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Hammer and sickle

The hammer and sickle (Unicode: "☭")[a] is a symbol meant to represent proletarian solidarity, a union between agricultural and industrial workers. It was first adopted during the Russian Revolution at the end of World War I, the hammer representing workers and the sickle representing the peasants.[1]

The hammer and sickle and red star design from the flag of the Soviet Union (1955–1991)
The hammer and sickle emblem of the Vietnamese Communist Party (1930–present)
The hammer and sickle emblem of the Chinese Communist Party (1942–1996)
The hammer and sickle emblem of the Chinese Communist Party (1996–present)
The hammer, sickle and paintbrush emblem of the Workers' Party of Korea (1949–present)
The cog and machete of the Flag of Angola (similar design)
The hammer and sickle emblem of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) on its flag (1964-present)
The ears of corn and sickle election symbol of Communist Party of India (1964-present) (similar design, except for the hammer which is replaced by Ears of Corn)
A hammer and sickle on the insignia of the Order of the Patriotic War, as displayed on the State Historical Museum.

After World War I (from which the Russian Empire withdrew in 1917) and the Russian Civil War, the hammer and sickle became more widely used as a symbol for labor within the Soviet Union and for international proletarian unity. It was taken up by many communist movements around the world, some with local variations. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War, the hammer and sickle remains commonplace in Russia and other former Soviet republics. In some other former communist countries, as well as in countries where communism is banned by law, its display is prohibited as part of decommunization policies. The hammer and sickle is also commonplace in later self-declared socialist states such as Cuba, China, North Korea, Vietnam, and Laos.[2]

History

 
The Chilean peso coin used the hammer and sickle symbol between 1894 and 1940

Worker symbolism

Farm and worker instruments and tools have long been used as symbols for proletarian struggle.

The combination of hammer and sickle symbolised the combination of farmers and construction workers. One example of use prior to its political instrumentalization by the Soviet Union is found in Chilean currency circulating since 1894.[3]

An alternative example is the combination of a hammer and a plough, with the same meaning (unity of peasants and workers). In Ireland, the symbol of the plough remains in use. The Starry Plough banner was originally used by the Irish Citizen Army, a socialist republican workers' militia. James Connolly, who co-founded the Irish Citizen Army with Jack White, said the significance of the banner was that a free Ireland would control its own destiny from the plough to the stars. A sword is forged into the plough to symbolise the end of war with the establishment of a Socialist International. That was unveiled in 1914 and flown by the Irish Citizen Army during the 1916 Easter Rising.

 
The Plough flag from 1914 and flown during the Easter Rising

Inception

In 1917, Vladimir Lenin and Anatoly Lunacharsky held a competition to create a Soviet emblem. The winning design was a hammer and sickle on top of a globe in rays of the sun, surrounded by a wreath of grain and under a five-pointed star, with the inscription "proletarians of the world, unite!" in six languages (Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Georgian, Armenian and Azerbaijani). It originally featured a sword, but Lenin strongly objected, disliking the violent connotations.[4] The winning designer was Yevgeny Ivanovich Kamzolkin (1885–1957).[5][6]

On 6 July 1923, the 2nd session of the Central Executive Committee (CIK) adopted the emblem.[4] In his work, Daily Life in a Crumbling Empire: The Absorption of Russia into the World Economy,[7] sociologist David Lempert hypothesizes that the hammer and sickle was a secular replacement for the patriarchal cross.[8]

Use in Soviet Union

 
The first State Emblem of the Soviet Union (1923–1936)

Meaning

At the time of creation, the hammer and sickle stood for worker-peasant alliance, with the hammer a traditional symbol of the industrial proletariat (who dominated the proletariat of Russia) and the sickle a traditional symbol for the peasantry, but the meaning has since broadened to a globally recognizable symbol for Marxism, communist parties, or socialist states.[4]

Current usage

Post-Soviet states

 
The flag of Transnistria is based on the flag formerly used by the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic
 
The flag of Oryol incorporates nithe flag formerly used by the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic

Two federal subjects of the post-Soviet Russian Federation use the hammer and sickle in their symbols: the Vladimir Oblast has them on its flag and the Bryansk Oblast has them on its flag and coat of arms, which is also the central element of its flag. In addition, the Russian city of Oryol also uses the hammer and sickle on its flag.[citation needed]

The former Soviet (now Russian) national airline, Aeroflot, continues to use the hammer and sickle in its symbol.[9]

Many commercially available ushanka hats, especially those marketed as "Russian hats", bear a Soviet-style hammer and sickle emblem.[citation needed]

The de facto government of Transnistria uses (with minor modifications) the flag and the emblem of the former Moldavian SSR, which includes the hammer and sickle. The flag can also appear without the hammer and sickle in some circumstances, for example on Transnistrian-issued license plates.[citation needed]

Communist parties

Three out of the five currently ruling Communist parties use a hammer and sickle as the party symbol: the Chinese Communist Party, the Communist Party of Vietnam and the Lao People's Revolutionary Party. In Laos and Vietnam, the hammer and sickle party flags can often be seen flying side by side with their respective national flags.[citation needed]

Many communist parties around the world also use it, including the Communist Party of Greece,[10] the Communist Party of Chile, both the Communist Party of Brazil and the Brazilian Communist Party, the Purba Banglar Sarbahara Party from Bangladesh, the Communist Party of Sri Lanka, the Communist Party of India (Marxist), the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation, the Communist Party of India, the Communist Party of India (Maoist), the Indian Communist Marxist Party, the Socialist Unity Centre of India (Communist), the Egyptian Communist Party, the Communist Party of Pakistan, the Communist Refoundation Party in Italy, the Communist Party of Spain, the Communist Party of Denmark, the Communist Party of Norway, the Romanian Communist Party, the Lebanese Communist Party, the Communist Party of the Philippines and the Shining Path. The Communist Party of Sweden, the Portuguese Communist Party[11] and the Mexican Communist Party use the hammer and sickle imposed on the red star.

 
 
 
 
 
Party Flag of the Brazilian Communist Party
 
Party Logo and Election Symbol of The Communist Party of India (Marxist)
 
The logo of The Communist Party of Spain
 
 

Variations

Many symbols having similar structures and messages to the original have been designed. For example, the Angolan flag shows a segment of a cog, crossed by a machete and crowned with a socialist star while the flag of Mozambique features an AK-47 crossed by a hoe. In the logo of the Communist Party USA, a circle is formed by a half cog and a semicircular sickle-blade. A hammer is laid directly over the sickle's handle with the hammer's head at the logo's center. The logo of the Communist Party of Turkey consists of half a cog wheel crossed by a hammer, with a star on the top.[citation needed]

Tools represented in other designs include: the brush, sickle and hammer of the Workers' Party of Korea; the spade, flaming torch and quill used prior to 1984 by the British Labour Party; the pickaxe and rifle used in communist Albania; and the hammer and compasses of the East German emblem and flag. The Far Eastern Republic of Russia used an anchor crossed over a spade or pickaxe, symbolising the union of the fishermen and miners. The Fourth International, founded by Leon Trotsky, uses a hammer and sickle symbol on which the number 4 is superimposed. The hammer and sickle in the Fourth International symbol are the opposite of other hammer and sickle symbols in that the head of the hammer is on the right side and the sickle end tip on the left. The Trotskyist League for the Fifth International merges a hammer with the number 5, using the number's lower arch to form the sickle. A sickle with a rifle is also used by the People's Mojahedin of Iran.[citation needed]

The Communist Party of Britain uses the hammer and dove symbol. Designed in 1988 by Michal Boncza, it is intended to highlight the party's connection to the peace movement. It is usually used in conjunction with the hammer and sickle and it appears on all of the CPB's publications. Some members of the CPB prefer one symbol over the other, although the party's 1994 congress reaffirmed the hammer and dove's position as the official emblem of the party. Similarly, the Communist Party of Israel uses a dove over the hammer and sickle as its symbol. The flag of the Guadeloupe Communist Party uses a sickle, turned to look like a majuscule G, to represent Guadeloupe.[12]

The flag of the Black Front, a Strasserist group founded by early Nazi Party members and expelled around the time of the Night of the Long Knives purge, along with his supporters and the Sturmabteilung and originator of the ideology and the Black Front himself Otto Strasser, featured a crossed hammer and sword, symbolizing the unity of the workers and military.[citation needed]

In 1938, the Dobama Asiayone, an anti-British nationalist group in the then British Burma, adopted a tricolour flag charged with red sickle and hammer.[13] From 1974–2010, the flag of Burma (Myanmar) featured a bushel of rice superimposed on a cogwheel surrounded by fourteen white stars; the rice representing the peasants and the cogwheel representing the workers, the combination symbolizing that the peasants and workers be the two basic social classes for State building, while the fourteen equal-sized white stars indicate the unity and equality of fourteen member states of the Union.[14]

The flag of Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM, Party of the Revolution in Swahili), currently the ruling political party of Tanzania, has a slightly different symbol with a hammer and a hoe (jembe) instead of a sickle to represent the most common farm tool in Africa.[citation needed]

The National Bolshevik Party used the hammer and sickle in their flag, but colored black instead of gold and in a design similar to the Nazi flag, a brighter red flag than the USSR, with a black hammer and sickle on a white disk in the center.[citation needed]

The symbols of the liberal socialist parties of Radical Civic Union in Argentina and the Czech National Social Party in the Czech Republic features a hammer and a quill with the former representing workers and the latter representing clerks.[citation needed]

The election symbol of Communist Party of India consists of a horizontal sickle, vertically crossed by Ears of Corn in the center.

Art

The hammer and sickle has long been a common theme in socialist realism, but it has also seen some depiction in non-Marxist popular culture. Andy Warhol who created many drawings and photographs of the hammer and sickle is the most famous example of this.

Legal status

In several countries in the former Eastern Bloc, there are laws that define the hammer and sickle as the symbol of a "totalitarian and criminal ideology" and the public display of the hammer and sickle and other Communist symbols such as the red star is considered a criminal offence. Georgia,[15] Hungary,[16] Latvia,[17] Lithuania,[18] Moldova (1 October 2012 – 4 June 2013)[19] and Ukraine[20][21][22] have banned communist symbols including this one. A similar law was considered in Estonia,[23] but it eventually failed in a parliamentary committee.[24] In Ukraine, the legislature equals communist symbols including hammer with sickle to Nazi swastika symbols.[25][26]

In 2010, the Lithuanian, Latvian, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Romanian, and Czech governments called for the European Union to criminalize "the approval, denial or belittling of communist crimes" similar to how a number of EU member states have banned Holocaust denial. The European Commission turned down this request, finding after a study that the criteria for EU-wide criminal legislation were not met, leaving individual member states to determine the extent to which they wished to handle past totalitarian crimes.[27]

In February 2013, the Constitutional Court of Hungary annulled the ban on the use of symbols of fascist and communist dictatorships, including the hammer and sickle, the red star and the swastika, saying the ban was too broad and imprecise. The court also pointed to a judgement of the European Court of Human Rights in which Hungary was found guilty of violation of article 10, the right to freedom of expression.[28] In June 2013, the Constitutional Court of Moldova ruled that the Moldovan Communist Party’s symbols—the hammer and sickle—are legal and can be used.[29]

In Indonesia, the display of communist symbols is banned and the country's Communist party was also banned by decree of president Suharto, following the 1965–1966 killings of communists in which over 500,000 people were killed.[30][31] In January 2018, an activist protesting against Bumi Resources displayed the hammer and sickle, was accused of spreading communism, and later jailed.[32][33]

In Poland, dissemination of items which are "media of fascist, communist or other totalitarian symbolism" was criminalized in 1997. However, the Constitutional Tribunal found this sanction to be unconstitutional in 2011.[34]

Usage

Flags

Europe

Asia

Africa

Americas

State emblems

Soviet Union (in the constitutional order)

Other

Logos

Europe

Asia

Africa

Americas

Unicode

In Unicode, the "hammer and sickle" symbol is U+262D (☭). It is part of the Miscellaneous Symbols (2600–26FF) code block. On systems where Compose key is available, it could be written as [Compose]+CCCP. It was added to Unicode 1.1 in 1993.[35]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Russian: серп и мо́лот, romanizedserp i mólot, lit.'sickle and hammer'
    Chinese: 锤子和镰刀; pinyin: Chuízi hé liándāo or 镰刀锤子; Liándāo chuízi

References

  1. ^ "Flag of Union of Soviet Socialist Republics". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
  2. ^ COMMUNISM TODAY: Are its days numbered? library.cqpress.com. Retrieved 6 September 2021
  3. ^ "Chilean peso design, 1894". Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  4. ^ a b c "The Hammer and Sickle: The Role of Symbolism and Rituals in the Russian Revolution". Retrieved 3 August 2014.
  5. ^ . International People's Tribunal 1965. 14 September 2015. Archived from the original on 14 September 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 August 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  7. ^ Lempert, David (1996). Daily Life in a Crumbling Empire: The Absorption of Russia into the World Economy. Columbia University Press/ Eastern European Monographs. ISBN 0-880-33341-3.
  8. ^ Crangan, Costel (1 September 2018). "De unde vine simbolul "secera şi ciocanul". Ce ţară l-a folosit prima şi în ce state este interzis" [Where does the symbol "sickle and hammer" come from? Which country used it first and in which states it is forbidden] (in Romanian). Adevarul Holding.
  9. ^ "Aeroflot Logo To Keep Hammer And Sickle". aviationweek.com. 18 April 2003. Retrieved 16 September 2022.
  10. ^ "KKE - Αρχική". kke.gr.
  11. ^ "Estatutos do PCP, art. 72". pcp.pt/estatutos-do-pcp.
  12. ^ "Parti Communiste Guadeloupéen". flagspot.net.
  13. ^ Khin Yi (1988). The Dobama Movement in Burma (1930-1938). Cornell University Press. p. 39.
  14. ^ မြန်မာဖတ်စာ ဒုတိယတန်း (Grade-3) [Myanmar Textbook for Second Standard (Grade-3)] (in Burmese). Ministry of Education, Government of the Union of Myanmar. 2006. p. 1.
  15. ^ Communist symbols to be banned in Georgia, BBC News, 4 May 2014, retrieved 13 May 2014
  16. ^ "Act C of 2012 on the Criminal Code, Section 335: Use of Symbols of Totalitarianism" (PDF). Ministry of Interior of Hungary. p. 97. Retrieved 21 February 2017. Any person who: a) distributes, b) uses before the public at large, or c) publicly exhibits, the swastika, the insignia of the SS, the arrow cross, the sickle and hammer, the five-pointed red star or any symbol depicting the above so as to breach public peace – specifically in a way to offend the dignity of victims of totalitarian regimes and their right to sanctity – is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by custodial arrest, insofar as they did not result in a more serious criminal offense.
  17. ^ Latvia Bans Soviet, Nazi Symbols, RIA Novosti, 21 June 2013, retrieved 14 September 2014
  18. ^ "Lithuanian ban on Soviet symbols". BBC News. 17 June 2008.
  19. ^ "Moldovan Parliament Bans Communist Symbols". Radio Free Europe. 12 July 2012.
  20. ^ "Ukraine Bans Soviet-Era Symbols". The Wall Street Journal.
  21. ^ LAW OF UKRAINE. On the condemnation of the communist and national socialist (Nazi) regimes, and prohibition of propaganda of their symbols
  22. ^ "Про засудження комуністичного та націонал-соціалістичного ... - від 09.04.2015 № 317-VIII". rada.gov.ua.
  23. ^ "Free speech questioned as Estonia prepares to ban Soviet, Nazi symbols".
  24. ^ "Ants Erm: Erinevalt venelaste ajaloost on Venemaa ajalugu Eestis vaid vägivald, küüditamine ja kommunistlik diktatuur".
  25. ^ "У поліції нагадали, що за серп і молот можна сісти на 5 років". Українська правда (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  26. ^ Bobkov, Denys (7 May 2021). "Заборона символіки тоталітарних режимів: що мають знати миколаївці".
  27. ^ EU won't legislate on communist crimes, BBC News (22 December 2010).
  28. ^ "Hungary, hammer and sickle ban declared illegal". ANSA. 27 February 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  29. ^ . allmoldova.com. 5 June 2013. Archived from the original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  30. ^ "Declassified files outline US support for 1965 Indonesia massacre". archive.is. 29 October 2017. Archived from the original on 29 October 2017. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  31. ^ Dickie Christanto (20 October 2008). . The Jakarta Post. Archived from the original on 26 October 2008. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  32. ^ "Indonesian activist jailed for advocating communism". ucanews.com. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
  33. ^ "Indonesia's 'Anti-Communism' Law Used Against Environmental Activist". Human Rights Watch. 12 January 2018. Retrieved 21 July 2021.
  34. ^ "Nowelizacja kodeksu karnego" (in Polish). 19 July 2011. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  35. ^ "☭ Hammer and Sickle Emoji". emojipedia.org. Retrieved 11 October 2019.

External links

  •   Media related to Hammer and sickle at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Media related to Hammer and sickle in heraldry at Wikimedia Commons

hammer, sickle, other, uses, disambiguation, hammer, sickle, unicode, symbol, meant, represent, proletarian, solidarity, union, between, agricultural, industrial, workers, first, adopted, during, russian, revolution, world, hammer, representing, workers, sickl. For other uses see Hammer and sickle disambiguation The hammer and sickle Unicode a is a symbol meant to represent proletarian solidarity a union between agricultural and industrial workers It was first adopted during the Russian Revolution at the end of World War I the hammer representing workers and the sickle representing the peasants 1 The hammer and sickle and red star design from the flag of the Soviet Union 1955 1991 The hammer and sickle emblem of the Vietnamese Communist Party 1930 present The hammer and sickle emblem of the Chinese Communist Party 1942 1996 The hammer and sickle emblem of the Chinese Communist Party 1996 present The hammer sickle and paintbrush emblem of the Workers Party of Korea 1949 present The cog and machete of the Flag of Angola similar design The hammer and sickle emblem of the Communist Party of India Marxist on its flag 1964 present The ears of corn and sickle election symbol of Communist Party of India 1964 present similar design except for the hammer which is replaced by Ears of Corn A hammer and sickle on the insignia of the Order of the Patriotic War as displayed on the State Historical Museum After World War I from which the Russian Empire withdrew in 1917 and the Russian Civil War the hammer and sickle became more widely used as a symbol for labor within the Soviet Union and for international proletarian unity It was taken up by many communist movements around the world some with local variations Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union at the end of the Cold War the hammer and sickle remains commonplace in Russia and other former Soviet republics In some other former communist countries as well as in countries where communism is banned by law its display is prohibited as part of decommunization policies The hammer and sickle is also commonplace in later self declared socialist states such as Cuba China North Korea Vietnam and Laos 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Worker symbolism 1 2 Inception 1 3 Use in Soviet Union 2 Meaning 3 Current usage 3 1 Post Soviet states 3 2 Communist parties 4 Variations 5 Art 6 Legal status 7 Usage 7 1 Flags 7 1 1 Europe 7 1 2 Asia 7 1 3 Africa 7 1 4 Americas 7 2 State emblems 7 2 1 Soviet Union in the constitutional order 7 2 2 Other 7 3 Logos 7 3 1 Europe 7 3 2 Asia 7 3 3 Africa 7 3 4 Americas 8 Unicode 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory Edit The Chilean peso coin used the hammer and sickle symbol between 1894 and 1940 Worker symbolism Edit Farm and worker instruments and tools have long been used as symbols for proletarian struggle The combination of hammer and sickle symbolised the combination of farmers and construction workers One example of use prior to its political instrumentalization by the Soviet Union is found in Chilean currency circulating since 1894 3 An alternative example is the combination of a hammer and a plough with the same meaning unity of peasants and workers In Ireland the symbol of the plough remains in use The Starry Plough banner was originally used by the Irish Citizen Army a socialist republican workers militia James Connolly who co founded the Irish Citizen Army with Jack White said the significance of the banner was that a free Ireland would control its own destiny from the plough to the stars A sword is forged into the plough to symbolise the end of war with the establishment of a Socialist International That was unveiled in 1914 and flown by the Irish Citizen Army during the 1916 Easter Rising The Plough flag from 1914 and flown during the Easter Rising Inception Edit In 1917 Vladimir Lenin and Anatoly Lunacharsky held a competition to create a Soviet emblem The winning design was a hammer and sickle on top of a globe in rays of the sun surrounded by a wreath of grain and under a five pointed star with the inscription proletarians of the world unite in six languages Russian Ukrainian Belarusian Georgian Armenian and Azerbaijani It originally featured a sword but Lenin strongly objected disliking the violent connotations 4 The winning designer was Yevgeny Ivanovich Kamzolkin 1885 1957 5 6 On 6 July 1923 the 2nd session of the Central Executive Committee CIK adopted the emblem 4 In his work Daily Life in a Crumbling Empire The Absorption of Russia into the World Economy 7 sociologist David Lempert hypothesizes that the hammer and sickle was a secular replacement for the patriarchal cross 8 Use in Soviet Union Edit The State Emblem of the Soviet Union and the Coats of Arms of the Soviet Republics showed the hammer and sickle which also appeared on the red star badge on the uniform cap of the Red Army uniform and in many other places Serp i Molot transliteration of Russian cerp i molot sickle and hammer is the name of the Moscow Metallurgical Plant Serp i Molot is also the name of a stop on the electric railway line from Kurski railway station in Moscow to Gorky featured in Venedikt Yerofeyev s novel Moscow Petushki The first State Emblem of the Soviet Union 1923 1936 Meaning EditAt the time of creation the hammer and sickle stood for worker peasant alliance with the hammer a traditional symbol of the industrial proletariat who dominated the proletariat of Russia and the sickle a traditional symbol for the peasantry but the meaning has since broadened to a globally recognizable symbol for Marxism communist parties or socialist states 4 Current usage EditPost Soviet states Edit The flag of Transnistria is based on the flag formerly used by the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic The flag of Oryol incorporates nithe flag formerly used by the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Two federal subjects of the post Soviet Russian Federation use the hammer and sickle in their symbols the Vladimir Oblast has them on its flag and the Bryansk Oblast has them on its flag and coat of arms which is also the central element of its flag In addition the Russian city of Oryol also uses the hammer and sickle on its flag citation needed The former Soviet now Russian national airline Aeroflot continues to use the hammer and sickle in its symbol 9 Many commercially available ushanka hats especially those marketed as Russian hats bear a Soviet style hammer and sickle emblem citation needed The de facto government of Transnistria uses with minor modifications the flag and the emblem of the former Moldavian SSR which includes the hammer and sickle The flag can also appear without the hammer and sickle in some circumstances for example on Transnistrian issued license plates citation needed Communist parties Edit Three out of the five currently ruling Communist parties use a hammer and sickle as the party symbol the Chinese Communist Party the Communist Party of Vietnam and the Lao People s Revolutionary Party In Laos and Vietnam the hammer and sickle party flags can often be seen flying side by side with their respective national flags citation needed Flag of the Chinese Communist Party Flag of the Communist Party of Vietnam Many communist parties around the world also use it including the Communist Party of Greece 10 the Communist Party of Chile both the Communist Party of Brazil and the Brazilian Communist Party the Purba Banglar Sarbahara Party from Bangladesh the Communist Party of Sri Lanka the Communist Party of India Marxist the Communist Party of India Marxist Leninist Liberation the Communist Party of India the Communist Party of India Maoist the Indian Communist Marxist Party the Socialist Unity Centre of India Communist the Egyptian Communist Party the Communist Party of Pakistan the Communist Refoundation Party in Italy the Communist Party of Spain the Communist Party of Denmark the Communist Party of Norway the Romanian Communist Party the Lebanese Communist Party the Communist Party of the Philippines and the Shining Path The Communist Party of Sweden the Portuguese Communist Party 11 and the Mexican Communist Party use the hammer and sickle imposed on the red star Symbol of the Communist Party of Greece Party Flag of Communist Party of Greece Symbol of the Communist Party of Chile Party Flag of Communist Party of Chile Logo of the Brazilian Communist Party Party Flag of the Brazilian Communist Party Party Logo and Election Symbol of The Communist Party of India Marxist Party Flag of the Communist Party of India Marxist Logo of the Communist Party of Pakistan The logo of The Communist Party of Spain The Flag of The Portuguese Communist Party Emblem of the Mexican Communist PartyVariations EditMany symbols having similar structures and messages to the original have been designed For example the Angolan flag shows a segment of a cog crossed by a machete and crowned with a socialist star while the flag of Mozambique features an AK 47 crossed by a hoe In the logo of the Communist Party USA a circle is formed by a half cog and a semicircular sickle blade A hammer is laid directly over the sickle s handle with the hammer s head at the logo s center The logo of the Communist Party of Turkey consists of half a cog wheel crossed by a hammer with a star on the top citation needed Tools represented in other designs include the brush sickle and hammer of the Workers Party of Korea the spade flaming torch and quill used prior to 1984 by the British Labour Party the pickaxe and rifle used in communist Albania and the hammer and compasses of the East German emblem and flag The Far Eastern Republic of Russia used an anchor crossed over a spade or pickaxe symbolising the union of the fishermen and miners The Fourth International founded by Leon Trotsky uses a hammer and sickle symbol on which the number 4 is superimposed The hammer and sickle in the Fourth International symbol are the opposite of other hammer and sickle symbols in that the head of the hammer is on the right side and the sickle end tip on the left The Trotskyist League for the Fifth International merges a hammer with the number 5 using the number s lower arch to form the sickle A sickle with a rifle is also used by the People s Mojahedin of Iran citation needed The Communist Party of Britain uses the hammer and dove symbol Designed in 1988 by Michal Boncza it is intended to highlight the party s connection to the peace movement It is usually used in conjunction with the hammer and sickle and it appears on all of the CPB s publications Some members of the CPB prefer one symbol over the other although the party s 1994 congress reaffirmed the hammer and dove s position as the official emblem of the party Similarly the Communist Party of Israel uses a dove over the hammer and sickle as its symbol The flag of the Guadeloupe Communist Party uses a sickle turned to look like a majuscule G to represent Guadeloupe 12 The flag of the Black Front a Strasserist group founded by early Nazi Party members and expelled around the time of the Night of the Long Knives purge along with his supporters and the Sturmabteilung and originator of the ideology and the Black Front himself Otto Strasser featured a crossed hammer and sword symbolizing the unity of the workers and military citation needed In 1938 the Dobama Asiayone an anti British nationalist group in the then British Burma adopted a tricolour flag charged with red sickle and hammer 13 From 1974 2010 the flag of Burma Myanmar featured a bushel of rice superimposed on a cogwheel surrounded by fourteen white stars the rice representing the peasants and the cogwheel representing the workers the combination symbolizing that the peasants and workers be the two basic social classes for State building while the fourteen equal sized white stars indicate the unity and equality of fourteen member states of the Union 14 The flag of Chama Cha Mapinduzi CCM Party of the Revolution in Swahili currently the ruling political party of Tanzania has a slightly different symbol with a hammer and a hoe jembe instead of a sickle to represent the most common farm tool in Africa citation needed The National Bolshevik Party used the hammer and sickle in their flag but colored black instead of gold and in a design similar to the Nazi flag a brighter red flag than the USSR with a black hammer and sickle on a white disk in the center citation needed The symbols of the liberal socialist parties of Radical Civic Union in Argentina and the Czech National Social Party in the Czech Republic features a hammer and a quill with the former representing workers and the latter representing clerks citation needed The election symbol of Communist Party of India consists of a horizontal sickle vertically crossed by Ears of Corn in the center Art EditThe hammer and sickle has long been a common theme in socialist realism but it has also seen some depiction in non Marxist popular culture Andy Warhol who created many drawings and photographs of the hammer and sickle is the most famous example of this The metro station Plosca Lienina Minsk Sandor Pinczehelyi Hammer and Sickle A tableau in a communist rally in Kerala India Worker peasant and the intellectual in front of the Juche Tower PyongyangLegal status EditSee also Red star Legal status and Bans on communist symbols In several countries in the former Eastern Bloc there are laws that define the hammer and sickle as the symbol of a totalitarian and criminal ideology and the public display of the hammer and sickle and other Communist symbols such as the red star is considered a criminal offence Georgia 15 Hungary 16 Latvia 17 Lithuania 18 Moldova 1 October 2012 4 June 2013 19 and Ukraine 20 21 22 have banned communist symbols including this one A similar law was considered in Estonia 23 but it eventually failed in a parliamentary committee 24 In Ukraine the legislature equals communist symbols including hammer with sickle to Nazi swastika symbols 25 26 In 2010 the Lithuanian Latvian Bulgarian Hungarian Romanian and Czech governments called for the European Union to criminalize the approval denial or belittling of communist crimes similar to how a number of EU member states have banned Holocaust denial The European Commission turned down this request finding after a study that the criteria for EU wide criminal legislation were not met leaving individual member states to determine the extent to which they wished to handle past totalitarian crimes 27 In February 2013 the Constitutional Court of Hungary annulled the ban on the use of symbols of fascist and communist dictatorships including the hammer and sickle the red star and the swastika saying the ban was too broad and imprecise The court also pointed to a judgement of the European Court of Human Rights in which Hungary was found guilty of violation of article 10 the right to freedom of expression 28 In June 2013 the Constitutional Court of Moldova ruled that the Moldovan Communist Party s symbols the hammer and sickle are legal and can be used 29 In Indonesia the display of communist symbols is banned and the country s Communist party was also banned by decree of president Suharto following the 1965 1966 killings of communists in which over 500 000 people were killed 30 31 In January 2018 an activist protesting against Bumi Resources displayed the hammer and sickle was accused of spreading communism and later jailed 32 33 In Poland dissemination of items which are media of fascist communist or other totalitarian symbolism was criminalized in 1997 However the Constitutional Tribunal found this sanction to be unconstitutional in 2011 34 Usage EditFlags Edit Europe Edit Flag of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1923 Flag of the Soviet Union from 1924 Flag of the Soviet Union from 1924 to 1936 Flag of the Soviet Union from 1936 to 1955 Flag of the Soviet Union from 19 August 1955 to 26 December 1991 Naval Jack of the Soviet Union and Russia from 16 November 1950 to 26 July 1992 Naval ensign of the Soviet Union and Russia from 16 November 1950 to 26 July 1992 Flag of Aeroflot from 1961 to 1991 Flag of the Communist Party of the Donetsk People s Republic Flag of the Romanian Communist Party Flag of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Flag of Bryansk Oblast Russia Flag of Vladimir Oblast Russia Flag of Oryol Russia Flag of the Italian Communist Party Flag of the Sammarinese Communist Party The flag of the Revolutionary People s Liberation Party Front Turkey Flag of the Portuguese Communist Party Flag of Communist Party of Czechoslovakia Flag of League of Communists of YugoslaviaAsia Edit Flag of the Vietnamese Communist Party Flag of the Chinese Communist Party Flag of the Chinese Communist Party before 1996 Flag of Chinese Workers and Peasants Red Army Flag of the Taiwan Democratic Communist Party Flag of the Chinese Soviet Republic 1931 1937 Flag of Workers Party of Korea Flag of the Communist Party of India Flag of the Communist Party of India Marxist Flag of various South Asian communist parties including the Communist Party of India Maoist Flag of the Socialist Unity Centre of India Flag of the Communist Party of Bangladesh Flag of the Nepal Communist Party Flag of the Communist Party of Bhutan Marxist Leninist Maoist Flag of Communist Party of Indonesia Flag of the Socialist Party of Timor Flag of the Communist Party of the Philippines Flag of Lao People s Revolutionary Party Flag of Communist Party of Kampuchea Flag of the Malayan Communist Party 1930 1989 Flag of the Lebanese Communist Party Flag of the Syrian Communist Party Bakdash Flag of the Kurdistan Workers Party 1978 1995 Flag of the Jordanian Communist Party Flag of the Palestinian Communist PartyAfrica Edit Flag of the Algerian Communist Party Flag of Angola Flag of FRELIMO 1987 2004 Flag of the People s Republic of the Congo and the Congolese Party of Labour Flag of the Communist Party of Kenya Flag of the South African Communist Party Flag of the Workers Party of EthiopiaAmericas Edit Flag of Shining Path Flag of PCdoB Flag of the PCCE Flag of the Communist Party USAState emblems Edit Soviet Union in the constitutional order Edit State emblem of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Emblem of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic National emblem of the German Democratic Republic 1955 1990 Emblem of the Russian Federation 1992 1993 Emblem of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Latvian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic Emblem of the Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic 1923 1936 Emblem of the Karelo Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic 1941 1956 Other Edit State emblem of the Tuvan People s Republic 1943 1944 Emblem of the self proclaimed Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic State emblem of the Lao People s Democratic Republic 1975 1991 Emblem of the People s Republic of the Congo 1970 1991 State emblem of the Chinese Soviet Republic 1934 1937 Emblem of Hungary 1949 1956 Emblem of Moscow 1924 1937 Emblem of Angola Coat of arms of Bryansk Oblast RussiaLogos Edit Europe Edit Badge of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union Emblem of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia Emblem of the Romanian Communist Party Emblem of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia Logo of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Logo of the Communist Party of Greece Logo of the Italian Communist Party Logo of the Proletarian Unity Party Italy Logo of the Communist Party Italy Logo of the Communist Party of Spain Logo of the Hungarian Socialist Workers Party Logo of the Communist Party of the Peoples of Spain Logo of the Portuguese Communist Party Logo of the Communist Party of Ireland Logo of the Communist Party of Britain Logo of the Communist Party of Great Britain Provisional Central Committee Logo of the Communist Party Sweden The Logo of the Communist Party of Norway Logo of the Communist Party of Denmark Logo of the Communist Party Denmark Logo of the Communist Party of Germany Logo of the Communist Party Switzerland Logo of the New Communist Party of the Netherlands Logo of the Communist Party of Belgium 1989 Badge of the Marxist Leninist Communist Party of Turkey Logo of the Revolutionary Communist Party of Turkey Logo of Aeroflot Logo of the Communist Party of Ireland Marxist Leninist Symbol of the Group of Social Revolutionary NationalistsAsia Edit Emblem of the Workers Party of Korea Emblem of the Communist Party of Indonesia 1914 1966 Logo of the Acoma Party Indonesia Logo of the Communist Party of Tajikistan Logo of the Socialist Party of Bangladesh Logo of the Communist Party of Nepal Unified Marxist Leninist 1991 2018 Alternative emblem of the Communist Party of Vietnam Emblem of the Communist Party of Vietnam Logo of the Ministry of State Security Emblem of the Chinese Communist Party 1942 1996 Emblem of the Chinese Communist Party 1996 present Logo of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party which features the symbol of the Fourth International Logo of the Communist Party of India Logo of the Communist Party of India Marxist Africa Edit Cogwheel machete and star logo of Angola Logo of the Communist Party of Benin Emblem of the All Ethiopia Socialist Movement Emblem of the Ethiopian People s Revolutionary Party ca 1975 Logo of the Congolese Party of Labour Emblem of the Somali Revolutionary Socialist Party Logo of the South African Communist Party Logo of the Revolutionary Communist Party of Ivory Coast Logo of FRELIMO 1987 2004 Logo of the Workers Party of Tunisia Logo of the Egyptian Communist PartyAmericas Edit Logo of the Mexican Communist Party Logo of the Communist Party of Chile Logo of the Brazilian Communist Party Logo of the Communist Party of Brazil Logo of the Workers Cause Party Emblem of the Communist Party USA Logo of the Communist Party of Argentina Extraordinary Congress Logo of the Communist Party of Ecuador Logo of Shining PathUnicode EditIn Unicode the hammer and sickle symbol is U 262D It is part of the Miscellaneous Symbols 2600 26FF code block On systems where Compose key is available it could be written as Compose CCCP It was added to Unicode 1 1 in 1993 35 See also Edit Communism portal Soviet Union portal China portalArm and hammer Fist and rose Communist symbolism Socialist heraldry Hammer and pick Red flag Red star Transport and Map Symbols Unicode block contains hammer and wrench as U 1F6E0 Notes Edit Russian serp i mo lot romanized serp i molot lit sickle and hammer Chinese 锤子和镰刀 pinyin Chuizi he liandao or 镰刀锤子 Liandao chuiziReferences Edit Flag of Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 30 November 2019 COMMUNISM TODAY Are its days numbered library cqpress com Retrieved 6 September 2021 Chilean peso design 1894 Retrieved 7 May 2018 a b c The Hammer and Sickle The Role of Symbolism and Rituals in the Russian Revolution Retrieved 3 August 2014 The Spectre of Hammer and Sickle International People s Tribunal 1965 14 September 2015 Archived from the original on 14 September 2015 Retrieved 6 November 2015 International Gallery of Contemporary Artists Archived from the original on 16 August 2016 Retrieved 6 November 2015 Lempert David 1996 Daily Life in a Crumbling Empire The Absorption of Russia into the World Economy Columbia University Press Eastern European Monographs ISBN 0 880 33341 3 Crangan Costel 1 September 2018 De unde vine simbolul secera si ciocanul Ce ţară l a folosit prima si in ce state este interzis Where does the symbol sickle and hammer come from Which country used it first and in which states it is forbidden in Romanian Adevarul Holding Aeroflot Logo To Keep Hammer And Sickle aviationweek com 18 April 2003 Retrieved 16 September 2022 KKE Arxikh kke gr Estatutos do PCP art 72 pcp pt estatutos do pcp Parti Communiste Guadeloupeen flagspot net Khin Yi 1988 The Dobama Movement in Burma 1930 1938 Cornell University Press p 39 မ န မ ဖတ စ ဒ တ ယတန Grade 3 Myanmar Textbook for Second Standard Grade 3 in Burmese Ministry of Education Government of the Union of Myanmar 2006 p 1 Communist symbols to be banned in Georgia BBC News 4 May 2014 retrieved 13 May 2014 Act C of 2012 on the Criminal Code Section 335 Use of Symbols of Totalitarianism PDF Ministry of Interior of Hungary p 97 Retrieved 21 February 2017 Any person who a distributes b uses before the public at large or c publicly exhibits the swastika the insignia of the SS the arrow cross the sickle and hammer the five pointed red star or any symbol depicting the above so as to breach public peace specifically in a way to offend the dignity of victims of totalitarian regimes and their right to sanctity is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by custodial arrest insofar as they did not result in a more serious criminal offense Latvia Bans Soviet Nazi Symbols RIA Novosti 21 June 2013 retrieved 14 September 2014 Lithuanian ban on Soviet symbols BBC News 17 June 2008 Moldovan Parliament Bans Communist Symbols Radio Free Europe 12 July 2012 Ukraine Bans Soviet Era Symbols The Wall Street Journal LAW OF UKRAINE On the condemnation of the communist and national socialist Nazi regimes and prohibition of propaganda of their symbols Pro zasudzhennya komunistichnogo ta nacional socialistichnogo vid 09 04 2015 317 VIII rada gov ua Free speech questioned as Estonia prepares to ban Soviet Nazi symbols Ants Erm Erinevalt venelaste ajaloost on Venemaa ajalugu Eestis vaid vagivald kuuditamine ja kommunistlik diktatuur U policiyi nagadali sho za serp i molot mozhna sisti na 5 rokiv Ukrayinska pravda in Ukrainian Retrieved 5 July 2022 Bobkov Denys 7 May 2021 Zaborona simvoliki totalitarnih rezhimiv sho mayut znati mikolayivci EU won t legislate on communist crimes BBC News 22 December 2010 Hungary hammer and sickle ban declared illegal ANSA 27 February 2013 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Constitutional Court rules that hammer and sickle can be used allmoldova com 5 June 2013 Archived from the original on 12 November 2013 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Declassified files outline US support for 1965 Indonesia massacre archive is 29 October 2017 Archived from the original on 29 October 2017 Retrieved 16 February 2019 Dickie Christanto 20 October 2008 Artists summoned over communist symbol exhibition The Jakarta Post Archived from the original on 26 October 2008 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Indonesian activist jailed for advocating communism ucanews com Retrieved 16 February 2019 Indonesia s Anti Communism Law Used Against Environmental Activist Human Rights Watch 12 January 2018 Retrieved 21 July 2021 Nowelizacja kodeksu karnego in Polish 19 July 2011 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Hammer and Sickle Emoji emojipedia org Retrieved 11 October 2019 External links Edit Media related to Hammer and sickle at Wikimedia Commons Media related to Hammer and sickle in heraldry at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hammer and sickle amp oldid 1155161948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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