvalu nbsp Djibouti 1977 1 5 ideal The red star signifies the unity of the diverse state nbsp Solomon Islands 1977 5 5 enumerate islands nbsp Dominica 1978 10 5 enumerate parishes nbsp Marshall Islands 1979 1 24 enumerate districts the points of the stars enumerate the electoral districts nbsp Federated States of Micronesia 1979 4 5 enumerate states Based on the Flag of the US Trust Territory of the Pacific each star represents a constitutional State Yap Chuuk Pohnpei and Kosrae nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis 1983 2 5 ideal enumerate islands hope and liberty or Saint Kitts and Nevis nbsp Burkina Faso 1984 1 5 ideal the guiding light of the revolution nbsp Croatia 1990 2 6 morning star The stars are part of the coat of arms of Croatia One star is part of the coat of arms of the Illyrian movement and the other is part of the coat of arms of Slavonia nbsp Slovenia 1991 3 6 ideal democracy inspired by the historical coat of arms of the Counts of Celje 15 nbsp Uzbekistan 1991 12 5 ideal a crescent and twelve stars representing the ancient calendar cycle nbsp Tajikistan 1992 7 5 seven stars on heaven s mountains nbsp Cape Verde 1992 10 5 enumerate islands nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 1998 8 5 ideal a diagonal line of seven five pointed stars plus two half stars cut off by the flag boundary The stars represent Europe and are intended to be infinite in number nbsp Comoros 2001 4 5 enumerate islands four stars alongside a crescent nbsp Turkmenistan 2001 5 5 enumerate provinces five stars alongside a crescent nbsp East Timor 2002 1 5 ideal the light that guides nbsp South Sudan 2005 1 5 ideal the Star of Bethlehem represents the unity of the states of South Sudan nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo 2007 1 5 ideal derived from the flag of Congo Free State 1885 nbsp Myanmar 2010 1 5 ideal unity Not bearing heraldic stars as such the 1915 Flag of Morocco and the 1996 flag of Ethiopia have a pentagram each and the 1948 flag of Israel a hexagram or star of David The 1962 Flag of Nepal has what would technically be described as a 12 pointed mullet but is intended to depict the Sun citation needed See also editRayed solar symbol Star and crescentReferences edit a b c Fox Davies Arthur Charles Graham Johnston 1909 A Complete Guide to Heraldry pp 295 296 172D Support Battalion Distinctive Unit Insignia The Institute of Heraldry Archived from the original on October 26 2017 a b Volborth Carl Alexander 1981 Heraldry Customs Rules and Styles Poole England Blandford Press p 48 ISBN 0 7137 0940 5 Mullet Pimbley s Dictionary of Heraldry 2008 03 12 Archived from the original on 2012 04 05 Retrieved 2008 02 07 Christian Friedrich August von Meding Nachrichten von adelichen Wapen 1786 Volborth 1981 p 80 Siebmachers Wappenbuch 1605 p 219 224 Siebmachers Wappenbuch 1605 pp 197 204 Our Flag PDF United States Government Printing Office 1998 S Doc 105 013 Retrieved 2009 02 07 The Great Seal of the United States PDF U S Department of State Bureau of Public Affairs Retrieved 2009 02 07 The Institute of Heraldry ed 2010 11 01 240th Signal Battalion Department of the Army Retrieved 2010 11 01 The European Flag Europa web portal 4 August 2007 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Sabuhi Ahmedov Gosudarstvennyj flag Azerbajdzhanskoj Respubliki The national flag of the Republic of Azerbaijan in Russian citing Myardanov M Gulijev Ya Azyarbajan Respublikasynyn dyuvlyat ryamzlyari B 2001 pp 74 75 Carlo Curti Gialdino I Simboli dell Unione europea Bandiera Inno Motto Moneta Giornata Roma Istituto Poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato S p A 2005 ISBN 88 240 2503 X pp 80 85 Gialdino is here cited after a translation of the Italian text published by the Centre Virtuel de la Connaissance sur l Europe cvce eu Irrespective of the statements by Paul M G Levy and the recent reconstruction by Susan Hood crediting Arsene Heitz with the original design still seems to me the soundest option In particular Arsene Heitz himself in 1987 laid claim to his own role in designing the flag and to its religious inspiration when he said that the flag of Europe is the flag of Our Lady Magnificat magazine 1987 Secondly it is worth noting the testimony of Father Pierre Caillon who refers to a meeting with Arsene Heitz Caillon tells of having met the former Council of Europe employee by chance in August 1987 at Lisieux in front of the Carmelite monastery It was Heitz who stopped him and declared I was the one who designed the European flag I suddenly had the idea of putting the 12 stars of the Miraculous Medal of the Rue du Bac on a blue field My proposal was adopted unanimously on 8 December 1955 the Feast of the Immaculate Conception I am telling you this Father because you are wearing the little blue cross of the Blue Army of Our Lady of Fatima Drzavni simboli niso carovnija so pa silen potencial National Symbols are not Magic but Are a Strong Potential Primorske si in Slovenian Primorske novice d o o 26 June 2011 ISSN 1580 4747 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flags with stars nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stars in heraldry star at flagspot net Star Symbol Archived 2021 04 02 at the Wayback Machine Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Star heraldry amp oldid 1208818000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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