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Flag of Japan

The national flag of Japan is a rectangular white banner bearing a crimson-red circle at its center. This flag is officially called the Nisshōki (日章旗, 'flag of the sun'), but is more commonly known in Japan as the Hinomaru (日の丸, 'Ball of the sun'). It embodies the country's sobriquet: the Land of the Rising Sun.

Japan
Nisshoki[1] or Hinomaru[2]
UseCivil and state flag, civil and state ensign
Proportion2:3[1]
Adopted27 February 1870; 153 years ago (1870-02-27)[a] (civil ensign)
13 August 1999; 24 years ago (1999-08-13)[b] (national flag)
DesignA white background with a large crimson dot in the middle

The Nisshoki flag is designated as the national flag in the Act on National Flag and Anthem, which was promulgated and became effective on 13 August 1999. Although no earlier legislation had specified a national flag, the sun-disc flag had already become the de facto national flag of Japan. Two proclamations issued in 1870 by the Daijō-kan, the governmental body of the early Meiji period, each had a provision for a design of the national flag. A sun-disc flag was adopted as the national flag for merchant ships under Proclamation No. 57 of Meiji 3 (issued on 27 February 1870),[3] and as the national flag used by the Navy under Proclamation No. 651 of Meiji 3 (issued on 27 October 1870).[4] Use of the Hinomaru was severely restricted during the early years of the Allied occupation of Japan after World War II; these restrictions were later relaxed.

The sun plays an important role in Japanese mythology and religion, as the Emperor is said to be the direct descendant of the Shinto sun goddess Amaterasu, and the legitimacy of the ruling house rested on this divine appointment. The name of the country as well as the design of the flag reflect this central importance of the sun. The ancient history Shoku Nihongi says that Emperor Monmu used a flag representing the sun in his court in 701, the first recorded use of a sun-motif flag in Japan.[5][6] The oldest existing flag is preserved in Unpō-ji temple, Kōshū, Yamanashi, which is older than the 16th century, and an ancient legend says that the flag was given to the temple by Emperor Go-Reizei in the 11th century.[7][8][9] During the Meiji Restoration, the sun disc and the Rising Sun Ensign of the Imperial Japanese Navy and Army became major symbols in the emerging Japanese Empire. Propaganda posters, textbooks, and films depicted the flag as a source of pride and patriotism. In Japanese homes, citizens were required to display the flag during national holidays, celebrations and other occasions as decreed by the government. Different tokens of devotion to Japan and its Emperor featuring the Hinomaru motif became popular among the public during the Second Sino-Japanese War and other conflicts. These tokens ranged from slogans written on the flag to clothing items and dishes that resembled the flag.

Public perception of the national flag varies. Historically, both Western and Japanese sources claimed the flag was a powerful and enduring symbol to the Japanese. Since the end of World War II (the Pacific War), the use of the flag and the national anthem Kimigayo has been a contentious issue for Japan's public schools, and disputes about their use have led to protests and lawsuits. Several military banners of Japan are based on the Hinomaru, including the sunrayed naval ensign. The Hinomaru also serves as a template for other Japanese flags in public and private use.

History edit

Ancient to medieval edit

 
The fleet of Kuki Yoshitaka in 1593
 
Shogunate fleet with hinomaru, c. 1634
 
Tokugawa shogunate warship Asahi Maru in 1856
 
Progression During the Imperial Inspection at Ou, Matsushima. Ukiyo-e by Hiroshige III (1876)
 
 Flag of Japan (1870–1999)

The exact origin of the Hinomaru is unknown,[10] but the rising sun has carried symbolic meaning since the early 7th century (the Japanese archipelago is east of the Asian mainland, and is thus where the sun "rises"). In 607, an official correspondence that began with "from the Emperor of the rising sun" was sent to Chinese Emperor Yang of Sui.[11] Japan is often referred to as "the land of the rising sun".[12]

The sun is closely related to the Imperial family, as legend states the imperial throne was descended from the sun goddess Amaterasu.[13][14] The religion, which is categorized as the ancient Ko-Shintō religion of the Japanese people, includes nature worship and animism, and the faith has been worshiping the sun, especially in agriculture and fishing. The Imperial God, Amaterasu-ōmikami, is the sun goddess. From the Yayoi period (300 BCE) to the Kofun period (250 CE) (Yamato period), the Naiko Kamonkyo (内行花文鏡 [ja], a large bronze mirror with patterns like a flower-petal manufactured in Japan) was used as a celebration of the shape of the shining sun and there is a theory that one of the Three Sacred Treasures, Yata no Kagami, is used like this mirror.[15]

During the eastern expedition (Jinmu tosei), Emperor Jimmu's brother Itsuse no Mikoto was killed in a battle against the local chieftain Nagasunehiko ("the long-legged man") in Naniwa (modern-day Osaka). Emperor Jimmu realized, as descendants of the sun, that he did not want to fight towards the sun (to the east), but to fight from the sun (to the west). So his clan went to the east side of Kii Peninsula to battle westward. They reached Kumano (or Ise) and went towards Yamato. They were victorious at the second battle with Nagasunehiko and conquered the Kinki region.[16][17]

The use of the sun-shaped flag was thought to have taken place since the emperor's direct imperial rule (親政) was established after the Isshi Incident in 645 (first year of the Taika (era)).[18]

The Japanese history text Shoku Nihongi, completed in 797, has the first recorded use of the sun-motif flag by Emperor Monmu's Chōga (朝賀, 'new year's greetings ceremony') in 701 (the first year of the Taihō era).[5][6] For the decoration of the ceremony hall on New Year's Day the Nissho (日像, 'the flag with the golden sun') was raised.[5][6]

One prominent theory is influenced by the results of the Genpei War (1180–1185).[19] Until the Heian period, the Nishiki flag (Nishiki no mihata 錦の御旗), a symbol of the Imperial Court, had a golden sun circle and a silver moon circle on a red background.[19] At the end of the Heian era, the Taira clan called themselves a government army and used the red flag with a gold circle (赤地金丸) as per the Imperial Court.[19] The Genji (Minamoto clan) were in opposition so they used a white flag with a red circle (白地赤丸) when they fought the Genpei War (1180–1185).[19] When the Taira clan was defeated, the samurai government (bakufu, 幕府) was formed by the Genji.[19] The warlords who came after such as Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieyasu realized they were successors of Genji so they raised the Hinomaru flag in battle.[19]

In the 12th-century work, The Tale of the Heike, it was written that different samurai carried drawings of the sun on their fans.[20] One legend related to the national flag is attributed to the Buddhist priest Nichiren. Supposedly, during a 13th-century Mongolian invasion of Japan, Nichiren gave a sun banner to the shōgun to carry into battle.[21]

During the Battle of Nagashino (28 June 1575), Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieyasu's allied forces fought Takeda Katsuyori.[19] Both Nobunaga and Ieyasu had their own flags with family crests, but they also held the Hinomaru.[19] On the other hand, the Takeda clan side also raised the Hinomaru.[19] So the Hinomaru was used as a national symbol.[19]

One of Japan's oldest flags is housed at the Unpo-ji temple in Kōshū city, Yamanashi Prefecture.[19] Legend states it was given by Emperor Go-Reizei to Minamoto no Yoshimitsu and has been treated as a family treasure by the Takeda clan for the past 1,000 years,[19][22] and at least it is older than 16th century.

In the 16th century unification period, each daimyō had flags that were used primarily in battle. Most of the flags were long banners usually charged with the mon (family crest) of the daimyō lord. Members of the same family, such as a son, father, and brother, had different flags to carry into battle. The flags served as identification and were displayed by soldiers on their backs and horses. Generals also had their own flags, most of which differed from soldiers' flags due to their square shape.[23][page needed]

In 1854, during the Tokugawa shogunate, Japanese ships were ordered to hoist the Hinomaru to distinguish themselves from foreign ships.[20] Before then, different types of Hinomaru flags were used on vessels that were trading with the U.S. and Russia.[10] The Hinomaru was decreed the merchant flag of Japan in 1870 and was the legal national flag from 1870 to 1885, making it the first national flag Japan adopted.[24][25]

While the idea of national symbols was strange to the Japanese, the Meiji Government needed them to communicate with the outside world. This became especially important after the landing of U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry in Yokohama Bay.[26] Further Meiji Government implementations gave more identifications to Japan, including the anthem Kimigayo and the imperial seal.[27] In 1885, all previous laws not published in the Official Gazette of Japan were abolished.[28] Because of this ruling by the new cabinet of Japan, the Hinomaru was the de facto national flag since no law was in place after the Meiji Restoration.[29]

Early conflicts and the Pacific War edit

 
1930s photo of a military enrollment. The Hinomaru is displayed on the house and held by several children.
 
Propaganda poster promoting harmony among Japanese, Chinese, and Manchu. The caption in Chinese (read right to left) reads "With the cooperation of Japan, China, and Manchukuo, the world can be in peace".

The use of the national flag grew as Japan sought to develop an empire, and the Hinomaru was present at celebrations after victories in the First Sino-Japanese and Russo-Japanese Wars. The flag was also used in war efforts throughout the country.[30] A Japanese propaganda film in 1934 portrayed foreign national flags as incomplete or defective with their designs, while the Japanese flag is perfect in all forms.[31] In 1937, a group of girls from Hiroshima Prefecture showed solidarity with Japanese soldiers fighting in China during the Second Sino-Japanese War, by eating "flag meals" that consisted of an umeboshi in the middle of a bed of rice. The Hinomaru bento became the main symbol of Japan's war mobilization and solidarity with its soldiers until the 1940s.[32]

Japan's early victories in the Sino-Japanese War resulted in the Hinomaru again being used for celebrations. It was seen in the hands of every Japanese during parades.[30]

Textbooks during this period also had the Hinomaru printed with various slogans expressing devotion to the Emperor and the country. Patriotism was taught as a virtue to Japanese children. Expressions of patriotism, such as displaying the flag or worshiping the Emperor daily, were all part of being a "good Japanese".[33]

The flag was a tool of Japanese imperialism in the occupied Southeast Asian areas during the Second World War: people had to use the flag,[34] and schoolchildren sang Kimigayo in morning flag raising ceremonies.[35] Local flags were allowed for some areas such as the Philippines, Indonesia, and Manchukuo.[36][37][38] In Korea which was part of the Empire of Japan, the Hinomaru and other symbols were used to declare that the Koreans were subjects of the empire.[39]

During the Pacific War, Americans coined the derogatory term "meatballs" for the Hinomaru and Japanese military aircraft insignia.[40] To the Japanese, the Hinomaru was the "Rising Sun flag that would light the darkness of the entire world".[41] To Westerners, it was one of the Japanese military's most powerful symbols.[42]

U.S. occupation edit

 
The Hinomaru is lowered in Seoul, Korea, on 9 September 1945, the day of the surrender.

The Hinomaru was the de facto flag of Japan throughout World War II and the occupation period.[29] During the occupation of Japan after World War II, permission from the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers (SCAPJ) was needed to fly the Hinomaru.[43][44] Sources differ on the degree to which the use of the Hinomaru flag was restricted; some use the term "banned;"[45][46] however, while the original restrictions were severe, they did not amount to an outright ban.[29]

After World War II, an ensign was used by Japanese civil ships of the United States Naval Shipping Control Authority for Japanese Merchant Marines.[47] Modified from the "E" signal code, the ensign was used from September 1945 until the U.S. occupation of Japan ceased.[48] U.S. ships operating in Japanese waters used a modified "O" signal flag as their ensign.[49]

On 2 May 1947, General Douglas MacArthur lifted the restrictions on displaying the Hinomaru in the grounds of the National Diet Building, on the Imperial Palace, on the Prime Minister's residence and on the Supreme Court building with the ratification of the new Constitution of Japan.[50][51] Those restrictions were further relaxed in 1948, when people were allowed to fly the flag on national holidays. In January 1949, the restrictions were abolished and anyone could fly the Hinomaru at any time without permission. As a result, schools and homes were encouraged to fly the Hinomaru until the early 1950s.[43]

Postwar to 1999 edit

 
The Hinomaru being raised at the United Nations headquarters in New York City in 1956

Since World War II, Japan's flag has been criticized for its association with the country's militaristic past. Similar objections have also been raised to the current national anthem of Japan, Kimigayo.[22] The feelings about the Hinomaru and Kimigayo represented a general shift from a patriotic feeling about "Dai Nippon" – Great Japan – to the pacifist and anti-militarist "Nihon". Because of this ideological shift, the flag was used less often in Japan directly after the war even though restrictions were lifted by the SCAPJ in 1949.[44][52]

As Japan began to re-establish itself diplomatically, the Hinomaru was used as a political weapon overseas. In a visit by Emperor Hirohito and Empress Kōjun to the Netherlands, the Hinomaru was burned by Dutch citizens who demanded that he either be sent home to Japan or tried for the deaths of Dutch prisoners of war during the Second World War.[53] Domestically, the flag was not even used in protests against a new Status of Forces Agreement being negotiated between the U.S. and Japan. The most common flag used by the trade unions and other protesters was the red flag of revolt.[54]

An issue with the Hinomaru and national anthem was raised once again when Tokyo hosted the 1964 Summer Olympic Games. Before the Olympic Games, the size of the sun disc of the national flag was changed partly because the sun disc was not considered striking when it was being flown with other national flags.[44] Tadamasa Fukiura, a color specialist, chose to set the sun disc at two-thirds of the flag's length. Fukiura also chose the flag colors for the 1964 games as well as for the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano.[55]

In 1989, the death of Emperor Hirohito once again raised moral issues about the national flag. Conservatives felt that if the flag could be used during the ceremonies without reopening old wounds, they might have a chance to propose that the Hinomaru become the national flag without being challenged about its meaning.[56] During an official six-day mourning period, flags were flown at half staff or draped in black bunting all across Japan.[57] Despite reports of protesters vandalizing the Hinomaru on the day of the Emperor's funeral,[58] schools' right to fly the Japanese flag at half-staff without reservations brought success to the conservatives.[56]

Since 1999 edit

 
The Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem as it appears in the Official Gazette on 15 August 1999

The Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem was passed in 1999, choosing both the Hinomaru and Kimigayo as Japan's national symbols. The passage of the law stemmed from the suicide of the principal of Sera High School [ja] in Sera, Hiroshima, Toshihiro Ishikawa, who could not resolve a dispute between his school board and his teachers over the use of the Hinomaru and Kimigayo.[59][60] The Act is one of the most controversial laws passed by the Diet since the 1992 "Law Concerning Cooperation for United Nations Peacekeeping Operations and Other Operations", also known as the "International Peace Cooperation Law".[61]

Prime Minister Keizō Obuchi of the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) decided to draft legislation to make the Hinomaru and Kimigayo official symbols of Japan in 2000. His Chief Cabinet Secretary, Hiromu Nonaka, wanted the legislation to be completed by the 10th anniversary of Emperor Akihito's enthronement.[62] This is not the first time legislation was considered for establishing both symbols as official. In 1974, with the backdrop of the 1972 return of Okinawa to Japan and the 1973 oil crisis, Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka hinted at a law being passed enshrining both symbols in the law of Japan.[63] In addition to instructing the schools to teach and play Kimigayo, Tanaka wanted students to raise the Hinomaru flag in a ceremony every morning, and to adopt a moral curriculum based on certain elements of the Imperial Rescript on Education pronounced by the Meiji Emperor in 1890.[64] Tanaka was unsuccessful in passing the law through the Diet that year.[65]

The main supporters of the bill were the LDP and the Komeito (CGP), while the opposition included the Social Democratic Party (SDPJ) and Communist Party (JCP), who cited the connotations both symbols had with the war era. The CPJ was further opposed for not allowing the issue to be decided by the public. Meanwhile, the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) could not develop party consensus on it. DPJ President and future prime minister Naoto Kan stated that the DPJ must support the bill because the party already recognized both symbols as the symbols of Japan.[66] Deputy Secretary General and future prime minister Yukio Hatoyama thought that this bill would cause further divisions among society and the public schools. Hatoyama voted for the bill while Kan voted against it.[62]

Before the vote, there were calls for the bills to be separated at the Diet. Waseda University professor Norihiro Kato stated that Kimigayo is a separate issue more complex than the Hinomaru flag.[67] Attempts to designate only the Hinomaru as the national flag by the DPJ and other parties during the vote of the bill were rejected by the Diet.[68] The House of Representatives passed the bill on 22 July 1999, by a 403 to 86 vote.[69] The legislation was sent to the House of Councilors on 28 July and was passed on 9 August. It was enacted into law on 13 August.[70]

On 8 August 2009, a photograph was taken at a DPJ rally for the House of Representatives election showing a banner that was hanging from a ceiling. The banner was made of two Hinomaru flags cut and sewn together to form the shape of the DPJ logo. This infuriated the LDP and Prime Minister Tarō Asō, saying this act was unforgivable. In response, DPJ President Yukio Hatoyama (who voted for the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem)[62] said that the banner was not the Hinomaru and should not be regarded as such.[71]

Flag design edit

 
Flag of Japan flying

Passed in 1870, the Prime Minister's Proclamation No. 57 had two provisions related to the national flag. The first provision specified who flew the flag and how it was flown; the second specified how the flag was made.[10] The ratio was seven units width and ten units length (7:10). The red disc, which represents the sun, was calculated to be three-fifths of the hoist width. The law decreed the disc to be in the center, but it was usually placed one-hundredth (1100) towards the hoist.[72][73] (this makes the disc appear centered when the flag is flying; this technique is used in other flags, such as the Flag of Bangladesh). On 3 October of the same year, regulations about the design of the merchant ensign and other naval flags were passed.[74] For the merchant flag, the ratio was two units width and three units length (2:3). The size of the disc remained the same, but the sun disc was placed one-twentieth (120) towards the hoist.[75]

 
Construction sheet

When the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem passed, the dimensions of the flag were slightly altered.[1] The overall ratio of the flag was changed to two units width by three units length (2:3). The red disc was shifted towards the center, but the overall size of the disc stayed the same.[2] The background of the flag is white and the center is a red circle (紅色, beni iro), but the exact color shades were not defined in the 1999 law.[1] The only hint given about the red colour is that it is a "deep" shade.[76]

Issued by the Japan Defense Agency (now the Ministry of Defense) in 1973 (Shōwa 48), specifications list the red color of the flag as 5R 4/12 and the white as N9 in the Munsell color chart.[77] The document was changed on 21 March 2008 (Heisei 20) to match the flag's construction with current legislation and updated the Munsell colours. The document lists acrylic fiber and nylon as fibers that could be used in construction of flags used by the military. For acrylic, the red color is 5.7R 3.7/15.5 and white is N9.4; nylon has 6.2R 4/15.2 for red and N9.2 for white.[77] In a document issued by the Official Development Assistance (ODA), the red color for the Hinomaru and the ODA logo is listed as DIC 156 and CMYK 0-100-90-0.[78] During deliberations about the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem, there was a suggestion to either use a bright red (赤色, aka iro) shade or use one from the color pool of the Japanese Industrial Standards.[79]

Colour chart edit

Official colour (White) Official colour (Red) Colour system Source Year
  N9[80]   5R 4/12[80] Munsell DSP Z 8701C[77] 1973
N/A   156[81] DIC ODA Symbol Mark Guidelines[78] 1995

Use and customs edit

 
In Osaka Metro,the flag is hoisted on national holidays

When the Hinomaru was first introduced, the government required citizens to greet the Emperor with the flag. There was some resentment among the Japanese over the flag, resulting in some protests. It took some time for the flag to gain acceptance among the people.[27]

Before World War II, all homes were required to display Hinomaru on national holidays.[29] Since the war, the display of the flag of Japan is mostly limited to buildings attached to national and local governments such as city halls; it is rarely seen at private homes or commercial buildings,[29] but some people and companies have advocated displaying the flag on holidays. Although the government of Japan encourages citizens and residents to fly the Hinomaru during national holidays, they are not legally required to do so.[82][83] Since the Emperor's 80th Birthday on 23 December 2002, the Kyushu Railway Company has displayed the Hinomaru at 330 stations.[84]

Starting in 1995, the ODA has used the Hinomaru motif in their official logo. The design itself was not created by the government (the logo was chosen from 5,000 designs submitted by the public) but the government was trying to increase the visualization of the Hinomaru through their aid packages and development programs. According to the ODA, the use of the flag is the most effective way to symbolise aid provided by the Japanese people.[85]

Hinomaru Yosegaki edit

 
An example of a Hinomaru Yosegaki from World War II

During World War II in Japanese culture, it was a popular custom for friends, classmates, and relatives of a deploying soldier to sign a Hinomaru and present it to him. The flag was also used as a good luck charm and a prayer to wish the soldier back safely from battle. One term for this kind of charm is Hinomaru Yosegaki (日の丸寄せ書き).[86] One tradition is that no writing should touch the sun disc.[87] After battles, these flags were often captured or later found on deceased Japanese soldiers. Some of these flags have become souvenirs,[87] and some are being returned to Japan and the descendants of the deceased.[88]

In modern times, the "Hinomaru Yosegaki" is still being used. The tradition of signing the Hinomaru as a good luck charm still continues, though in a limited fashion. The Hinomaru Yosegaki is shown at sporting events to give support to the Japanese national team.[89] The Yosegaki (group effort flag, 寄せ書き) is used for campaigning soldiers,[90] athletes, retirees, transfer students in a community and for friends. The colored paper and flag has writing with a message. In modern Japan, it is given as a present to a person at a send-off party, for athletes, a farewell party for colleagues or transfer students, for graduation and retirement. After natural disasters such as the 2011 Tōhoku Earthquake and tsunami people write notes on a Hinomaru Yosegaki to show support.

Hachimaki edit

 
Takeru Kobayashi wears a hachimaki.

The hachimaki (鉢巻, "helmet-scarf") is a white headband (bandana) with the red sun in the middle. Phrases are usually written on it. It is worn as a symbol of perseverance, effort, and/or courage by the wearer. These are worn on many occasions by for example sports spectators, women giving birth, students in cram school, office workers,[91] tradesmen taking pride in their work etc. During World War II, the phrases "Certain Victory" (必勝, Hisshō) or "Seven Lives" was written on the hachimaki and worn by kamikaze pilots. This denoted that the pilot was willing to die for his country.[92]

Hinomaru Bentō edit

 
A Hinomaru bentō

A bentō and makunouchi are types of Japanese lunch boxes. It can have Hinomaru rice (日の丸ご飯, Hinomaru gohan). It consists of gohan (steamed white rice) with a red umeboshi (dried ume) in the center which represents the sun and the flag of Japan. A Hinomaru lunch box (日の丸弁当, Hinomaru bentō) only has white rice and a red umeboshi in the center. The salty, vinegar soaked umeboshi acts as a preservative for the rice. There are also hinomaru rice bowls which are less common.[93]

Culture and perception edit

 
A flag-waving crowd greet the Imperial Family after Emperor Naruhito's ascension to the throne at the Imperial Palace, 4 May 2019.

According to polls conducted by mainstream media, most Japanese people had perceived the flag of Japan as the national flag even before the passage of the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem in 1999.[94] Despite this, controversies surrounding the use of the flag in school events or media still remain. For example, liberal newspapers such as Asahi Shimbun and Mainichi Shimbun often feature articles critical of the flag of Japan, reflecting their readerships' political spectrum.[95] To other Japanese, the flag represents the time where democracy was suppressed when Japan was an empire.[96]

The display of the national flag at homes and businesses is also debated in Japanese society. Because of its association with uyoku dantai (right wing) activists, reactionary politics, or hooliganism, most homes and businesses do not fly the flag.[29] There is no requirement to fly the flag on any national holiday or special events. The town of Kanazawa, Ishikawa, has proposed plans in September 2012 to use government funds to buy flags with the purpose of encouraging citizens to fly the flag on national holidays.[97] The Japanese Communist Party is vocally against the flag.

Negative perceptions of the national flag exist in former colonies of Japan as well as within Japan itself, such as in Okinawa. In one notable example of this, on 26 October 1987, an Okinawan supermarket owner burned the flag before the start of the National Sports Festival of Japan.[98] The flag burner, Shōichi Chibana, burned the Hinomaru not only to show opposition to atrocities committed by the Japanese army and the continued presence of U.S. forces but also to prevent it from being displayed in public.[99] Other incidents in Okinawa included the flag being torn down during school ceremonies and students refusing to honor the flag as it was being raised to the sounds of "Kimigayo".[30] In the capital city of Naha, Okinawa, the Hinomaru was raised for the first time since the return of Okinawa to Japan to celebrate the city's 80th anniversary in 2001.[100] In the People's Republic of China and Republic of Korea, both of which had been occupied by the Empire of Japan, the 1999 formal adoption of the Hinomaru was met with reactions of Japan moving towards the right and also a step towards re-militarization. The passage of the 1999 law also coincided with the debates about the status of the Yasukuni Shrine, U.S.-Japan military cooperation, and the creation of a missile defense program. In other nations that Japan occupied, the 1999 law was met with mixed reactions or glossed over. In Singapore, the older generation still harbors ill feelings toward the flag while the younger generation does not hold similar views. The Philippine government not only believed that Japan was not going to revert to militarism, but the goal of the 1999 law was to formally establish two symbols (the flag and anthem) in law and every state has a right to create national symbols.[101] Japan has no law criminalizing the burning of the Hinomaru, but foreign flags cannot be burned in Japan.[102][103]

Protocol edit

 
Diagram published with Regulation 1 from 1912 (Raising Mourning Flag for the Emperor)

According to protocol, the flag may fly from sunrise until sunset; businesses and schools are permitted to fly the flag from opening to closing.[104] When flying the flags of Japan and another country at the same time in Japan, the Japanese flag takes the position of honor and the flag of the guest country flies to its right. Both flags must be at the same height and of equal size. When more than one foreign flag is displayed, Japan's flag is arranged in the alphabetical order prescribed by the United Nations.[105] When the flag becomes unsuitable to use, it is customarily burned in private.[104] The Law Regarding the National Flag and Anthem does not specify on how the flag should be used, but different prefectures came up with their own regulations to use the Hinomaru and other prefectural flags.[106][107]

Mourning edit

The Hinomaru flag has at least two mourning styles. One is to display the flag at half-staff (半旗, Han-ki), as is common in many countries. The offices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs also hoist the flag at half-staff when a funeral is performed for a foreign nation's head of state.[108]

An alternative mourning style is to wrap the spherical finial with black cloth and place a black ribbon, known as a mourning flag (弔旗 [ja], Chō-ki), above the flag. This style dates back to the death of Emperor Meiji on 30 July 1912, and the Cabinet issued an ordinance stipulating that the national flag should be raised in mourning when the Emperor dies.[109] The Cabinet has the authority to announce the half-staffing of the national flag.[110]

Public schools edit

 
A graduation ceremony in Hokkaido Prefecture with both the Hinomaru and the flag of Hokkaido Prefecture. The school's own flag is on a staff to the speakers' right.

Since the end of World War II, the Ministry of Education has issued statements and regulations to promote the usage of both the Hinomaru and Kimigayo (national anthem) at schools under their jurisdiction. The first of these statements was released in 1950, stating that it was desirable, but not required, to use both symbols. This desire was later expanded to include both symbols on national holidays and during ceremonial events to encourage students on what national holidays are and to promote defense education.[44] In a 1989 reform of the education guidelines, the LDP-controlled government first demanded that the flag must be used in school ceremonies and that proper respect must be given to it and to Kimigayo.[111] Punishments for school officials who did not follow this order were also enacted with the 1989 reforms.[44]

The 1999 curriculum guideline issued by the Ministry of Education after the passage of the Law Regarding the National Flag and Anthem decrees that "on entrance and graduation ceremonies, schools must raise the flag of Japan and instruct students to sing the Kimigayo, given the significance of the flag and the song."[112] Additionally, the ministry's commentary on the 1999 curriculum guideline for elementary schools note that "given the advance of internationalization, along with fostering patriotism and awareness of being Japanese, it is important to nurture school children's respectful attitude toward the flag of Japan and Kimigayo as they grow up to be respected Japanese citizens in an internationalized society."[113] The ministry also stated that if Japanese students cannot respect their own symbols, then they will not be able to respect the symbols of other nations.[114]

Schools have been the center of controversy over both the anthem and the national flag.[45] The Tokyo Board of Education requires the use of both the anthem and flag at events under their jurisdiction. The order requires school teachers to respect both symbols or risk losing their jobs.[115] Some have protested that such rules violate the Constitution of Japan, but the Board has argued that since schools are government agencies, their employees have an obligation to teach their students how to be good Japanese citizens.[22] As a sign of protest, schools refused to display the Hinomaru at school graduations and some parents ripped down the flag.[45] Teachers have unsuccessfully brought criminal complaints against Tokyo Governor Shintarō Ishihara and senior officials for ordering teachers to honor the Hinomaru and Kimigayo.[116] After earlier opposition, the Japan Teachers Union accepts the use of both the flag and anthem; the smaller All Japan Teachers and Staffs Union still opposes both symbols and their use inside the school system.[117]

Related flags edit

Military flags edit

 
An illustration of the Japanese army occupying Khabarovsk, 1920. Both Hinomaru and the Rising Sun Flag (in background) are depicted.

The Japan Self-Defense Forces (JSDF) and the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force use the Rising Sun Flag with eight red rays extending outward, called Hachijō-Kyokujitsuki (八条旭日旗). A gold border is situated partially around the edge.[118]

A well-known variant of the sun disc design is the sun disc with 16 red rays in a Siemens star formation, which was also historically used by Japan's military, particularly the Imperial Japanese Army and the Imperial Japanese Navy. The ensign, known in Japanese as the Jyūrokujō-Kyokujitsu-ki (十六条旭日旗), was first adopted as the war flag on 15 May 1870, and was used until the end of World War II in 1945. It was re-adopted on 30 June 1954, and is now used as the war flag and naval ensign of the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF).[118] JSDF Chief of Staff Katsutoshi Kawano said the Rising Sun Flag is the Maritime Self-Defense Force sailors' "pride".[119] Due to its continued use by the Imperial Japanese Army, this flag carries the negative connotation similar to the Nazi flag in China and Korea.[120] These formerly colonised countries state that this flag is a symbol of Japanese imperialism during World War II, and was an ongoing conflict event for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. The JMSDF also employs the use of a masthead pennant. First adopted in 1914 and readopted in 1965, the masthead pennant contains a simplified version of the naval ensign at the hoist end, with the rest of the pennant colored white. The ratio of the pennant is between 1:40 and 1:90.[121]

The Japan Air Self-Defense Force (JASDF), established independently in 1952, has only the plain sun disc as its emblem.[122] This is the only branch of service with an emblem that does not invoke the rayed Imperial Standard. However, the branch does have an ensign to fly on bases and during parades. The Japan Air Self-Defense Force flag was first adopted in 1955 after the JASDF was created in 1954. The flag is cobalt blue with a gold winged eagle on top of a combined star, the moon, the Hinomaru sun disc and clouds.[123][124] The latest version of the JASDF flag was re-adopted on 19 March 2001.[125]

Although not an official national flag, the Z signal flag played a major role in Japanese naval history. On 27 May 1905, Admiral Heihachirō Tōgō of the Mikasa was preparing to engage the Russian Baltic Fleet. Before the Battle of Tsushima began, Togo raised the Z flag on the Mikasa and engaged the Russian fleet, winning the battle for Japan. The raising of the flag said to the crew the following: "The fate of Imperial Japan hangs on this one battle; all hands will exert themselves and do their best." The Z flag was also raised on the aircraft carrier Akagi on the eve of Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in December 1941.[126]

Imperial flags edit

 
  The standard of the Japanese Emperor

Starting in 1870, flags were created for the Japanese Emperor (then Emperor Meiji), the Empress, and other members of the imperial family.[127] At first, the Emperor's flag was ornate, with a sun resting in the center of an artistic pattern. He had flags that were used on land, at sea, and when he was in a carriage. The imperial family was also granted flags to be used at sea and while on land (one for use on foot and one carriage flag). The carriage flags were a monocolored chrysanthemum, with 16 petals, placed in the center of a monocolored background.[74] These flags were discarded in 1889 when the Emperor decided to use the chrysanthemum on a red background as his flag. With minor changes in the color shades and proportions, the flags adopted in 1889 are still in use by the imperial family.[128][129]

The current Emperor's flag is a 16-petal chrysanthemum (called Kikkamon, Japanese:菊花紋), colored in gold, centered on a red background with a 2:3 ratio. The Empress uses the same flag, except the shape is that of a swallow tail. The crown prince and the crown princess use the same flags, except with a smaller chrysanthemum and a white border in the middle of the flags.[130] The chrysanthemum has been associated with the Imperial throne since the rule of Emperor Go-Toba in the 12th century, but it did not become the exclusive symbol of the Imperial throne until 1868.[127]

Subnational flags edit

 
The national flag flying with the flags of Okinawa Prefecture and Urasoe City

Each of the 47 prefectures of Japan has its own flag which, like the national flag, consists of a symbol – called a mon – charged upon a monocolored field (except for Ehime Prefecture, where the background is bicolored).[131] There are several prefecture flags, such as Hiroshima's, that match their specifications to the national flag (2:3 ratio, mon placed in the center and is 35 the length of the flag).[132] Some of the mon display the name of the prefecture in Japanese characters; others are stylized depictions of the location or another special feature of the prefecture. An example of a prefectural flag is that of Nagano, where the orange katakana character ナ (na) appears in the center of a white disc. One interpretation of the mon is that the na symbol represents a mountain and the white disc, a lake. The orange color represents the sun while the white color represents the snow of the region.[133]

Municipalities can also adopt flags of their own. The designs of the city flags are similar to the prefectural flags: a mon on a monocolored background. An example is the flag of Amakusa in Kumamoto Prefecture: the city symbol is composed of the Katakana character ア (a) and surrounded by waves.[134] This symbol is centered on a white flag, with a ratio of 2:3.[135] Both the city emblem and the flag were adopted in 2006.[135]

Derivatives edit

 
  Former Japan Post flag (1872–1887)
 
The flag of the Association of Evenks in the Sakha Republic composites the Flag of Japan and other elements.

In addition to the flags used by the military, several other flag designs were inspired by the national flag. The former Japan Post flag consisted of the Hinomaru with a red horizontal bar placed in the center of the flag. There was also a thin white ring around the red sun. It was later replaced by a flag that consisted of the 〒 postal mark in red on a white background.[136]

Two recently designed national flags resemble the Japanese flag. In 1971, Bangladesh gained independence from Pakistan, and it adopted a national flag that had a green background, charged with an off-centered red disc that contained a golden map of Bangladesh. The current flag, adopted in 1972, dropped the golden map and kept everything else. The Government of Bangladesh officially calls the red disc a circle;[137] the red color symbolizes the blood that was shed to create their country.[138] The island nation of Palau uses a flag of similar design, but the color scheme is completely different. While the Government of Palau does not cite the Japanese flag as an influence on their national flag, Japan did administer Palau from 1914 until 1944.[139] The flag of Palau is an off-centered golden-yellow full moon on a sky blue background.[140] The moon stands for peace and a young nation while the blue background represents Palau's transition to self-government from 1981 to 1994, when it achieved full independence.[141]

The Japanese naval ensign also influenced other flag designs. One such flag design is used by the Asahi Shimbun. At the bottom hoist of the flag, one quarter of the sun is displayed. The kanji character 朝 is displayed on the flag, colored white, covering most of the sun. The rays extend from the sun, occurring in a red and white alternating order, culminating in 13 total stripes.[142][143] The flag is commonly seen at the National High School Baseball Championship, as the Asahi Shimbun is a main sponsor of the tournament.[144] The rank flags and ensigns of the Imperial Japanese Navy also based their designs on the naval ensign.[145]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ As the civil ensign by Proclamation No. 57.
  2. ^ As the national flag and slight modifications to the design of the flag.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d 国旗及び国歌に関する法律
  2. ^ a b Consulate-General of Japan in San Francisco. Basic / General Information on Japan; 1 January 2008 [ 11 December 2012].
  3. ^ 郵船商船規則  (in Japanese). Government of Japan – via Wikisource.
  4. ^ "法令全書". Act of 27 October 1870 (in Japanese). National Diet. doi:10.11501/787950. from the original on 28 March 2019. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  5. ^ a b c . 23 December 2015. Archived from the original on 4 February 2016.
  6. ^ a b c . University of California, Berkeley (see original Japanese text). Archived from the original on 4 February 2021.
  7. ^ Yamanashi Tourism Organization. 日の丸の御旗 [ 1 October 2011].(in Japanese)
  8. ^ Unpoji. 宝物殿の案内 [ 4 November 2011].(in Japanese)
  9. ^ Little-Known Wars of Great and Lasting Impact: The Turning Points in Our History We Should Know More About. Fair Winds; 2009. ISBN 1-59233-375-3. p. 54.
  10. ^ a b c Web Japan. Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. National Flag and Anthem [PDF]; 2000 [ 15 June 2010].
  11. ^ Dyer 1909, p. 24
  12. ^ Edgington 2003, pp. 123–124
  13. ^ Ashkenazi 2003, pp. 112–113
  14. ^ Hall 1996, p. 110
  15. ^ 森浩一著「日本神話の考古学」(朝日新聞出版 1993年7月)
  16. ^ 「日本古典文学大系 2 風土記」(岩波書店 1958年4月)の伊勢国風土記逸文に、神武天皇が伊勢国造の祖の天日別命に命じて伊勢国に攻め込ませ、国津神の伊勢津彦を追い出して伊勢を平定したとある。
  17. ^ 熊野からでは北に向かって戦う事になる。このため鈴木眞年のように、伊勢まで行って西から大和盆地に侵攻したとする説もある。
  18. ^ 泉欣七郎、千田健共編『日本なんでもはじめ』ナンバーワン、1985年、149頁、ISBN 4931016065
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l (PDF). Nishinomote City. 28 January 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2021.
  20. ^ a b Itoh 2003, p. 205
  21. ^ Feldman 2004, pp. 151–155
  22. ^ a b c Hongo, Jun. Hinomaru, 'Kimigayo' express conflicts both past and future. The Japan Times. 17 July 2007 [archived 18 July 2012].
  23. ^ Turnbull 2001
  24. ^ Goodman, Neary 1996, pp. 77–78
  25. ^ National Diet Library. レファレンス事例詳細 [Reference Case Details]; 2 July 2009 [ 20 July 2011]. (in Japanese).
  26. ^ Feiler 2004, p. 214
  27. ^ a b Ohnuki-Tierney 2002, pp. 68–69
  28. ^ Rohl 2005, p. 20
  29. ^ a b c d e f Befu 1992, pp. 32–33
  30. ^ a b c Befu 2001, pp. 92–95
  31. ^ Nornes 2003, p. 81
  32. ^ Cwiertka 2007, pp. 117–119
  33. ^ Partner 2004, pp. 55–56
  34. ^ Tipton 2002, p. 137
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  36. ^ The Camera Overseas: The Japanese People Voted Against Frontier Friction. Life. 21 June 1937:75.
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  • Saito, Shinya. 記者四十年 [Fourteen Years As A Reporter]. Asahi Shimbun Publishing; 1987. (in Japanese). ISBN 978-4-02-260421-7.
  • Smith, Whitney. Flags Through the Ages and Across the World. McGraw-Hill; 1975. ISBN 0-07-059093-1.
  • Smith, Whitney. Flag Lore Of All Nations. Millbrook Press; 2001. ISBN 0-7613-1753-8.
  • Takahashi, Yuuichi. 海軍問答 [Navy Dialogue]. 1903. (in Japanese).
  • Takenaka, Yoshiharu. 知っておきたい国旗・旗の基礎知識 [Flag basics you should know]. Gifu Shimbun; 2003. (in Japanese). ISBN 4-87797-054-1.
  • Taylor, Jean Gelman. Indonesia: Peoples and Histories. Yale University Press; 2004. ISBN 0-300-10518-5.
  • Tazagi, Shirou. 梶山静六: 死に顔に笑みをたたえて [Seiroku Kajiyama: Praising the smile in the dying face]. Kodansha; 2004. (in Japanese). ISBN 4-06-212592-7.
  • Tipton, Elise. Modern Japan A Social and Political History. Routledge; 2002. ISBN 978-0-415-18538-7.
  • Trevor, Malcolm. Japan – Restless Competitor The Pursuit of Economic Nationalism. Routledge; 2001. ISBN 978-1-903350-02-7.
  • Turnbull, Stephen; Howard Gerrard. Ashigaru 1467–1649. Osprey Publishing; 2001. ISBN 1-84176-149-4.
  • Williams, David; Rikki Kersten (2006), The Left in the Shaping of Japanese Democracy, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-33435-8, retrieved 17 October 2020
  • Yamazumi, Masami. 日の丸・君が代問題とは何か. Otsuki Shoten; 1988. (in Japanese). ISBN 4-272-41032-6.

Legislation edit

  • Government of Japan. 明治3年太政官布告第57号 [Prime Minister's Proclamation No. 57]; 27 February 1870 [archived 23 May 2013]. (in Japanese).
  • National Diet Library. 明治3年太政官布告第651号 [Prime Minister's Proclamation No. 651] [PDF]; 3 October 1870 [ 20 October 2021]. (in Japanese).
  • Government of Japan. 大正元年閣令第一号 (大喪中ノ国旗掲揚方) [Regulation 1 from 1912 (Raising Mourning Flag For the Emperor)]; 30 July 1912 [ 18 August 2010]. (in Japanese).
  • Government of Japan. 自衛隊法施行令 [Self-Defense Forces Law Enforcement Order]; 30 June 1954 [ 7 April 2008]. (in Japanese).
  • Ministry of Defense. 〇海上自衛隊の使用する航空機の分類等及び塗粧標準等に 関する達 [Standard Sizes, Markings and Paint Used On Aircraft] [PDF]; 24 December 1962 [ 22 July 2011]. (in Japanese).
  • Government of Hiroshima Prefecture. 広島県県章および県旗の制定 [Law About the Flag and Emblem of Hiroshima Prefecture]; 16 July 1968 [ 19 July 2011]. (in Japanese).
  • Government of Japan. 国旗及び国歌に関する法律 (法律第百二十七号) [Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem, Act No. 127]; 13 August 1999 [ 21 May 2010]. (in Japanese).
  • Police of the Hokkaido Prefecture. 国旗及び国歌の取扱いについて [Law Regarding Use of the National Flag and Anthem]; 18 November 1999 [ 6 May 2008]. (in Japanese).
  • Police of Kanagawa Prefecture. 国旗及び県旗の取扱いについて [Law Regarding the Use of the National and Prefectural Flag] [PDF]; 29 March 2003 [ 4 October 2011]. (in Japanese).
  • Government of Amakusa City. 天草市章 [Emblem of Amakusa]; 27 March 2003 [ 30 September 2013]. (in Japanese).
  • Government of Amakusa City. 天草市旗 [Flag of Amakusa]; 27 March 2003 [ 28 September 2013]. (in Japanese).
  • Ministry of Defense. 自衛隊の旗に関する訓令 [Flag Rules of the JASDF] [PDF]; 25 March 2008 [ 22 July 2011]. (in Japanese).
  • Ministry of Defense. 海上自衛隊旗章規則 [JMSDF Flag and Emblem Rules] [PDF]; 25 March 2008 [ 22 July 2011]. (in Japanese).

External links edit

flag, japan, hinomaru, redirects, here, confused, with, hanamaru, national, flag, japan, rectangular, white, banner, bearing, crimson, circle, center, this, flag, officially, called, nisshōki, 日章旗, flag, more, commonly, known, japan, hinomaru, 日の丸, ball, embod. Hinomaru redirects here Not to be confused with Hanamaru The national flag of Japan is a rectangular white banner bearing a crimson red circle at its center This flag is officially called the Nisshōki 日章旗 flag of the sun but is more commonly known in Japan as the Hinomaru 日の丸 Ball of the sun It embodies the country s sobriquet the Land of the Rising Sun JapanNisshoki 1 or Hinomaru 2 UseCivil and state flag civil and state ensignProportion2 3 1 Adopted27 February 1870 153 years ago 1870 02 27 a civil ensign 13 August 1999 24 years ago 1999 08 13 b national flag DesignA white background with a large crimson dot in the middleThe Nisshoki flag is designated as the national flag in the Act on National Flag and Anthem which was promulgated and became effective on 13 August 1999 Although no earlier legislation had specified a national flag the sun disc flag had already become the de facto national flag of Japan Two proclamations issued in 1870 by the Daijō kan the governmental body of the early Meiji period each had a provision for a design of the national flag A sun disc flag was adopted as the national flag for merchant ships under Proclamation No 57 of Meiji 3 issued on 27 February 1870 3 and as the national flag used by the Navy under Proclamation No 651 of Meiji 3 issued on 27 October 1870 4 Use of the Hinomaru was severely restricted during the early years of the Allied occupation of Japan after World War II these restrictions were later relaxed The sun plays an important role in Japanese mythology and religion as the Emperor is said to be the direct descendant of the Shinto sun goddess Amaterasu and the legitimacy of the ruling house rested on this divine appointment The name of the country as well as the design of the flag reflect this central importance of the sun The ancient history Shoku Nihongi says that Emperor Monmu used a flag representing the sun in his court in 701 the first recorded use of a sun motif flag in Japan 5 6 The oldest existing flag is preserved in Unpō ji temple Kōshu Yamanashi which is older than the 16th century and an ancient legend says that the flag was given to the temple by Emperor Go Reizei in the 11th century 7 8 9 During the Meiji Restoration the sun disc and the Rising Sun Ensign of the Imperial Japanese Navy and Army became major symbols in the emerging Japanese Empire Propaganda posters textbooks and films depicted the flag as a source of pride and patriotism In Japanese homes citizens were required to display the flag during national holidays celebrations and other occasions as decreed by the government Different tokens of devotion to Japan and its Emperor featuring the Hinomaru motif became popular among the public during the Second Sino Japanese War and other conflicts These tokens ranged from slogans written on the flag to clothing items and dishes that resembled the flag Public perception of the national flag varies Historically both Western and Japanese sources claimed the flag was a powerful and enduring symbol to the Japanese Since the end of World War II the Pacific War the use of the flag and the national anthem Kimigayo has been a contentious issue for Japan s public schools and disputes about their use have led to protests and lawsuits Several military banners of Japan are based on the Hinomaru including the sunrayed naval ensign The Hinomaru also serves as a template for other Japanese flags in public and private use Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient to medieval 1 2 Early conflicts and the Pacific War 1 3 U S occupation 1 4 Postwar to 1999 1 5 Since 1999 2 Flag design 2 1 Colour chart 3 Use and customs 3 1 Hinomaru Yosegaki 3 2 Hachimaki 3 3 Hinomaru Bentō 4 Culture and perception 5 Protocol 5 1 Mourning 5 2 Public schools 6 Related flags 6 1 Military flags 6 2 Imperial flags 6 3 Subnational flags 6 4 Derivatives 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 Notes 9 3 Bibliography 9 4 Legislation 10 External linksHistory editAncient to medieval edit nbsp The fleet of Kuki Yoshitaka in 1593 nbsp Shogunate fleet with hinomaru c 1634 nbsp Tokugawa shogunate warship Asahi Maru in 1856 nbsp Progression During the Imperial Inspection at Ou Matsushima Ukiyo e by Hiroshige III 1876 nbsp nbsp Flag of Japan 1870 1999 The exact origin of the Hinomaru is unknown 10 but the rising sun has carried symbolic meaning since the early 7th century the Japanese archipelago is east of the Asian mainland and is thus where the sun rises In 607 an official correspondence that began with from the Emperor of the rising sun was sent to Chinese Emperor Yang of Sui 11 Japan is often referred to as the land of the rising sun 12 The sun is closely related to the Imperial family as legend states the imperial throne was descended from the sun goddess Amaterasu 13 14 The religion which is categorized as the ancient Ko Shintō religion of the Japanese people includes nature worship and animism and the faith has been worshiping the sun especially in agriculture and fishing The Imperial God Amaterasu ōmikami is the sun goddess From the Yayoi period 300 BCE to the Kofun period 250 CE Yamato period the Naiko Kamonkyo 内行花文鏡 ja a large bronze mirror with patterns like a flower petal manufactured in Japan was used as a celebration of the shape of the shining sun and there is a theory that one of the Three Sacred Treasures Yata no Kagami is used like this mirror 15 During the eastern expedition Jinmu tosei Emperor Jimmu s brother Itsuse no Mikoto was killed in a battle against the local chieftain Nagasunehiko the long legged man in Naniwa modern day Osaka Emperor Jimmu realized as descendants of the sun that he did not want to fight towards the sun to the east but to fight from the sun to the west So his clan went to the east side of Kii Peninsula to battle westward They reached Kumano or Ise and went towards Yamato They were victorious at the second battle with Nagasunehiko and conquered the Kinki region 16 17 The use of the sun shaped flag was thought to have taken place since the emperor s direct imperial rule 親政 was established after the Isshi Incident in 645 first year of the Taika era 18 The Japanese history text Shoku Nihongi completed in 797 has the first recorded use of the sun motif flag by Emperor Monmu s Chōga 朝賀 new year s greetings ceremony in 701 the first year of the Taihō era 5 6 For the decoration of the ceremony hall on New Year s Day the Nissho 日像 the flag with the golden sun was raised 5 6 One prominent theory is influenced by the results of the Genpei War 1180 1185 19 Until the Heian period the Nishiki flag Nishiki no mihata 錦の御旗 a symbol of the Imperial Court had a golden sun circle and a silver moon circle on a red background 19 At the end of the Heian era the Taira clan called themselves a government army and used the red flag with a gold circle 赤地金丸 as per the Imperial Court 19 The Genji Minamoto clan were in opposition so they used a white flag with a red circle 白地赤丸 when they fought the Genpei War 1180 1185 19 When the Taira clan was defeated the samurai government bakufu 幕府 was formed by the Genji 19 The warlords who came after such as Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieyasu realized they were successors of Genji so they raised the Hinomaru flag in battle 19 In the 12th century work The Tale of the Heike it was written that different samurai carried drawings of the sun on their fans 20 One legend related to the national flag is attributed to the Buddhist priest Nichiren Supposedly during a 13th century Mongolian invasion of Japan Nichiren gave a sun banner to the shōgun to carry into battle 21 During the Battle of Nagashino 28 June 1575 Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieyasu s allied forces fought Takeda Katsuyori 19 Both Nobunaga and Ieyasu had their own flags with family crests but they also held the Hinomaru 19 On the other hand the Takeda clan side also raised the Hinomaru 19 So the Hinomaru was used as a national symbol 19 One of Japan s oldest flags is housed at the Unpo ji temple in Kōshu city Yamanashi Prefecture 19 Legend states it was given by Emperor Go Reizei to Minamoto no Yoshimitsu and has been treated as a family treasure by the Takeda clan for the past 1 000 years 19 22 and at least it is older than 16th century In the 16th century unification period each daimyō had flags that were used primarily in battle Most of the flags were long banners usually charged with the mon family crest of the daimyō lord Members of the same family such as a son father and brother had different flags to carry into battle The flags served as identification and were displayed by soldiers on their backs and horses Generals also had their own flags most of which differed from soldiers flags due to their square shape 23 page needed In 1854 during the Tokugawa shogunate Japanese ships were ordered to hoist the Hinomaru to distinguish themselves from foreign ships 20 Before then different types of Hinomaru flags were used on vessels that were trading with the U S and Russia 10 The Hinomaru was decreed the merchant flag of Japan in 1870 and was the legal national flag from 1870 to 1885 making it the first national flag Japan adopted 24 25 While the idea of national symbols was strange to the Japanese the Meiji Government needed them to communicate with the outside world This became especially important after the landing of U S Commodore Matthew Perry in Yokohama Bay 26 Further Meiji Government implementations gave more identifications to Japan including the anthem Kimigayo and the imperial seal 27 In 1885 all previous laws not published in the Official Gazette of Japan were abolished 28 Because of this ruling by the new cabinet of Japan the Hinomaru was the de facto national flag since no law was in place after the Meiji Restoration 29 Early conflicts and the Pacific War edit nbsp 1930s photo of a military enrollment The Hinomaru is displayed on the house and held by several children nbsp Propaganda poster promoting harmony among Japanese Chinese and Manchu The caption in Chinese read right to left reads With the cooperation of Japan China and Manchukuo the world can be in peace The use of the national flag grew as Japan sought to develop an empire and the Hinomaru was present at celebrations after victories in the First Sino Japanese and Russo Japanese Wars The flag was also used in war efforts throughout the country 30 A Japanese propaganda film in 1934 portrayed foreign national flags as incomplete or defective with their designs while the Japanese flag is perfect in all forms 31 In 1937 a group of girls from Hiroshima Prefecture showed solidarity with Japanese soldiers fighting in China during the Second Sino Japanese War by eating flag meals that consisted of an umeboshi in the middle of a bed of rice The Hinomaru bento became the main symbol of Japan s war mobilization and solidarity with its soldiers until the 1940s 32 Japan s early victories in the Sino Japanese War resulted in the Hinomaru again being used for celebrations It was seen in the hands of every Japanese during parades 30 Textbooks during this period also had the Hinomaru printed with various slogans expressing devotion to the Emperor and the country Patriotism was taught as a virtue to Japanese children Expressions of patriotism such as displaying the flag or worshiping the Emperor daily were all part of being a good Japanese 33 The flag was a tool of Japanese imperialism in the occupied Southeast Asian areas during the Second World War people had to use the flag 34 and schoolchildren sang Kimigayo in morning flag raising ceremonies 35 Local flags were allowed for some areas such as the Philippines Indonesia and Manchukuo 36 37 38 In Korea which was part of the Empire of Japan the Hinomaru and other symbols were used to declare that the Koreans were subjects of the empire 39 During the Pacific War Americans coined the derogatory term meatballs for the Hinomaru and Japanese military aircraft insignia 40 To the Japanese the Hinomaru was the Rising Sun flag that would light the darkness of the entire world 41 To Westerners it was one of the Japanese military s most powerful symbols 42 U S occupation edit nbsp The Hinomaru is lowered in Seoul Korea on 9 September 1945 the day of the surrender The Hinomaru was the de facto flag of Japan throughout World War II and the occupation period 29 During the occupation of Japan after World War II permission from the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers SCAPJ was needed to fly the Hinomaru 43 44 Sources differ on the degree to which the use of the Hinomaru flag was restricted some use the term banned 45 46 however while the original restrictions were severe they did not amount to an outright ban 29 After World War II an ensign was used by Japanese civil ships of the United States Naval Shipping Control Authority for Japanese Merchant Marines 47 Modified from the E signal code the ensign was used from September 1945 until the U S occupation of Japan ceased 48 U S ships operating in Japanese waters used a modified O signal flag as their ensign 49 On 2 May 1947 General Douglas MacArthur lifted the restrictions on displaying the Hinomaru in the grounds of the National Diet Building on the Imperial Palace on the Prime Minister s residence and on the Supreme Court building with the ratification of the new Constitution of Japan 50 51 Those restrictions were further relaxed in 1948 when people were allowed to fly the flag on national holidays In January 1949 the restrictions were abolished and anyone could fly the Hinomaru at any time without permission As a result schools and homes were encouraged to fly the Hinomaru until the early 1950s 43 Postwar to 1999 edit nbsp The Hinomaru being raised at the United Nations headquarters in New York City in 1956Since World War II Japan s flag has been criticized for its association with the country s militaristic past Similar objections have also been raised to the current national anthem of Japan Kimigayo 22 The feelings about the Hinomaru and Kimigayo represented a general shift from a patriotic feeling about Dai Nippon Great Japan to the pacifist and anti militarist Nihon Because of this ideological shift the flag was used less often in Japan directly after the war even though restrictions were lifted by the SCAPJ in 1949 44 52 As Japan began to re establish itself diplomatically the Hinomaru was used as a political weapon overseas In a visit by Emperor Hirohito and Empress Kōjun to the Netherlands the Hinomaru was burned by Dutch citizens who demanded that he either be sent home to Japan or tried for the deaths of Dutch prisoners of war during the Second World War 53 Domestically the flag was not even used in protests against a new Status of Forces Agreement being negotiated between the U S and Japan The most common flag used by the trade unions and other protesters was the red flag of revolt 54 An issue with the Hinomaru and national anthem was raised once again when Tokyo hosted the 1964 Summer Olympic Games Before the Olympic Games the size of the sun disc of the national flag was changed partly because the sun disc was not considered striking when it was being flown with other national flags 44 Tadamasa Fukiura a color specialist chose to set the sun disc at two thirds of the flag s length Fukiura also chose the flag colors for the 1964 games as well as for the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano 55 In 1989 the death of Emperor Hirohito once again raised moral issues about the national flag Conservatives felt that if the flag could be used during the ceremonies without reopening old wounds they might have a chance to propose that the Hinomaru become the national flag without being challenged about its meaning 56 During an official six day mourning period flags were flown at half staff or draped in black bunting all across Japan 57 Despite reports of protesters vandalizing the Hinomaru on the day of the Emperor s funeral 58 schools right to fly the Japanese flag at half staff without reservations brought success to the conservatives 56 Since 1999 edit nbsp The Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem as it appears in the Official Gazette on 15 August 1999The Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem was passed in 1999 choosing both the Hinomaru and Kimigayo as Japan s national symbols The passage of the law stemmed from the suicide of the principal of Sera High School ja in Sera Hiroshima Toshihiro Ishikawa who could not resolve a dispute between his school board and his teachers over the use of the Hinomaru and Kimigayo 59 60 The Act is one of the most controversial laws passed by the Diet since the 1992 Law Concerning Cooperation for United Nations Peacekeeping Operations and Other Operations also known as the International Peace Cooperation Law 61 Prime Minister Keizō Obuchi of the Liberal Democratic Party LDP decided to draft legislation to make the Hinomaru and Kimigayo official symbols of Japan in 2000 His Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiromu Nonaka wanted the legislation to be completed by the 10th anniversary of Emperor Akihito s enthronement 62 This is not the first time legislation was considered for establishing both symbols as official In 1974 with the backdrop of the 1972 return of Okinawa to Japan and the 1973 oil crisis Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka hinted at a law being passed enshrining both symbols in the law of Japan 63 In addition to instructing the schools to teach and play Kimigayo Tanaka wanted students to raise the Hinomaru flag in a ceremony every morning and to adopt a moral curriculum based on certain elements of the Imperial Rescript on Education pronounced by the Meiji Emperor in 1890 64 Tanaka was unsuccessful in passing the law through the Diet that year 65 The main supporters of the bill were the LDP and the Komeito CGP while the opposition included the Social Democratic Party SDPJ and Communist Party JCP who cited the connotations both symbols had with the war era The CPJ was further opposed for not allowing the issue to be decided by the public Meanwhile the Democratic Party of Japan DPJ could not develop party consensus on it DPJ President and future prime minister Naoto Kan stated that the DPJ must support the bill because the party already recognized both symbols as the symbols of Japan 66 Deputy Secretary General and future prime minister Yukio Hatoyama thought that this bill would cause further divisions among society and the public schools Hatoyama voted for the bill while Kan voted against it 62 Before the vote there were calls for the bills to be separated at the Diet Waseda University professor Norihiro Kato stated that Kimigayo is a separate issue more complex than the Hinomaru flag 67 Attempts to designate only the Hinomaru as the national flag by the DPJ and other parties during the vote of the bill were rejected by the Diet 68 The House of Representatives passed the bill on 22 July 1999 by a 403 to 86 vote 69 The legislation was sent to the House of Councilors on 28 July and was passed on 9 August It was enacted into law on 13 August 70 On 8 August 2009 a photograph was taken at a DPJ rally for the House of Representatives election showing a banner that was hanging from a ceiling The banner was made of two Hinomaru flags cut and sewn together to form the shape of the DPJ logo This infuriated the LDP and Prime Minister Tarō Asō saying this act was unforgivable In response DPJ President Yukio Hatoyama who voted for the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem 62 said that the banner was not the Hinomaru and should not be regarded as such 71 Flag design edit nbsp Flag of Japan flyingPassed in 1870 the Prime Minister s Proclamation No 57 had two provisions related to the national flag The first provision specified who flew the flag and how it was flown the second specified how the flag was made 10 The ratio was seven units width and ten units length 7 10 The red disc which represents the sun was calculated to be three fifths of the hoist width The law decreed the disc to be in the center but it was usually placed one hundredth 1 100 towards the hoist 72 73 this makes the disc appear centered when the flag is flying this technique is used in other flags such as the Flag of Bangladesh On 3 October of the same year regulations about the design of the merchant ensign and other naval flags were passed 74 For the merchant flag the ratio was two units width and three units length 2 3 The size of the disc remained the same but the sun disc was placed one twentieth 1 20 towards the hoist 75 nbsp Construction sheetWhen the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem passed the dimensions of the flag were slightly altered 1 The overall ratio of the flag was changed to two units width by three units length 2 3 The red disc was shifted towards the center but the overall size of the disc stayed the same 2 The background of the flag is white and the center is a red circle 紅色 beni iro but the exact color shades were not defined in the 1999 law 1 The only hint given about the red colour is that it is a deep shade 76 Issued by the Japan Defense Agency now the Ministry of Defense in 1973 Shōwa 48 specifications list the red color of the flag as 5R 4 12 and the white as N9 in the Munsell color chart 77 The document was changed on 21 March 2008 Heisei 20 to match the flag s construction with current legislation and updated the Munsell colours The document lists acrylic fiber and nylon as fibers that could be used in construction of flags used by the military For acrylic the red color is 5 7R 3 7 15 5 and white is N9 4 nylon has 6 2R 4 15 2 for red and N9 2 for white 77 In a document issued by the Official Development Assistance ODA the red color for the Hinomaru and the ODA logo is listed as DIC 156 and CMYK 0 100 90 0 78 During deliberations about the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem there was a suggestion to either use a bright red 赤色 aka iro shade or use one from the color pool of the Japanese Industrial Standards 79 Colour chart edit Official colour White Official colour Red Colour system Source Year N9 80 5R 4 12 80 Munsell DSP Z 8701C 77 1973N A 156 81 DIC ODA Symbol Mark Guidelines 78 1995Use and customs edit nbsp In Osaka Metro the flag is hoisted on national holidaysWhen the Hinomaru was first introduced the government required citizens to greet the Emperor with the flag There was some resentment among the Japanese over the flag resulting in some protests It took some time for the flag to gain acceptance among the people 27 Before World War II all homes were required to display Hinomaru on national holidays 29 Since the war the display of the flag of Japan is mostly limited to buildings attached to national and local governments such as city halls it is rarely seen at private homes or commercial buildings 29 but some people and companies have advocated displaying the flag on holidays Although the government of Japan encourages citizens and residents to fly the Hinomaru during national holidays they are not legally required to do so 82 83 Since the Emperor s 80th Birthday on 23 December 2002 the Kyushu Railway Company has displayed the Hinomaru at 330 stations 84 Starting in 1995 the ODA has used the Hinomaru motif in their official logo The design itself was not created by the government the logo was chosen from 5 000 designs submitted by the public but the government was trying to increase the visualization of the Hinomaru through their aid packages and development programs According to the ODA the use of the flag is the most effective way to symbolise aid provided by the Japanese people 85 Hinomaru Yosegaki edit Main article Good Luck Flag nbsp An example of a Hinomaru Yosegaki from World War IIDuring World War II in Japanese culture it was a popular custom for friends classmates and relatives of a deploying soldier to sign a Hinomaru and present it to him The flag was also used as a good luck charm and a prayer to wish the soldier back safely from battle One term for this kind of charm is Hinomaru Yosegaki 日の丸寄せ書き 86 One tradition is that no writing should touch the sun disc 87 After battles these flags were often captured or later found on deceased Japanese soldiers Some of these flags have become souvenirs 87 and some are being returned to Japan and the descendants of the deceased 88 In modern times the Hinomaru Yosegaki is still being used The tradition of signing the Hinomaru as a good luck charm still continues though in a limited fashion The Hinomaru Yosegaki is shown at sporting events to give support to the Japanese national team 89 The Yosegaki group effort flag 寄せ書き is used for campaigning soldiers 90 athletes retirees transfer students in a community and for friends The colored paper and flag has writing with a message In modern Japan it is given as a present to a person at a send off party for athletes a farewell party for colleagues or transfer students for graduation and retirement After natural disasters such as the 2011 Tōhoku Earthquake and tsunami people write notes on a Hinomaru Yosegaki to show support Hachimaki edit nbsp Takeru Kobayashi wears a hachimaki The hachimaki 鉢巻 helmet scarf is a white headband bandana with the red sun in the middle Phrases are usually written on it It is worn as a symbol of perseverance effort and or courage by the wearer These are worn on many occasions by for example sports spectators women giving birth students in cram school office workers 91 tradesmen taking pride in their work etc During World War II the phrases Certain Victory 必勝 Hisshō or Seven Lives was written on the hachimaki and worn by kamikaze pilots This denoted that the pilot was willing to die for his country 92 Hinomaru Bentō edit nbsp A Hinomaru bentōA bentō and makunouchi are types of Japanese lunch boxes It can have Hinomaru rice 日の丸ご飯 Hinomaru gohan It consists of gohan steamed white rice with a red umeboshi dried ume in the center which represents the sun and the flag of Japan A Hinomaru lunch box 日の丸弁当 Hinomaru bentō only has white rice and a red umeboshi in the center The salty vinegar soaked umeboshi acts as a preservative for the rice There are also hinomaru rice bowls which are less common 93 Culture and perception edit nbsp A flag waving crowd greet the Imperial Family after Emperor Naruhito s ascension to the throne at the Imperial Palace 4 May 2019 According to polls conducted by mainstream media most Japanese people had perceived the flag of Japan as the national flag even before the passage of the Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem in 1999 94 Despite this controversies surrounding the use of the flag in school events or media still remain For example liberal newspapers such as Asahi Shimbun and Mainichi Shimbun often feature articles critical of the flag of Japan reflecting their readerships political spectrum 95 To other Japanese the flag represents the time where democracy was suppressed when Japan was an empire 96 The display of the national flag at homes and businesses is also debated in Japanese society Because of its association with uyoku dantai right wing activists reactionary politics or hooliganism most homes and businesses do not fly the flag 29 There is no requirement to fly the flag on any national holiday or special events The town of Kanazawa Ishikawa has proposed plans in September 2012 to use government funds to buy flags with the purpose of encouraging citizens to fly the flag on national holidays 97 The Japanese Communist Party is vocally against the flag Negative perceptions of the national flag exist in former colonies of Japan as well as within Japan itself such as in Okinawa In one notable example of this on 26 October 1987 an Okinawan supermarket owner burned the flag before the start of the National Sports Festival of Japan 98 The flag burner Shōichi Chibana burned the Hinomaru not only to show opposition to atrocities committed by the Japanese army and the continued presence of U S forces but also to prevent it from being displayed in public 99 Other incidents in Okinawa included the flag being torn down during school ceremonies and students refusing to honor the flag as it was being raised to the sounds of Kimigayo 30 In the capital city of Naha Okinawa the Hinomaru was raised for the first time since the return of Okinawa to Japan to celebrate the city s 80th anniversary in 2001 100 In the People s Republic of China and Republic of Korea both of which had been occupied by the Empire of Japan the 1999 formal adoption of the Hinomaru was met with reactions of Japan moving towards the right and also a step towards re militarization The passage of the 1999 law also coincided with the debates about the status of the Yasukuni Shrine U S Japan military cooperation and the creation of a missile defense program In other nations that Japan occupied the 1999 law was met with mixed reactions or glossed over In Singapore the older generation still harbors ill feelings toward the flag while the younger generation does not hold similar views The Philippine government not only believed that Japan was not going to revert to militarism but the goal of the 1999 law was to formally establish two symbols the flag and anthem in law and every state has a right to create national symbols 101 Japan has no law criminalizing the burning of the Hinomaru but foreign flags cannot be burned in Japan 102 103 Protocol edit nbsp Diagram published with Regulation 1 from 1912 Raising Mourning Flag for the Emperor According to protocol the flag may fly from sunrise until sunset businesses and schools are permitted to fly the flag from opening to closing 104 When flying the flags of Japan and another country at the same time in Japan the Japanese flag takes the position of honor and the flag of the guest country flies to its right Both flags must be at the same height and of equal size When more than one foreign flag is displayed Japan s flag is arranged in the alphabetical order prescribed by the United Nations 105 When the flag becomes unsuitable to use it is customarily burned in private 104 The Law Regarding the National Flag and Anthem does not specify on how the flag should be used but different prefectures came up with their own regulations to use the Hinomaru and other prefectural flags 106 107 Mourning edit The Hinomaru flag has at least two mourning styles One is to display the flag at half staff 半旗 Han ki as is common in many countries The offices of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs also hoist the flag at half staff when a funeral is performed for a foreign nation s head of state 108 An alternative mourning style is to wrap the spherical finial with black cloth and place a black ribbon known as a mourning flag 弔旗 ja Chō ki above the flag This style dates back to the death of Emperor Meiji on 30 July 1912 and the Cabinet issued an ordinance stipulating that the national flag should be raised in mourning when the Emperor dies 109 The Cabinet has the authority to announce the half staffing of the national flag 110 See also ja 大喪中ノ国旗掲揚方 Public schools edit nbsp A graduation ceremony in Hokkaido Prefecture with both the Hinomaru and the flag of Hokkaido Prefecture The school s own flag is on a staff to the speakers right Since the end of World War II the Ministry of Education has issued statements and regulations to promote the usage of both the Hinomaru and Kimigayo national anthem at schools under their jurisdiction The first of these statements was released in 1950 stating that it was desirable but not required to use both symbols This desire was later expanded to include both symbols on national holidays and during ceremonial events to encourage students on what national holidays are and to promote defense education 44 In a 1989 reform of the education guidelines the LDP controlled government first demanded that the flag must be used in school ceremonies and that proper respect must be given to it and to Kimigayo 111 Punishments for school officials who did not follow this order were also enacted with the 1989 reforms 44 The 1999 curriculum guideline issued by the Ministry of Education after the passage of the Law Regarding the National Flag and Anthem decrees that on entrance and graduation ceremonies schools must raise the flag of Japan and instruct students to sing the Kimigayo given the significance of the flag and the song 112 Additionally the ministry s commentary on the 1999 curriculum guideline for elementary schools note that given the advance of internationalization along with fostering patriotism and awareness of being Japanese it is important to nurture school children s respectful attitude toward the flag of Japan and Kimigayo as they grow up to be respected Japanese citizens in an internationalized society 113 The ministry also stated that if Japanese students cannot respect their own symbols then they will not be able to respect the symbols of other nations 114 Schools have been the center of controversy over both the anthem and the national flag 45 The Tokyo Board of Education requires the use of both the anthem and flag at events under their jurisdiction The order requires school teachers to respect both symbols or risk losing their jobs 115 Some have protested that such rules violate the Constitution of Japan but the Board has argued that since schools are government agencies their employees have an obligation to teach their students how to be good Japanese citizens 22 As a sign of protest schools refused to display the Hinomaru at school graduations and some parents ripped down the flag 45 Teachers have unsuccessfully brought criminal complaints against Tokyo Governor Shintarō Ishihara and senior officials for ordering teachers to honor the Hinomaru and Kimigayo 116 After earlier opposition the Japan Teachers Union accepts the use of both the flag and anthem the smaller All Japan Teachers and Staffs Union still opposes both symbols and their use inside the school system 117 Related flags editMain article List of Japanese flags Military flags edit See also Rising Sun Flag nbsp An illustration of the Japanese army occupying Khabarovsk 1920 Both Hinomaru and the Rising Sun Flag in background are depicted The Japan Self Defense Forces JSDF and the Japan Ground Self Defense Force use the Rising Sun Flag with eight red rays extending outward called Hachijō Kyokujitsuki 八条旭日旗 A gold border is situated partially around the edge 118 A well known variant of the sun disc design is the sun disc with 16 red rays in a Siemens star formation which was also historically used by Japan s military particularly the Imperial Japanese Army and the Imperial Japanese Navy The ensign known in Japanese as the Jyurokujō Kyokujitsu ki 十六条旭日旗 was first adopted as the war flag on 15 May 1870 and was used until the end of World War II in 1945 It was re adopted on 30 June 1954 and is now used as the war flag and naval ensign of the Japan Ground Self Defense Force JGSDF and the Japan Maritime Self Defense Force JMSDF 118 JSDF Chief of Staff Katsutoshi Kawano said the Rising Sun Flag is the Maritime Self Defense Force sailors pride 119 Due to its continued use by the Imperial Japanese Army this flag carries the negative connotation similar to the Nazi flag in China and Korea 120 These formerly colonised countries state that this flag is a symbol of Japanese imperialism during World War II and was an ongoing conflict event for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics The JMSDF also employs the use of a masthead pennant First adopted in 1914 and readopted in 1965 the masthead pennant contains a simplified version of the naval ensign at the hoist end with the rest of the pennant colored white The ratio of the pennant is between 1 40 and 1 90 121 The Japan Air Self Defense Force JASDF established independently in 1952 has only the plain sun disc as its emblem 122 This is the only branch of service with an emblem that does not invoke the rayed Imperial Standard However the branch does have an ensign to fly on bases and during parades The Japan Air Self Defense Force flag was first adopted in 1955 after the JASDF was created in 1954 The flag is cobalt blue with a gold winged eagle on top of a combined star the moon the Hinomaru sun disc and clouds 123 124 The latest version of the JASDF flag was re adopted on 19 March 2001 125 Although not an official national flag the Z signal flag played a major role in Japanese naval history On 27 May 1905 Admiral Heihachirō Tōgō of the Mikasa was preparing to engage the Russian Baltic Fleet Before the Battle of Tsushima began Togo raised the Z flag on the Mikasa and engaged the Russian fleet winning the battle for Japan The raising of the flag said to the crew the following The fate of Imperial Japan hangs on this one battle all hands will exert themselves and do their best The Z flag was also raised on the aircraft carrier Akagi on the eve of Japan s attack on Pearl Harbor Hawaii in December 1941 126 nbsp nbsp nbsp Pre WWII War flag of the Imperial Japanese Army 1868 1945 十六条旭日旗 nbsp nbsp nbsp Pre WWII flag of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1889 1945 nbsp nbsp nbsp Post WWII flag of the Japan Ground Self Defense Force 八条旭日旗 nbsp nbsp nbsp Post WWII flag of the Japan Maritime Self Defense Force 1954 present 十六条旭日旗 nbsp nbsp Post WWII flag of the Japan Air Self Defense Force JASDF nbsp Pre WWII roundel military aircraft insignia of Navy and Army military aircraft nbsp Post WWII roundel of the JASDFImperial flags edit See also Arjan bowl nbsp nbsp The standard of the Japanese EmperorStarting in 1870 flags were created for the Japanese Emperor then Emperor Meiji the Empress and other members of the imperial family 127 At first the Emperor s flag was ornate with a sun resting in the center of an artistic pattern He had flags that were used on land at sea and when he was in a carriage The imperial family was also granted flags to be used at sea and while on land one for use on foot and one carriage flag The carriage flags were a monocolored chrysanthemum with 16 petals placed in the center of a monocolored background 74 These flags were discarded in 1889 when the Emperor decided to use the chrysanthemum on a red background as his flag With minor changes in the color shades and proportions the flags adopted in 1889 are still in use by the imperial family 128 129 The current Emperor s flag is a 16 petal chrysanthemum called Kikkamon Japanese 菊花紋 colored in gold centered on a red background with a 2 3 ratio The Empress uses the same flag except the shape is that of a swallow tail The crown prince and the crown princess use the same flags except with a smaller chrysanthemum and a white border in the middle of the flags 130 The chrysanthemum has been associated with the Imperial throne since the rule of Emperor Go Toba in the 12th century but it did not become the exclusive symbol of the Imperial throne until 1868 127 Subnational flags edit nbsp The national flag flying with the flags of Okinawa Prefecture and Urasoe CityEach of the 47 prefectures of Japan has its own flag which like the national flag consists of a symbol called a mon charged upon a monocolored field except for Ehime Prefecture where the background is bicolored 131 There are several prefecture flags such as Hiroshima s that match their specifications to the national flag 2 3 ratio mon placed in the center and is 3 5 the length of the flag 132 Some of the mon display the name of the prefecture in Japanese characters others are stylized depictions of the location or another special feature of the prefecture An example of a prefectural flag is that of Nagano where the orange katakana character ナ na appears in the center of a white disc One interpretation of the mon is that the na symbol represents a mountain and the white disc a lake The orange color represents the sun while the white color represents the snow of the region 133 Municipalities can also adopt flags of their own The designs of the city flags are similar to the prefectural flags a mon on a monocolored background An example is the flag of Amakusa in Kumamoto Prefecture the city symbol is composed of the Katakana character ア a and surrounded by waves 134 This symbol is centered on a white flag with a ratio of 2 3 135 Both the city emblem and the flag were adopted in 2006 135 Derivatives edit nbsp nbsp Former Japan Post flag 1872 1887 nbsp The flag of the Association of Evenks in the Sakha Republic composites the Flag of Japan and other elements In addition to the flags used by the military several other flag designs were inspired by the national flag The former Japan Post flag consisted of the Hinomaru with a red horizontal bar placed in the center of the flag There was also a thin white ring around the red sun It was later replaced by a flag that consisted of the postal mark in red on a white background 136 Two recently designed national flags resemble the Japanese flag In 1971 Bangladesh gained independence from Pakistan and it adopted a national flag that had a green background charged with an off centered red disc that contained a golden map of Bangladesh The current flag adopted in 1972 dropped the golden map and kept everything else The Government of Bangladesh officially calls the red disc a circle 137 the red color symbolizes the blood that was shed to create their country 138 The island nation of Palau uses a flag of similar design but the color scheme is completely different While the Government of Palau does not cite the Japanese flag as an influence on their national flag Japan did administer Palau from 1914 until 1944 139 The flag of Palau is an off centered golden yellow full moon on a sky blue background 140 The moon stands for peace and a young nation while the blue background represents Palau s transition to self government from 1981 to 1994 when it achieved full independence 141 The Japanese naval ensign also influenced other flag designs One such flag design is used by the Asahi Shimbun At the bottom hoist of the flag one quarter of the sun is displayed The kanji character 朝 is displayed on the flag colored white covering most of the sun The rays extend from the sun occurring in a red and white alternating order culminating in 13 total stripes 142 143 The flag is commonly seen at the National High School Baseball Championship as the Asahi Shimbun is a main sponsor of the tournament 144 The rank flags and ensigns of the Imperial Japanese Navy also based their designs on the naval ensign 145 Gallery edit nbsp Japanese flag at the Meiji Memorial nbsp Japan Self Defense Forces honor guards holding the national flag during Mike Pence s visit nbsp Flags of Japan and other G7 states flying in Toronto nbsp A series of Japanese flags in a school entrance nbsp Yokohama City left and the Hinomaru center flying on Yokohama Harbor nbsp Firefighters in Tokyo holding the Japanese national flag during a ceremony nbsp Large flags of Japan at the Tokyo Olympic Stadium during the final match of the East Asian Football Championship 14 February 2010 nbsp Totenko Rooster Crows with hinomaru and lady 1909See also edit nbsp Japan portalList of Japanese flags National symbols of Japan Nobori Sashimono Uma jirushiReferences editFootnotes edit As the civil ensign by Proclamation No 57 As the national flag and slight modifications to the design of the flag Notes edit a b c d 国旗及び国歌に関する法律 a b Consulate General of Japan in San Francisco Basic General Information on Japan 1 January 2008 archived 11 December 2012 郵船商船規則 in Japanese Government of Japan via Wikisource 法令全書 Act of 27 October 1870 in Japanese National Diet doi 10 11501 787950 Archived from the original on 28 March 2019 Retrieved 26 February 2019 a b c 国旗 の真実をどれだけ知っていますか 23 December 2015 Archived from the original on 4 February 2016 a b c Shoku Nihongi University of California Berkeley see original Japanese text Archived from the original on 4 February 2021 Yamanashi Tourism Organization 日の丸の御旗 archived 1 October 2011 in Japanese Unpoji 宝物殿の案内 archived 4 November 2011 in Japanese Little Known Wars of Great and Lasting Impact The Turning Points in Our History We Should Know More About Fair Winds 2009 ISBN 1 59233 375 3 p 54 a b c Web Japan Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs National Flag and Anthem PDF 2000 archived 15 June 2010 Dyer 1909 p 24 Edgington 2003 pp 123 124 Ashkenazi 2003 pp 112 113 Hall 1996 p 110 森浩一著 日本神話の考古学 朝日新聞出版 1993年7月 日本古典文学大系 2 風土記 岩波書店 1958年4月 の伊勢国風土記逸文に 神武天皇が伊勢国造の祖の天日別命に命じて伊勢国に攻め込ませ 国津神の伊勢津彦を追い出して伊勢を平定したとある 熊野からでは北に向かって戦う事になる このため鈴木眞年のように 伊勢まで行って西から大和盆地に侵攻したとする説もある 泉欣七郎 千田健共編 日本なんでもはじめ ナンバーワン 1985年 149頁 ISBN 4931016065 a b c d e f g h i j k l 国旗 日の丸 のルーツは 種子島家の船贈 PDF Nishinomote City 28 January 2021 Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2021 a b Itoh 2003 p 205 Feldman 2004 pp 151 155 a b c Hongo Jun Hinomaru Kimigayo express conflicts both past and future The Japan Times 17 July 2007 archived 18 July 2012 Turnbull 2001 Goodman Neary 1996 pp 77 78 National Diet Library レファレンス事例詳細 Reference Case Details 2 July 2009 archived 20 July 2011 in Japanese Feiler 2004 p 214 a b Ohnuki Tierney 2002 pp 68 69 Rohl 2005 p 20 a b c d e f Befu 1992 pp 32 33 a b c Befu 2001 pp 92 95 Nornes 2003 p 81 Cwiertka 2007 pp 117 119 Partner 2004 pp 55 56 Tipton 2002 p 137 Newell 1982 p 28 The Camera Overseas The Japanese People Voted Against Frontier Friction Life 21 June 1937 75 National Historical Institute The Controversial Philippine National Flag PDF 2008 archived 1 June 2009 Taylor 2004 p 321 Goodman Neary 1996 p 102 Morita D 19 April 2007 A Story of Treason San Francisco Nichi Bei Times Ebrey 2004 p 443 Hauser Ernest Son of Heaven Life 10 June 1940 archived 14 December 2011 79 a b Ministry of Education 国旗 国歌の由来等 Origin of the National Flag and Anthem 1 September 1999 archived 10 January 2008 in Japanese a b c d e Goodman Neary 1996 pp 81 83 a b c Weisman Steven R For Japanese Flag and Anthem Sometimes Divide The New York Times 29 April 1990 archived 24 May 2013 Hardarce Helen Adam L Kern New Directions in the Study of Meiji Japan Brill 1997 ISBN 90 04 10735 5 p 653 吉田 藤人 邦人船員消滅 Kunihito crew extinguished archived 9 December 2012 in Japanese University of Leicester The Journal of Transport History Manchester United Kingdom University of Leicester 1987 p 41 Carr Hulme 1956 p 200 Yoshida Shigeru National Diet Library Letter from Shigeru Yoshida to General MacArthur dated May 2 1947 2 May 1947 archived 8 December 2008 in Japanese English MacArthur Douglas National Archives of Japan Letter from Douglas MacArthur to Prime Minister dated May 2 1947 2 May 1947 archived 11 June 2011 Meyer 2009 p 266 Large 1992 p 184 Yamazumi 1988 p 76 Fukiura Tadamasa 2009 ブラックマヨネーズ TV Japan New Star Creation a b Borneman 2003 p 112 Chira Susan Hirohito 124th Emperor of Japan Is Dead at 87 The New York Times 7 January 1989 archived 7 January 2010 Kataoka 1991 p 149 Aspinall 2001 p 126 Vote in Japan Backs Flag and Ode as Symbols The New York Times 23 July 1999 archived 1 June 2013 Williams 2006 p 91 a b c Itoh 2003 pp 209 210 Goodman Neary 1996 pp 82 83 Education Tanaka v the Teachers Time 17 June 1974 archived 23 June 2011 Okano 1999 p 237 Democratic Party of Japan 国旗国歌法制化についての民主党の考え方 The DPJ Asks For A Talk About the Flag and Anthem Law 21 July 1999 archived 8 July 2013 in Japanese Contemporary Japanese Thought Columbia University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 231 13620 4 p 211 Democratic Party of Japan 国旗 国歌法案 衆院で可決 民主党は自主投票 Flag and Anthem Law Passed by the House DPJ Free Vote 22 July 1999 archived 19 October 2013 in Japanese National Diet Library 第145回国会 本会議 第47号 22 July 1999 archived 14 July 2012 in Japanese House of Representatives 議案審議経過情報 国旗及び国歌に関する法律案 13 August 1999 archived 23 March 2011 in Japanese 日本の議論 日の丸裁断による民主党旗問題 国旗の侮辱行為への罰則は是か非か Japan Discussion of penalties of acts of contempt against the Hinomaru by the DPJ Sankei Shimbun 30 August 2009 archived 2 September 2009 in Japanese Sankei Digital 明治3年太政官布告第57号 Takenaka 2003 pp 68 69 a b 明治3年太政官布告第651号 Takenaka 2003 p 66 Cabinet Office Government of Japan National Flag amp National Anthem 2006 archived 22 May 2009 a b c Ministry of Defense Defense Specification Z 8701C DSPZ8701C PDF 27 November 1973 archived 20 April 2012 in Japanese a b Office of Developmental Assistance 日章旗のマーク ODAシンボルマーク National flag mark ODA Symbol PDF 1 September 1995 archived 28 September 2011 in Japanese National Diet Library 第145回国会 国旗及び国歌に関する特別委員会 第4号 145th Meeting of the Diet Discussion about the bill Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem 2 August 1999 archived 19 August 2011 in Japanese a b Hexadecimal obtained by placing the colors in Feelimage Analyzer Archived 25 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine DIC Corporation DICカラーガイド情報検索 ver 1 4 DIC Color Guide Information Retrieval version 1 4 in Japanese permanent dead link Web Japan Ministry of Foreign Affairs 国旗と国歌 National Flag and Anthem PDF archived 5 June 2011 in Japanese Yoshida Shigeru House of Councillors 答弁書第九号 27 April 1954 archived 22 January 2010 in Japanese 47news JR九州 日の丸を掲揚へ 有人330駅 祝日に JR Kyushu 330 manned stations to hoist the national flag 26 November 2002 archived 8 December 2008 in Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 27 December 2012 City of Himeji Hyogo Prefecture 開催中の平和資料館収蔵品展から 日の丸寄せ書き について Museum collections from the exhibition Group flag efforts being held for peace archived 13 August 2011 in Japanese a b Smith 1975 p 171 McBain Roger Going back home Courier amp Press 9 July 2005 archived 21 July 2011 Takenaka 2003 p 101 西宮市立郷土資料館の企画展示 Archived from the original on 19 June 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2019 Hachimaki Japanese Headbands DuncanSensei Japanese DuncanSensei Japanese 24 March 2015 Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 19 March 2016 Cutler 2001 p 271 Spacey John 24 January 2014 Japan s Patriotic Bento Box Hinomaru Japan Talk Archived from the original on 7 August 2017 Retrieved 24 October 2019 Asahi Research TV Asahi 国旗 国歌法制化について About the Law of the Flag and Anthem 18 July 1999 archived 23 May 2008 in Japanese Hoso Bunka Foundation テレビニュースの多様化により 異なる番組の固定視聴者間に生じる意見の差 Diversity of television news viewers differences of opinion arise between different programs PDF 2002 archived 28 February 2008 in Japanese Khan 1998 p 190 Town eyes subsidy for residents to buy flag The Japan Times Archived from the original on 16 October 2012 Retrieved 27 December 2012 Wundunn Sheryl Yomitan Journal A Pacifist Landlord Makes War on Okinawa Bases The New York Times 11 November 1995 archived 10 December 2008 Smits Gregory Penn State University Okinawa in Postwar Japanese Politics and the Economy 2000 archived 30 May 2013 Hinomaru flies at Naha for first time in 29 years The Japan Times dead link Japan s Neo Nationalism The Role of the Hinomaru and Kimigayo Legislation JPRI working paper 2001 2007 archived 28 April 2014 79 16 Lauterpacht 2002 p 599 Inoguchi Jain 2000 p 228 a b Sargo Flag Company Flag Protocol archived 23 December 2007 in Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs プロトコール Protocol PDF 2009 2002 archived 6 February 2011 in Japanese 国旗及び国歌の取扱いについて 国旗及び県旗の取扱いについて Ministry of Foreign Affairs Page 1 グローカル通信 平成21年5月号 プロトコール講座 Protocol Question and Answer May 2009 PDF 2009 2005 archived 7 June 2011 in Japanese 大正元年閣令第一号 Office of the Cabinet National Diet Library 全国戦没者追悼式の実施に関する件 14 May 1963 archived 10 March 2005 in Japanese Trevor 2001 p 78 Hiroshima Prefectural Board of Education Secretariat 学習指導要領における国旗及び国歌の取扱い Handling of the flag and anthem in the National Curriculum 11 September 2001 archived 22 July 2011 in Japanese Ministry of Education 小学校学習指導要領解説社会編 音楽編 特別活動編 National Curriculum Guide Elementary social notes Chapter music Chapter Special Activities 1999 archived 19 March 2006 in Japanese Aspinall 2001 p 125 McCurry Justin A touchy subject Guardian Unlimited 5 June 2006 archived 30 August 2013 The Guardian The Japan Times Ishihara s Hinomaru order called legit 5 January 2006 archived 27 December 2012 Heenan 1998 p 206 a b 自衛隊法施行令 Japan to skip S Korea fleet event over rising sun flag The Asahi Shimbun 6 October 2018 Archived from the original on 6 October 2018 Retrieved 7 October 2018 国际 在线 赵薇欲代言抗日网游洗刷 军旗装事件 之辱 图 Zhao Wei wishes to endorse the anti Japanese gaming scrubbing Xinhua 11 August 2006 archived 7 July 2008 Chinese 海上自衛隊旗章規則 海上自衛隊の使用する航空機の分類等及び塗粧標準等に 関する達 自衛隊の旗に関する訓令 桜星の数はかつての陸上自衛隊と同様 階級ではなく部隊規模を示していた Air Self Defense Force Japan CRW Flags Archived from the original on 15 March 2016 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Carpenter 2004 p 124 a b Fujitani 1996 pp 48 49 Matoba 1901 pp 180 181 Takahashi 1903 pp 180 181 皇室儀制令 Imperial System archived 8 December 2008 in Japanese Government of Ehime Prefecture 愛媛県のシンボル Symbols of Ehime Prefecture 2009 archived 9 January 2008 in Japanese 広島県県章および県旗の制定 Government of Nagano Prefecture 長野県の県章 県旗 Flag and Emblem of Nagano Prefecture 2006 archived 18 September 2007 in Japanese 天草市章 a b 天草市旗 Communications Museum Tei Park 郵便のマーク archived 2 January 2013 in Japanese Prime Minister s Office People s Republic of Bangladesh People s Republic of Bangladesh Flag Rules 1972 PDF 2005 2007 archived 14 July 2010 Embassy of Bangladesh in the Netherlands Facts and Figures archived 24 July 2011 Van Fossen Anthony B Centre for the Study of Australia Asia Relations Faculty of Asian and International Studies Griffith University The International Political Economy of Pacific Islands Flags of Convenience Australia Asia archived 14 December 2011 66 69 53 Republic of Palau National Government Palau Flag 18 July 2008 archived 13 November 2009 Smith 2001 p 73 Saito 1987 p 53 Tazagi 2004 p 11 Mangan 2000 p 213 Gordon 1915 pp 217 218 Bibliography edit Ashkenazi Michael Handbook of Japanese Mythology ABC CLIO 2003 ISBN 1 57607 467 6 Aspinall Robert W Teachers Unions and the Politics of Education in Japan State University of New York Press 2001 ISBN 0 7914 5050 3 Befu Harumi Symbols of nationalism and Nihonjinron In Goodman Roger and Kirsten Refsing Ideology and Practice in Modern Japan Routledge 1992 ISBN 0 415 06102 4 Befu Harumi Hegemony of Homogeneity An Anthropological Analysis of Nihonjinron Trans Pacific Press 2001 ISBN 978 1 876843 05 2 Borneman John Death of the Father An Anthropology of the End in Political Authority Berghahn Books 2003 2011 ISBN 1 57181 111 7 Carpenter Ronald H Rhetoric In Martial Deliberations And Decision Making Cases And Consequences University of South Carolina Press 2004 ISBN 978 1 57003 555 5 Carr Harold Gresham Frederick Edward Hulme Flags of the world London New York Warne 1956 Cutler Thomas The Battle of Leyte Gulf 23 26 October 1944 Naval Institute Press 2001 ISBN 1 55750 243 9 Cwiertka Katarzyna Joanna Modern Japanese Cuisine Food Power and National Identity Reaktion Books 2007 ISBN 1 86189 298 5 Dyer Henry Japan in World Politics A Study in International Dynamics Blackie amp Son Limited 1909 Edgington David William Japan at the Millennium Joining Past and Future UCB Press 2003 ISBN 0 7748 0899 3 Ebrey Patricia Buckley Anne Walthall James Palais East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing 2004 ISBN 0 547 00534 2 Feiler Bruce Learning to Bow Inside the Heart of Japan Harper Perennial 2004 ISBN 0 06 057720 7 Feldman David Do Elephants Jump HarperCollins 2004 ISBN 0 06 053913 5 Fujitani Takashi Splendid Monarchy Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan University of California Press 1996 ISBN 978 0 520 21371 5 Goodman Roger Ian Neary Case Studies on Human Rights in Japan Routledge 1996 ISBN 978 1 873410 35 6 Gordon William Flags of the World Past and Present Frederick Warne amp Co 1915 Hall James Illustrated Dictionary of Symbols in Eastern and Western Art Westview Press 1996 ISBN 0 06 430982 7 Heenan Patrick The Japan Handbook Routledge 1998 ISBN 1 57958 055 6 Inoguchi Takashi Purnendra Jain Japanese Foreign Policy Today Palgrave Macmillan Ltd 2000 ISBN 0 312 22707 8 Itoh Mayumi The Hatoyama Dynasty Japanese Political Leadership Through the Generations Palgrave Macmillan 2003 ISBN 1 4039 6331 2 Kataoka Tetsuya Creating Single Party Democracy Japan s Postwar Political System Hoover Institution Press 1991 ISBN 0 8179 9111 5 Khan Yoshimitsu Japanese Moral Education Past and Present Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 1998 ISBN 0 8386 3693 4 Large Stephen Emperor Hirohito and Showa Japan A Political Biography Routledge 1992 ISBN 0 415 03203 2 Lauterpacht Elihu In C J Greenwood and A G Oppenheimer International Law Reports Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 521 80775 3 Mangan J A Finn Gerry Giulianotti Richard and Majumdar Boria Football Culture Local Conflicts Global Visions Routledge 2000 ISBN 978 0 7146 5041 8 Matoba Seinosuke 陸軍と海軍 Army and Navy 1901 in Japanese Meyer Milton Japan A Concise History Rowman amp Littlefield Publishing Group 2009 ISBN 0 7425 4117 7 Newell William Japan in Asia 1942 1945 Singapore University Press 1982 ISBN 9971 69 014 4 Nornes Abe Mark Japanese Documentary Film The Meiji Era through Hiroshima University of Minnesota Press 2003 ISBN 0 8166 4046 7 Ohnuki Tierney Emiko Kamikaze Cherry Blossoms and Nationalisms University of Chicago Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 226 62091 6 Okano Kaori Motonori Tsuchiya 1999 Education in Contemporary Japan Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 62686 6 retrieved 17 October 2020 Partner Simon Toshie A Story of Village Life in Twentieth Century Japan University of California Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 520 24097 1 Rohl Wilhelm History of law in Japan since 1868 Part 5 Volume 12 Brill 2005 ISBN 978 90 04 13164 4 Saito Shinya 記者四十年 Fourteen Years As A Reporter Asahi Shimbun Publishing 1987 in Japanese ISBN 978 4 02 260421 7 Smith Whitney Flags Through the Ages and Across the World McGraw Hill 1975 ISBN 0 07 059093 1 Smith Whitney Flag Lore Of All Nations Millbrook Press 2001 ISBN 0 7613 1753 8 Takahashi Yuuichi 海軍問答 Navy Dialogue 1903 in Japanese Takenaka Yoshiharu 知っておきたい国旗 旗の基礎知識 Flag basics you should know Gifu Shimbun 2003 in Japanese ISBN 4 87797 054 1 Taylor Jean Gelman Indonesia Peoples and Histories Yale University Press 2004 ISBN 0 300 10518 5 Tazagi Shirou 梶山静六 死に顔に笑みをたたえて Seiroku Kajiyama Praising the smile in the dying face Kodansha 2004 in Japanese ISBN 4 06 212592 7 Tipton Elise Modern Japan A Social and Political History Routledge 2002 ISBN 978 0 415 18538 7 Trevor Malcolm Japan Restless Competitor The Pursuit of Economic Nationalism Routledge 2001 ISBN 978 1 903350 02 7 Turnbull Stephen Howard Gerrard Ashigaru 1467 1649 Osprey Publishing 2001 ISBN 1 84176 149 4 Williams David Rikki Kersten 2006 The Left in the Shaping of Japanese Democracy Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 33435 8 retrieved 17 October 2020 Yamazumi Masami 日の丸 君が代問題とは何か Otsuki Shoten 1988 in Japanese ISBN 4 272 41032 6 Legislation edit Government of Japan 明治3年太政官布告第57号 Prime Minister s Proclamation No 57 27 February 1870 archived 23 May 2013 in Japanese National Diet Library 明治3年太政官布告第651号 Prime Minister s Proclamation No 651 PDF 3 October 1870 archived 20 October 2021 in Japanese Government of Japan 大正元年閣令第一号 大喪中ノ国旗掲揚方 Regulation 1 from 1912 Raising Mourning Flag For the Emperor 30 July 1912 archived 18 August 2010 in Japanese Government of Japan 自衛隊法施行令 Self Defense Forces Law Enforcement Order 30 June 1954 archived 7 April 2008 in Japanese Ministry of Defense 海上自衛隊の使用する航空機の分類等及び塗粧標準等に 関する達 Standard Sizes Markings and Paint Used On Aircraft PDF 24 December 1962 archived 22 July 2011 in Japanese Government of Hiroshima Prefecture 広島県県章および県旗の制定 Law About the Flag and Emblem of Hiroshima Prefecture 16 July 1968 archived 19 July 2011 in Japanese Government of Japan 国旗及び国歌に関する法律 法律第百二十七号 Law Regarding the National Flag and National Anthem Act No 127 13 August 1999 archived 21 May 2010 in Japanese Police of the Hokkaido Prefecture 国旗及び国歌の取扱いについて Law Regarding Use of the National Flag and Anthem 18 November 1999 archived 6 May 2008 in Japanese Police of Kanagawa Prefecture 国旗及び県旗の取扱いについて Law Regarding the Use of the National and Prefectural Flag PDF 29 March 2003 archived 4 October 2011 in Japanese Government of Amakusa City 天草市章 Emblem of Amakusa 27 March 2003 archived 30 September 2013 in Japanese Government of Amakusa City 天草市旗 Flag of Amakusa 27 March 2003 archived 28 September 2013 in Japanese Ministry of Defense 自衛隊の旗に関する訓令 Flag Rules of the JASDF PDF 25 March 2008 archived 22 July 2011 in Japanese Ministry of Defense 海上自衛隊旗章規則 JMSDF Flag and Emblem Rules PDF 25 March 2008 archived 22 July 2011 in Japanese External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to National flag of Japan Japan at Flags of the World Flag protocol in Japanese Website on the standards of the Imperial family in Japanese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flag of Japan amp oldid 1192302516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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