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Flag of Poland

The national flag of Poland (Polish: flaga Polski) consists of two horizontal stripes of equal width, the upper one white and the lower one red. The two colours are defined in the Polish constitution as the national colours. A variant of the flag with the national coat of arms in the middle of the white fess is legally reserved for official use abroad and at sea. A similar flag with the addition of a white eagle is used as the naval ensign of Poland.

Republic of Poland
Flag of the Republic of Poland
UseNational flag
Proportion5:8
Adopted1 August 1919; 104 years ago (1919-08-01) (officially)
31 January 1980; 44 years ago (1980-01-31) (restored)
DesignA horizontal bicolour of white and red
Flag with coat of arms of the Republic of Poland
UseState flag, civil and state ensign
Proportion5:8
Adopted1919; last modified 1990
DesignA horizontal bicolour of white and red defaced with the arms of Poland in the white stripe.
UseNaval ensign
Proportion10:21
Adopted19 February 1993; 31 years ago (1993-02-19)
DesignA flag consisting of two stripes, white and red, terminated in two triangular tongues on a free leech. In the center of the white strip, in the part between the louvre and the apex of the indentation between the tongues, is the emblem of the Republic of Poland.
Pennant of the president of the Republic of Poland
UsePresidential standard
Proportion5:6
Adopted1919 (original)
1927 (officially)
26 January 1996 (restored)
DesignCrowned white eagle in a red field bordered with a white wavy line.

White and red were officially adopted as national colours in 1831, although these were associated with Poland since the Middle Ages and were emphasized on royal banners. They are of heraldic origin and derive from the tinctures (colours) of the coats of arms of the two constituent nations of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (i.e., the White Eagle of Poland, and the Pursuer of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, a white knight riding a white horse), both on a red shield.

Until 1831, Polish soldiers wore cockades of various colour combinations. The national flag was officially adopted in 1919. Since 2004, Polish Flag Day has been celebrated on 2 May.

The flag is flown continuously on the buildings of the highest national authorities, such as the parliament and the presidential palace. Other institutions and many Polish people fly the national flag on national holidays and other special occasions of national significance. Current Polish law does not restrict the use of the national flag without the coat of arms, as long as the flag is not disrespected.

Horizontal bicolours of white and red being a relatively widespread design, several flags are similar but unrelated to the Polish one. Two national flags (Indonesia and Monaco) have the red stripe above the white one. In Poland, many flags based on the national design also feature the national colours.

It is one of five flags that use the 5:8 ratio. The other four flags include those of Argentina, Guatemala, Palau, and Sweden.

Design edit

 
Horizontal and vertical display of the colours of the Republic of Poland

Legal sources edit

The colours and flags of the Republic of Poland are described in two legal documents: the Constitution of the Republic of Poland of 1997[1] and the Coat of Arms, Colours and Anthem of the Republic of Poland and State Seals Act (Ustawa o godle, barwach i hymnie Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej oraz o pieczęciach państwowych) of 1980 with subsequent amendments[2] (henceforth referred to as "the Coat of Arms Act").

Legislation concerning the national symbols is far from perfect. The Coat of Arms Act has been amended several times and refers extensively to executive ordinances, some of which have never been issued. Moreover, the Act contains errors, omissions and inconsistencies which make the law confusing, open to various interpretations and often not followed in practice.[3]

National colours edit

Statutory coordinates of Polish national colours in the CIE xyY colour space with the tolerated colour differences in CIELUV[2]
Colour[a] x y Y ΔE
  White 0.315 0.320 82.0 4.0
  Red 0.570 0.305 16.0 8.0
Illuminant C, measurement geometry d/0

According to Chapter I, Article 28, paragraph 2 of the Constitution, the national colours of Poland are white and red.[1] The Coat of Arms Act, Article 4, further specifies that the colours are white and red in two horizontal, parallel stripes of equal width, of which the top one is white and the bottom one is red.[2] If the colours are displayed vertically, the white stripe is placed on the left from the onlooker's viewpoint. Attachment no. 2 to the Act shows the national colours in both horizontal and vertical alignment, as well as the official shades of both colours expressed as coordinates in the CIE xyY (CIE 1931) colour space with the tolerated colour differences (ΔE) specified in the CIE 1976 (L*, u*, v*) colour space (CIELUV).[2]

Variants of the national flag edit

 
An unofficial construction sheet of the flag with coat of arms, based on specifications in Polish law

The Constitution contains no mention of a national flag. Instead, the flag is defined by the Coat of Arms Act which specifies two variants of the national flag: the national flag of the Republic of Poland (flaga państwowa Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej) and the national flag with coat of arms of the Republic of Poland (flaga państwowa z godłem Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej). Both flags are defined in Article 6 of the act as follows:

  1. The state flag of the Republic of Poland is a rectangular piece of cloth in the colours of the Republic of Poland hoisted on a flagpole.
  2. The state flag of the Republic of Poland is also the flag specified in paragraph 1, with the coat of arms of the Republic of Poland placed in the middle of the white stripe.[2]

The hoist to fly ratio for both flags is 5:8. For the latter flag, the proportion between the inescutcheon of the coat of arms and the hoist is 2:5. Images of both variations of the flag can be found in attachment no. 3 to the Coat of Arms Act.[4]

Usage edit

Right and obligation to fly the flag edit

According to the Coat of Arms Act, everyone can use the Polish flag, especially during national and cultural events, as long as it is done in a respectful manner.[2] This liberty in the use of national colours is a relative novelty. Until 2004, Polish citizens were only allowed to fly the Polish flag on national holidays. The use of both variants was restricted, but only flying the flag with coat of arms was, from 1955 to 1985, punishable by a fine or arrest for up to one year.[3] After 1985, unauthorised use of any national symbol was an infraction. A possible explanation to such harsh measures was the fact that the officially promoted holiday of 1 May was separated by only one day from the pre-war (and current) national holiday of Poland, the anniversary of signing of the Constitution of 3 May 1791. While hoisting a flag on 1 May was acceptable, no later than the following day it had to be taken down.[5]

 
Flag without the coat of arms

That restriction and kind of state monopoly on the use of national symbols during the Communist regime made flying the Polish flag a symbol of resistance against the government. It became customary, as it still is, for workers to hoist Polish flags on plant buildings when going on strike. That is why the Polish flag, as a symbol of patriotism and resistance against the Communist rule, is part of the Solidarity trade union logo.[6]

Flag without coat of arms edit

The following institutions are required by law to fly the national flag without coat of arms either on top or in front of their official buildings:

Additionally, the national flag without coat of arms is used as an ensign for inland navigation.[2]

Flag with coat of arms edit

 
Flag with the coat of arms

While the ban on using the flag without coat of arms has been lifted, the use of the national flag with coat of arms is still legally restricted and should be flown only:

In practice, however, the restriction is often ignored and the two flags, with and without the coat of arms, are treated as interchangeable.[3] The variant with the coat of arms, even though its incorrect usage, is often used by the Polonia, or Polish diaspora outside Poland, especially in the United States.[7]

Flag flying days edit

 
The Polish, Papal (yellow and white) and Municipal (white and blue) flags in Kraków's Grand Square during Pope Benedict XVI's visit to Poland on 27 May 2006

State and local government organs are legally required, and other institutions and organisations as well as all citizens are encouraged to fly the Polish flag on the following days:

Common flag practice edit

The flag is often popularly flown during important sporting events, such as the FIFA World Cup, if Polish athletes are participating;[8] and during an official visit of a particularly important person, especially a pope, in Poland. During a pope's visit, the national flag is usually flown together with yellow and white Church flags, and white and blue Marian flags.[9] It is uncommon to fly the national flag on personal occasions, such as birthdays or weddings.[3]

According to polls, about one out of three Poles say they own a Polish flag, and about one out of four fly it on national holidays. Such public display of patriotism is much more common in western Poland, especially in Greater Poland, than in other parts of the country.[3]

Flag protocol edit

 
Example of vertical alignment of Polish national colours inside the Sejm chamber

Flags in Poland are used according to a customary, rather than legal, flag protocol. Apart from the obligation to treat the flag with due respect, Polish law does not offer a detailed code of correct usage of the Polish flag. Some organisations and public institutions, such as the Heraldic and Vexillological Institute and the Supreme Chamber of Control have proposed written flag protocols for the Polish flag, based on custom, flag protocols of other countries such as India and the United States, and common sense. These guidelines, however, are not legally binding.[3][10]

Traditionally, the national flag is reserved to serve either informative or festive purposes. A single specimen of the flag on or in front of a public office building indicates its official role. Multiple flags, on the other hand, are normally used to decorate both public and private buildings to mark special occasions, such as national holidays.[3]

In Polish heraldry, the tincture of the charge has priority in relation to the tincture of the field. In the case of Polish national colours, white, the colour of the White Eagle, should always be placed in a more honorable position than red, the colour of the field of the Polish coat of arms. In the most usual, horizontal alignment, this means that the white stripe is placed above the red one. If the alignment is vertical, the white stripe should be on the left from the onlooker's point of view. If the flag is hung vertically above a street, the white stripe should be placed on the left when looking in the direction of increasing house numbers. If it drapes a coffin, the white stripe should be placed over the heart.[10]

The flag should be raised before 8 a.m. and lowered at sunset, and if flown at night, it should be illuminated.[3] During a ceremonial raising of the flag, the national anthem is played so that the timing of the raising matches the duration of the anthem.[10] Civilians pay respect by standing in a dignified manner; additionally, men uncover their heads. Members of uniformed services stand at attention; if their uniform includes headgear and they are not standing in an organised group, they also perform the two-finger salute. Colour guards dip their banners to the flag.[2] (See video)

 
Example of indoor display of the flag of Poland (center) together with other flags: that of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship (left) and the European flag (right)

According to generally accepted standards of respect, the national flag should never be dipped to any person or thing. Care should be taken to prevent the flag from touching the ground, floor or water beneath it. It should be also secured from being torn off or falling to the ground and it should not be flown outdoors during a heavy rain, blizzard or very strong wind. The flag should never be flown dirty, torn or faded. When no longer in a fit condition to be used, it should be disposed of in a dignified manner, preferably by cutting it in half so as to separate the colours and then, burning.[3][10]

When displayed with other flags, the Polish flag should be raised first and lowered last. Each flag must be flown from a separate pole of the same height, but the flag of Poland should be always placed in the most honorable position.[3] It means that if the total number of flags is even, the Polish flag should be placed to its right of the other flags. If the total number of flags is odd, it should be placed in the middle. Alternatively, two Polish flags may be placed, one at each end of the row of flags.[10] The order of precedence for flags is as follows:

  • flag of Poland,
  • national flags of other countries (in alphabetical order),
  • voivodeship flags,
  • county flags,
  • commune flags,
  • European flag,
  • flags of domestic organisations,
  • flags of international organisations,
  • public services flags,
  • corporate flags,
  • other flags.[10]

The President of the Republic may announce a period of national mourning. During that time Polish flags are flown at half-staff.[2] If a flag is flown from a wooden pole rather than a staff or mast, a black ribbon is attached to the pole as a sign of mourning or a black flag is flown to its left from the national flag.[3]

History edit

Royal banner edit

 
Stanisław Sobieski, Grand Standard Bearer of the Polish Crown, carrying King Sigismund III's double-swallow-tailed royal banner consisting of red and white stripes emblazoned with a coat of arms combining the heraldic symbols of Poland, Lithuania, Sweden and the House of Vasa (c. 1605)

The earliest vexilloids (flag-like objects) used in Poland were known as stanice and probably resembled the Roman vexillum, that is a cloth draped vertically from a horizontal crosspiece attached to a wooden pole or spear. They served as both religious and military symbols as early as 10th century. With Poland's conversion to Christianity in 966, the stanice were probably Christianized by replacing pagan symbols with Christian ones. The royal banner of arms dates back to the reign of King Boleslaus the Generous (r. 1076–1079), but it was during the reign of King Ladislaus the Short (r. 1320–1333) that a red cloth emblazoned with the White Eagle of the arms of Poland was finally established as the Banner of the Kingdom of Poland, a symbol of royal authority used at coronations and in battles.[11]

In the times of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569–1795), a banner of the Commonwealth was also used, combining the heraldic symbols of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The Commonwealth banner was initially plain white emblazoned with the arms of the Commonwealth which consisted of the heraldic charges of Poland (White Eagle) and Lithuania (Pursuer). Since both Polish and Lithuanian coats of arms consisted of white (Argent) charges in a red (Gules) field, these two colours started to be used for the entire banner. During the 17th century, the banner was usually divided into two, three or four horizontal, often swallow-tailed, stripes of red and white.[11][12]

National cockade edit

 
A woman fastening a red-and-white cockade to a Polish insurgent's square-shaped rogatywka cap during the January Uprising of 1863–1864

In the 18th and 19th centuries, European nations used cockades, or knots of coloured ribbons pinned to the hat, to denote the nationality of their military. In Poland, until 1831, there was no consensus as to what the colours of the national cockade should be. Polish soldiers wore white, white-and-red, blue-and-red or blue-white-red cockades.[11]

The custom came to Poland from Saxony during the reign of Augustus II (r. 1697–1733), King of Poland and Elector of Saxony. During that time, the cockade worn by the Polish military had, like in Saxony, the form of a white silk ribbon with a knot in the middle. It was later replaced with a circular white cockade wrinkled toward the center, patterned after the cockade of the Kingdom of France. During the reign of King Stanislaus Augustus (r. 1764–1795), a white-and-red cockade came into use alongside the plain white one. In 1791, the Military Commission introduced a metal cross pattée as a more durable alternative to the cockade. However, many soldiers continued to either pin the cross to the cockade or wear the cockade without the cross. Polish military leaders and national heroes of the time, such as General Tadeusz Kościuszko and Prince Józef Poniatowski pinned plain white "national" cockades to their hats.[11]

 
National Cockade Act of 7 February 1831
 
Polish-Lithuanian coat of arms during the November Uprising of 1830–1831

The patriotic and staunchly Catholic members of the Bar Confederation of 1768–1772 adopted crimson – the symbol of Polish szlachta, or nobility – and blue – symbolizing Virgin Mary – as their colours. These, as well as white-and-red, were considered national colours during the Great Sejm of 1788–1792. White and red were first publicly used as national colours by civilians on 3 May 1792 in Warsaw, during a celebration of the first anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of 1791. Meanwhile, the political left wore the blue-white-red cockades of the French Revolution. Polish Legions created in 1797 in French-controlled republics in Italy, used either national cockades of the particular Italian republics in which they served or the French tricolour cockade. In the latter case, the red and blue colours were replaced with crimson and navy blue respectively, hues considered to be traditionally Polish. The General Confederation of the Kingdom of Poland, which sought to revive the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the French invasion of Russia in 1812, adopted red-and-blue cockades, symbolizing the unity of Poland (red) and Lithuania (blue).[12] The military of the French-controlled Duchy of Warsaw (1807–1815) and the Russian-controlled Congress Kingdom of Poland (1815–1831) used the white cockade, which was also worn by the cadets who started the November Uprising against Russian rule on 29 November 1830.[11]

During the uprising, the Sejm realized the need for unified national insignia that could be used by the Polish military. On 7 February 1831 it adopted white and red, the tinctures (colours) of the Polish and Lithuanian coats of arms, as the national cockade of Poland. The white-and-red cockade was henceforth worn by Polish soldiers in the November Uprising, as well as by participants of the Kraków Uprising of 1846, Polish freedom fighters in the Grand Duchy of Posen and the Austrian Empire during the Spring of Nations of 1848, and Polish insurgents during the January Uprising of 1863–1864. White and red colours were also used by civilians to show their protest against the Russian rule, as well as by people in France, Britain, Germany, Belgium and other countries as a sign of their sympathy with the Polish cause. The Sejm's decision was not, however, immediately accepted by all. Left-wing politicians of the time, such as Joachim Lelewel, continued to regard the revolutionary blue, white and red as true national colours. Tricolour standards were used by some Polish guerrilla units during the January Uprising.[11]

Twentieth century edit

 
The flag of Poland in 1937
 
The civil ensign of Poland in 1938
 
The flag of Poland in 1939

White-and-red flags were first waved during a patriotic demonstration on 3 May 1916 in Warsaw. The organizing committee advised participants about the correct alignment of the colours, that is with the white stripe above the red one. Still, many demonstrators brought flags with the red stripe on top. On 1 August 1919, almost a year after Poland regained independence in November 1918, the Sejm officially introduced a white-and-red bicolour as the Polish national flag. In order to avoid confusion with the white-and-red maritime signal flag used internationally by harbor pilots and tugboats, the same act of Sejm introduced a variant of the flag with the coat of arms in the white stripe for use as a civil ensign and by Polish diplomats and consuls abroad.[11]

 
A white-and-red brassard worn by a Polish insurgent during the Warsaw Uprising of 1944. The acronym WP stands for Wojsko Polskie or Polish Armed Forces.

Apart from changes in the legal specifications of the shades of the national colours (see the section below), the basic design of the Polish flag, including the 5:8 ratio, has remained unchanged to this day. The flag with coat of arms was only modified to adjust to the changes in the coat of arms itself. Major modifications included a change in the stylisation of the eagle from Classicist to Baroque in 1927 and the removal of the crown from the eagle's head during the Communist rule from 1944 to 1990.[12][13] In that period, Poland was one of the few socialist states in the Eastern Bloc (apart from the flag of Cuba and Laos) not to adorn communist symbolism on its flag.

 
A frayed Polish flag during the final days of the Warsaw Uprising of 1944
 
Polish flag in Berlin on 2 May 1945

20th-century Polish insurgents wore white-and-red brassards (armbands) which played a role similar to the cockade of previous centuries. Such armbands were worn by Polish freedom fighters during the Greater Poland Uprising (1918–1919) and Silesian Uprisings (1919–1921), as well as during the Second World War (1939–1945) by the soldiers of the Home Army (AK) and Peasants' Battalions (BCh) – usually emblazoned with the acronyms of their formations.[11] During the Second World War, Polish soldiers raised the Polish flag on several sites of their victories. On 18 May 1944, after an Allied victory over the German forces in the Battle of Monte Cassino, a patrol of the 12th Podolian Uhlan Regiment (part of the Polish 3rd Carpathian Rifle Division) raised a Polish flag on ruins of the Monte Cassino abbey in Italy. On 1 August 1944, the first day of the Warsaw Uprising, a white-and-red flag was hoisted on the Prudential building, Warsaw's tallest skyscraper of the time. During the liberation of Warsaw by Soviet forces and Polish People's Army on 17 January 1945, Polish flags were raised on the Belvedere palace and ruins of the Main Railway Station. On 2 May 1945, after the capture of Berlin, soldiers of the 7th Battery, 3rd Division, 1st Light Artillery Regiment planted Polish flags on the Berlin Victory Column.[11]

Polish flags were also used by anti-government demonstrators under the Communist rule. During the bloody riots of 1956 in Poznań and 1970 in Gdynia, protesters carried flags that were blood-stained on the white stripe.[11]

Shades of red edit

Shades of red comparison
Crimson
Amaranth
Vermilion
Current statutory[a]
HTML red
 
  Flag of Poland (1919–1927)
 
  Flag of Poland (1927–1980)
 
   Flag of Poland (1980–present)
Historical flags

Until 1927, the exact shades of the national colours were not legally specified. In practice, the actual hue, particularly of red, depended on what kind of red dye was available. In pre-partition Poland, crimson, due to its high price, was a colour associated with the rich and the privileged. It could be obtained from the domestically harvested Polish cochineal, although imported alternatives were also available: kermes from the Mediterranean Basin (hence karmazyn, the Polish name of the colour) and Mexican cochineal after the discovery of the New World. Crimson was reserved for the nobility and considered a symbol of the aristocracy, so that karmazyn became synonymous with a magnate. A royal ban on wearing this colour could be a form of punishment; in the 14th century, the Nałęcz clan of Greater Poland were forbidden to dress in crimson for their ancestors' complicity in the assassination of King Premislaus in 1296.[11] In the first half of the 19th century, due to the influence of French fashion, crimson was largely replaced with the cheaper amaranth.[12]

The National Cockade Act of 1831 did not specify the shade of red, for which it was criticised by Joachim Lelewel,[11] nor did the Coat of Arms and National Colours Act of 1919. In 1921, the Ministry of Military Affairs issued a pamphlet with illustrations of the Polish flag and other national symbols which used the crimson shade of red.[14] The pamphlet was not, however, an official source of law and was published for informative purpose only. The shade of red was first legally specified by a presidential decree of 13 December 1927 which stipulated that the official shade was vermilion. This specification was upheld by a decree of 7 December 1955.[11] The Coat of Arms Act of 31 January 1980[2] replaced the verbal prescription with trichromatic coordinates in the CIE colour space as proposed by Nikodem Sobczak, an expert in colorimetry,[15] bringing the resulting hue closer to crimson again.

Related and similar flags edit

 
Polish naval ensign
 
Polish naval airbase flag
 
 Flag of Lower Silesia (2001–2008)
 
Examples of related flags

The flag of the Grand Duchy of Posen, a Polish-populated autonomous province of the Kingdom of Prussia created in 1815, was a red-and-white horizontal bicolour. Its colours were taken from the duchy's coat of arms which consisted of the Prussian Black Eagle with an inescutcheon of the Polish White Eagle. With Germany's increasingly anti-Polish policy and a rising identification of white and red as Polish national colours, the red-and-white flag of Posen was replaced in 1886 with a white-black-white horizontal triband.[16]

Today, many flags used in Poland are based on the design of the national flag. This applies especially to flags defined by Polish law and used by the Polish military and other uniformed services, such as the naval ensign – a swallow-tailed horizontal bicolour of white and red defaced with the arms of Poland in the white stripe.[17] Flags of some administrative subdivisions also resemble the national flag. Examples include the former flag of the Lower Silesian Voivodeship – a horizontal bicolour of white and red defaced with the arms of the voivodeship – or the flag of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship – a horizontal tricolour of white, yellow and red with the yellow stripe half as wide as any of the other two.[18]

Controversies edit

Polish law says that treating the national symbols, including the flag, "with reverence and respect" is the "right and obligation" of every Polish citizen and all state organs, institutions and organisations.[2] Public disrespect, destruction or intentional removal of the flag is considered a crime punishable by a fine, penal servitude or up to one year of imprisonment.[19] Official statistics show that crimes against national symbols are rare: 43 such crimes in 2003 and 96 in 2004 were less than 0.001% of all crimes registered in Poland in those years.[3] Other, unspecified violation of regulations on the Polish flag is an infraction, punishable by a fine or up to one month imprisonment.[20]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Statutory colour specifications rendered into sRGB for web display, assuming the white point at 6500 K. The resulting RGB values, in hexadecimal notation, are: white E9 E8 E7 and red D4 21 3D. The shades actually visible on your screen depend on your browser and screen settings, as well as the surrounding context and other factors. An intensely luminous light background may make the statutory white colour appear grey. Many websites which display the Polish national colours use a simplified approximation of the legally specified shades by using basic HTML colours: white FF FF FF and red FF 00 00. The Pantone equivalents are 656 C and 1795 C.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Konstytucja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ustawa o godle... (1980, with amendments)
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Informacja o wynikach kontroli... (NIK, 2005)
  4. ^ Ustawa o godle... (1980, original)
  5. ^ various authors; Renata Brzezińska; et al. (2007). Polska pełna uroku (in Polish). Warsaw: Petit Fute. p. 716. ISBN 978-83-60496-85-5.
  6. ^ Niezabitowska
  7. ^ prezydent.pl
  8. ^ Magiera
  9. ^ Polish Religious flags (FOTW)
  10. ^ a b c d e f Protokół flagowy
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Znamierowski
  12. ^ a b c d Russocki, Kuczyński, Willaume
  13. ^ Ustawa o zmianie przepisów o godle... (1990)
  14. ^ Łoza, Czaykowski
  15. ^ Bajtlik
  16. ^ Grand Duchy of Posen... (FOTW)
  17. ^ Ustawa o znakach Sił Zbrojnych Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej (1993)
  18. ^ Kromer
  19. ^ Article 137 §1 of the penal code (Kodeks karny) of 6 June 1997
  20. ^ Article 49 §2 of the infraction code (Kodeks wykroczeń) of 20 May 1971

Sources edit

 
The largest Polish flag flying from the Freedom Mast in Warsaw, which, at 63 metres (207 ft), is Poland's tallest flag pole

Books edit

  • Russocki Stanisław; Kuczyński Stefan; Willaume Juliusz (1970). Godło, barwy i hymn Rzeczypospolitej. Zarys dziejów [Arms, Colors, and Anthem of the Republic. A Historical Sketch] (in Polish). Warsaw: Wiedza Powszechna.
  • Znamierowski, Alfred (1995). Stworzony do chwały [Created for Glory] (in Polish). Warsaw: Editions Spotkania. ISBN 83-7115-055-5.
Law
  • Konstytucja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 2 kwietnia 1997 r. [Constitution of the Republic of Poland], Dz. U. z 1997 r. Nr 78, poz. 483 (1997-04-02)
  • Ustawa z dnia 6 czerwca 1997 r. – Kodeks karny [Penal Code], Dz. U. z 1997 r. Nr 88, poz. 553 (1997-06-06)
  • Ustawa z dnia 18 stycznia 1951 r. o dniach wolnych od pracy [Non-Working Days Act], Dz. U. z 1951 r. Nr 4, poz. 28 (1951-01-18)
  • Ustawa z dnia 31 stycznia 1980 r. o godle, barwach i hymnie Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej oraz o pieczęciach państwowych [Arms, Colors, and Anthem of the Republic of Poland, and State Seals Act], Dz. U. z 1980 r. Nr 7, poz. 18 (1980-01-31)
  • Ustawa z dnia 6 kwietnia 1990 r. o przywróceniu Święta Narodowego Trzeciego Maja [Reestablishment of the National Day of the Third of May Act], Dz. U. z 1990 r. Nr 28, poz. 160 (1990-04-06)
  • Ustawa z dnia 9 lutego 1990 r. o zmianie przepisów o godle, barwach i hymnie Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej [Amendment to the Arms, Colors, and Anthem of the Republic of Poland Act], Dz. U. z 1990 r. Nr 10, poz. 60 (1990-02-09)
  • Ustawa z dnia 19 lutego 1993 r. o znakach Sił Zbrojnych Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej [Insignia of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Poland Act], Dz. U. z 1993 r. Nr 34, poz. 154 (1993-02-19)

Official documents edit

  • (PDF) (in Polish). Warsaw: Supreme Chamber of Control (Najwyższa Izba Kontroli). 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 26 March 2015. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • (in Polish and French) Łoza, Stanisław; Czaykowski, Zygmunt (1921). Godło i barwy Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej – Armoiries et couleurs de la République polonaise. Warsaw: Ministry of Military Affairs. p. 10.
  • (in Polish) , Druk 2149, Warsaw, 15 October 2003

News edit

  • Bajtlik, Stanisław (1 May 2008). "Szyjemy flagę narodową". Gazeta Wyborcza (in Polish). Agora. Retrieved 4 May 2008.
  • Magiera, Marek (9 June 2006). Życie Częstochowskie (in Polish). Beta Press S.C. Archived from the original on 11 December 2008. Retrieved 2 February 2008.
  • Molak, Wiesław; Sakiewicz, Tomasz (2 May 2007). . Interview with Bogdan Borusewicz in Program 1 Polskiego Radia (in Polish). Law and Justice. Archived from the original on 25 October 2007. Retrieved 2 February 2008.
  • Niezabitowska, Małgorzata (January 1988). "Discovering America". National Geographic.

Web edit

  • . Official website of the President of the Republic of Poland (in Polish). Chancellery of the President of the Republic of Poland. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 30 September 2007.
  • Flags of the World – subpages:
    • "Bohemia (Czech Republic)". Retrieved 2 November 2007.
    • "Colors of Flags". Retrieved 4 November 2007.
    • "Grand Duchy of Posen 1815–1849, Posen Province 1849–1920 (Prussia, Germany)". Retrieved 2 November 2007.
    • "Polish Religious flags". Retrieved 2 February 2008.
  • Kromer, Adam. . Polskie flagi, chorągwie, bandery... (in Polish). Archived from the original on 4 February 2008. Retrieved 2 February 2008.
  • (in Polish). Instytut Heraldyczno-Weksylologiczny. 11 July 2005. Archived from the original on 1 July 2008. Retrieved 30 September 2007.
  • Sarajčić, Ivan. "Flag Identifier". Retrieved 3 February 2008.

External links edit

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Not to be confused with the Flag of Indonesia Flag of Monaco or Flag of Bohemia You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Polish May 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Polish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 449 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Polish Wikipedia article at pl Flaga Polski see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated pl Flaga Polski to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The national flag of Poland Polish flaga Polski consists of two horizontal stripes of equal width the upper one white and the lower one red The two colours are defined in the Polish constitution as the national colours A variant of the flag with the national coat of arms in the middle of the white fess is legally reserved for official use abroad and at sea A similar flag with the addition of a white eagle is used as the naval ensign of Poland Republic of PolandFlag of the Republic of PolandUseNational flagProportion5 8Adopted1 August 1919 104 years ago 1919 08 01 officially 31 January 1980 44 years ago 1980 01 31 restored DesignA horizontal bicolour of white and redFlag with coat of arms of the Republic of PolandUseState flag civil and state ensignProportion5 8Adopted1919 last modified 1990DesignA horizontal bicolour of white and red defaced with the arms of Poland in the white stripe UseNaval ensignProportion10 21Adopted19 February 1993 31 years ago 1993 02 19 DesignA flag consisting of two stripes white and red terminated in two triangular tongues on a free leech In the center of the white strip in the part between the louvre and the apex of the indentation between the tongues is the emblem of the Republic of Poland Pennant of the president of the Republic of PolandUsePresidential standardProportion5 6Adopted1919 original 1927 officially 26 January 1996 restored DesignCrowned white eagle in a red field bordered with a white wavy line White and red were officially adopted as national colours in 1831 although these were associated with Poland since the Middle Ages and were emphasized on royal banners They are of heraldic origin and derive from the tinctures colours of the coats of arms of the two constituent nations of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth i e the White Eagle of Poland and the Pursuer of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania a white knight riding a white horse both on a red shield Until 1831 Polish soldiers wore cockades of various colour combinations The national flag was officially adopted in 1919 Since 2004 Polish Flag Day has been celebrated on 2 May The flag is flown continuously on the buildings of the highest national authorities such as the parliament and the presidential palace Other institutions and many Polish people fly the national flag on national holidays and other special occasions of national significance Current Polish law does not restrict the use of the national flag without the coat of arms as long as the flag is not disrespected Horizontal bicolours of white and red being a relatively widespread design several flags are similar but unrelated to the Polish one Two national flags Indonesia and Monaco have the red stripe above the white one In Poland many flags based on the national design also feature the national colours It is one of five flags that use the 5 8 ratio The other four flags include those of Argentina Guatemala Palau and Sweden Contents 1 Design 1 1 Legal sources 1 2 National colours 1 3 Variants of the national flag 2 Usage 2 1 Right and obligation to fly the flag 2 1 1 Flag without coat of arms 2 1 2 Flag with coat of arms 2 2 Flag flying days 2 3 Common flag practice 3 Flag protocol 4 History 4 1 Royal banner 4 2 National cockade 4 3 Twentieth century 4 4 Shades of red 5 Related and similar flags 6 Controversies 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 9 2 1 Books 9 2 2 Official documents 9 2 3 News 9 2 4 Web 10 External linksDesign edit nbsp Horizontal and vertical display of the colours of the Republic of PolandLegal sources edit The colours and flags of the Republic of Poland are described in two legal documents the Constitution of the Republic of Poland of 1997 1 and the Coat of Arms Colours and Anthem of the Republic of Poland and State Seals Act Ustawa o godle barwach i hymnie Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej oraz o pieczeciach panstwowych of 1980 with subsequent amendments 2 henceforth referred to as the Coat of Arms Act Legislation concerning the national symbols is far from perfect The Coat of Arms Act has been amended several times and refers extensively to executive ordinances some of which have never been issued Moreover the Act contains errors omissions and inconsistencies which make the law confusing open to various interpretations and often not followed in practice 3 National colours edit Statutory coordinates of Polish national colours in the CIE xyY colour space with the tolerated colour differences in CIELUV 2 Colour a x y Y DE White 0 315 0 320 82 0 4 0 Red 0 570 0 305 16 0 8 0Illuminant C measurement geometry d 0According to Chapter I Article 28 paragraph 2 of the Constitution the national colours of Poland are white and red 1 The Coat of Arms Act Article 4 further specifies that the colours are white and red in two horizontal parallel stripes of equal width of which the top one is white and the bottom one is red 2 If the colours are displayed vertically the white stripe is placed on the left from the onlooker s viewpoint Attachment no 2 to the Act shows the national colours in both horizontal and vertical alignment as well as the official shades of both colours expressed as coordinates in the CIE xyY CIE 1931 colour space with the tolerated colour differences DE specified in the CIE 1976 L u v colour space CIELUV 2 Variants of the national flag edit nbsp An unofficial construction sheet of the flag with coat of arms based on specifications in Polish lawThe Constitution contains no mention of a national flag Instead the flag is defined by the Coat of Arms Act which specifies two variants of the national flag the national flag of the Republic of Poland flaga panstwowa Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej and the national flag with coat of arms of the Republic of Poland flaga panstwowa z godlem Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Both flags are defined in Article 6 of the act as follows The state flag of the Republic of Poland is a rectangular piece of cloth in the colours of the Republic of Poland hoisted on a flagpole The state flag of the Republic of Poland is also the flag specified in paragraph 1 with the coat of arms of the Republic of Poland placed in the middle of the white stripe 2 The hoist to fly ratio for both flags is 5 8 For the latter flag the proportion between the inescutcheon of the coat of arms and the hoist is 2 5 Images of both variations of the flag can be found in attachment no 3 to the Coat of Arms Act 4 Usage editRight and obligation to fly the flag edit According to the Coat of Arms Act everyone can use the Polish flag especially during national and cultural events as long as it is done in a respectful manner 2 This liberty in the use of national colours is a relative novelty Until 2004 Polish citizens were only allowed to fly the Polish flag on national holidays The use of both variants was restricted but only flying the flag with coat of arms was from 1955 to 1985 punishable by a fine or arrest for up to one year 3 After 1985 unauthorised use of any national symbol was an infraction A possible explanation to such harsh measures was the fact that the officially promoted holiday of 1 May was separated by only one day from the pre war and current national holiday of Poland the anniversary of signing of the Constitution of 3 May 1791 While hoisting a flag on 1 May was acceptable no later than the following day it had to be taken down 5 nbsp Flag without the coat of armsThat restriction and kind of state monopoly on the use of national symbols during the Communist regime made flying the Polish flag a symbol of resistance against the government It became customary as it still is for workers to hoist Polish flags on plant buildings when going on strike That is why the Polish flag as a symbol of patriotism and resistance against the Communist rule is part of the Solidarity trade union logo 6 Flag without coat of arms edit source source source source source source source source track The following institutions are required by law to fly the national flag without coat of arms either on top or in front of their official buildings the Sejm lower house of parliament the Senate upper house of parliament the President of the Republic the Council of Ministers cabinet and the President of the Council of Ministers Prime Minister Voivodeship sejmiks provincial legislatures other state and local government organs Additionally the national flag without coat of arms is used as an ensign for inland navigation 2 Flag with coat of arms edit nbsp Flag with the coat of armsWhile the ban on using the flag without coat of arms has been lifted the use of the national flag with coat of arms is still legally restricted and should be flown only on or in front of Polish embassies consulates and other representative offices and missions abroad as well as by Polish ambassadors and consuls on their residences and vehicles at civilian airports and heliports civil air ensign on civilian airplanes only during international flights on buildings of seaport authorities as a merchant civil ensign 2 In practice however the restriction is often ignored and the two flags with and without the coat of arms are treated as interchangeable 3 The variant with the coat of arms even though its incorrect usage is often used by the Polonia or Polish diaspora outside Poland especially in the United States 7 Flag flying days edit nbsp The Polish Papal yellow and white and Municipal white and blue flags in Krakow s Grand Square during Pope Benedict XVI s visit to Poland on 27 May 2006State and local government organs are legally required and other institutions and organisations as well as all citizens are encouraged to fly the Polish flag on the following days 1 May State Holiday May Day formerly Labor Day 2 May Polish National Flag Day 3 May Constitution Day along with Polish National Flag Day 11 November Independence Day 3 Common flag practice edit The flag is often popularly flown during important sporting events such as the FIFA World Cup if Polish athletes are participating 8 and during an official visit of a particularly important person especially a pope in Poland During a pope s visit the national flag is usually flown together with yellow and white Church flags and white and blue Marian flags 9 It is uncommon to fly the national flag on personal occasions such as birthdays or weddings 3 According to polls about one out of three Poles say they own a Polish flag and about one out of four fly it on national holidays Such public display of patriotism is much more common in western Poland especially in Greater Poland than in other parts of the country 3 Flag protocol edit nbsp Example of vertical alignment of Polish national colours inside the Sejm chamberFlags in Poland are used according to a customary rather than legal flag protocol Apart from the obligation to treat the flag with due respect Polish law does not offer a detailed code of correct usage of the Polish flag Some organisations and public institutions such as the Heraldic and Vexillological Institute and the Supreme Chamber of Control have proposed written flag protocols for the Polish flag based on custom flag protocols of other countries such as India and the United States and common sense These guidelines however are not legally binding 3 10 Traditionally the national flag is reserved to serve either informative or festive purposes A single specimen of the flag on or in front of a public office building indicates its official role Multiple flags on the other hand are normally used to decorate both public and private buildings to mark special occasions such as national holidays 3 In Polish heraldry the tincture of the charge has priority in relation to the tincture of the field In the case of Polish national colours white the colour of the White Eagle should always be placed in a more honorable position than red the colour of the field of the Polish coat of arms In the most usual horizontal alignment this means that the white stripe is placed above the red one If the alignment is vertical the white stripe should be on the left from the onlooker s point of view If the flag is hung vertically above a street the white stripe should be placed on the left when looking in the direction of increasing house numbers If it drapes a coffin the white stripe should be placed over the heart 10 The flag should be raised before 8 a m and lowered at sunset and if flown at night it should be illuminated 3 During a ceremonial raising of the flag the national anthem is played so that the timing of the raising matches the duration of the anthem 10 Civilians pay respect by standing in a dignified manner additionally men uncover their heads Members of uniformed services stand at attention if their uniform includes headgear and they are not standing in an organised group they also perform the two finger salute Colour guards dip their banners to the flag 2 See video nbsp Example of indoor display of the flag of Poland center together with other flags that of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship left and the European flag right According to generally accepted standards of respect the national flag should never be dipped to any person or thing Care should be taken to prevent the flag from touching the ground floor or water beneath it It should be also secured from being torn off or falling to the ground and it should not be flown outdoors during a heavy rain blizzard or very strong wind The flag should never be flown dirty torn or faded When no longer in a fit condition to be used it should be disposed of in a dignified manner preferably by cutting it in half so as to separate the colours and then burning 3 10 When displayed with other flags the Polish flag should be raised first and lowered last Each flag must be flown from a separate pole of the same height but the flag of Poland should be always placed in the most honorable position 3 It means that if the total number of flags is even the Polish flag should be placed to its right of the other flags If the total number of flags is odd it should be placed in the middle Alternatively two Polish flags may be placed one at each end of the row of flags 10 The order of precedence for flags is as follows flag of Poland national flags of other countries in alphabetical order voivodeship flags county flags commune flags European flag flags of domestic organisations flags of international organisations public services flags corporate flags other flags 10 The President of the Republic may announce a period of national mourning During that time Polish flags are flown at half staff 2 If a flag is flown from a wooden pole rather than a staff or mast a black ribbon is attached to the pole as a sign of mourning or a black flag is flown to its left from the national flag 3 History editRoyal banner edit Main article Banner of Poland nbsp Stanislaw Sobieski Grand Standard Bearer of the Polish Crown carrying King Sigismund III s double swallow tailed royal banner consisting of red and white stripes emblazoned with a coat of arms combining the heraldic symbols of Poland Lithuania Sweden and the House of Vasa c 1605 The earliest vexilloids flag like objects used in Poland were known as stanice and probably resembled the Roman vexillum that is a cloth draped vertically from a horizontal crosspiece attached to a wooden pole or spear They served as both religious and military symbols as early as 10th century With Poland s conversion to Christianity in 966 the stanice were probably Christianized by replacing pagan symbols with Christian ones The royal banner of arms dates back to the reign of King Boleslaus the Generous r 1076 1079 but it was during the reign of King Ladislaus the Short r 1320 1333 that a red cloth emblazoned with the White Eagle of the arms of Poland was finally established as the Banner of the Kingdom of Poland a symbol of royal authority used at coronations and in battles 11 In the times of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569 1795 a banner of the Commonwealth was also used combining the heraldic symbols of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania The Commonwealth banner was initially plain white emblazoned with the arms of the Commonwealth which consisted of the heraldic charges of Poland White Eagle and Lithuania Pursuer Since both Polish and Lithuanian coats of arms consisted of white Argent charges in a red Gules field these two colours started to be used for the entire banner During the 17th century the banner was usually divided into two three or four horizontal often swallow tailed stripes of red and white 11 12 National cockade edit nbsp A woman fastening a red and white cockade to a Polish insurgent s square shaped rogatywka cap during the January Uprising of 1863 1864In the 18th and 19th centuries European nations used cockades or knots of coloured ribbons pinned to the hat to denote the nationality of their military In Poland until 1831 there was no consensus as to what the colours of the national cockade should be Polish soldiers wore white white and red blue and red or blue white red cockades 11 The custom came to Poland from Saxony during the reign of Augustus II r 1697 1733 King of Poland and Elector of Saxony During that time the cockade worn by the Polish military had like in Saxony the form of a white silk ribbon with a knot in the middle It was later replaced with a circular white cockade wrinkled toward the center patterned after the cockade of the Kingdom of France During the reign of King Stanislaus Augustus r 1764 1795 a white and red cockade came into use alongside the plain white one In 1791 the Military Commission introduced a metal cross pattee as a more durable alternative to the cockade However many soldiers continued to either pin the cross to the cockade or wear the cockade without the cross Polish military leaders and national heroes of the time such as General Tadeusz Kosciuszko and Prince Jozef Poniatowski pinned plain white national cockades to their hats 11 nbsp National Cockade Act of 7 February 1831 nbsp Polish Lithuanian coat of arms during the November Uprising of 1830 1831 The patriotic and staunchly Catholic members of the Bar Confederation of 1768 1772 adopted crimson the symbol of Polish szlachta or nobility and blue symbolizing Virgin Mary as their colours These as well as white and red were considered national colours during the Great Sejm of 1788 1792 White and red were first publicly used as national colours by civilians on 3 May 1792 in Warsaw during a celebration of the first anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution of 1791 Meanwhile the political left wore the blue white red cockades of the French Revolution Polish Legions created in 1797 in French controlled republics in Italy used either national cockades of the particular Italian republics in which they served or the French tricolour cockade In the latter case the red and blue colours were replaced with crimson and navy blue respectively hues considered to be traditionally Polish The General Confederation of the Kingdom of Poland which sought to revive the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth during the French invasion of Russia in 1812 adopted red and blue cockades symbolizing the unity of Poland red and Lithuania blue 12 The military of the French controlled Duchy of Warsaw 1807 1815 and the Russian controlled Congress Kingdom of Poland 1815 1831 used the white cockade which was also worn by the cadets who started the November Uprising against Russian rule on 29 November 1830 11 During the uprising the Sejm realized the need for unified national insignia that could be used by the Polish military On 7 February 1831 it adopted white and red the tinctures colours of the Polish and Lithuanian coats of arms as the national cockade of Poland The white and red cockade was henceforth worn by Polish soldiers in the November Uprising as well as by participants of the Krakow Uprising of 1846 Polish freedom fighters in the Grand Duchy of Posen and the Austrian Empire during the Spring of Nations of 1848 and Polish insurgents during the January Uprising of 1863 1864 White and red colours were also used by civilians to show their protest against the Russian rule as well as by people in France Britain Germany Belgium and other countries as a sign of their sympathy with the Polish cause The Sejm s decision was not however immediately accepted by all Left wing politicians of the time such as Joachim Lelewel continued to regard the revolutionary blue white and red as true national colours Tricolour standards were used by some Polish guerrilla units during the January Uprising 11 Twentieth century edit nbsp The flag of Poland in 1937 nbsp The civil ensign of Poland in 1938 nbsp The flag of Poland in 1939White and red flags were first waved during a patriotic demonstration on 3 May 1916 in Warsaw The organizing committee advised participants about the correct alignment of the colours that is with the white stripe above the red one Still many demonstrators brought flags with the red stripe on top On 1 August 1919 almost a year after Poland regained independence in November 1918 the Sejm officially introduced a white and red bicolour as the Polish national flag In order to avoid confusion with the white and red maritime signal flag used internationally by harbor pilots and tugboats the same act of Sejm introduced a variant of the flag with the coat of arms in the white stripe for use as a civil ensign and by Polish diplomats and consuls abroad 11 nbsp A white and red brassard worn by a Polish insurgent during the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 The acronym WP stands for Wojsko Polskie or Polish Armed Forces Apart from changes in the legal specifications of the shades of the national colours see the section below the basic design of the Polish flag including the 5 8 ratio has remained unchanged to this day The flag with coat of arms was only modified to adjust to the changes in the coat of arms itself Major modifications included a change in the stylisation of the eagle from Classicist to Baroque in 1927 and the removal of the crown from the eagle s head during the Communist rule from 1944 to 1990 12 13 In that period Poland was one of the few socialist states in the Eastern Bloc apart from the flag of Cuba and Laos not to adorn communist symbolism on its flag nbsp A frayed Polish flag during the final days of the Warsaw Uprising of 1944 nbsp Polish flag in Berlin on 2 May 194520th century Polish insurgents wore white and red brassards armbands which played a role similar to the cockade of previous centuries Such armbands were worn by Polish freedom fighters during the Greater Poland Uprising 1918 1919 and Silesian Uprisings 1919 1921 as well as during the Second World War 1939 1945 by the soldiers of the Home Army AK and Peasants Battalions BCh usually emblazoned with the acronyms of their formations 11 During the Second World War Polish soldiers raised the Polish flag on several sites of their victories On 18 May 1944 after an Allied victory over the German forces in the Battle of Monte Cassino a patrol of the 12th Podolian Uhlan Regiment part of the Polish 3rd Carpathian Rifle Division raised a Polish flag on ruins of the Monte Cassino abbey in Italy On 1 August 1944 the first day of the Warsaw Uprising a white and red flag was hoisted on the Prudential building Warsaw s tallest skyscraper of the time During the liberation of Warsaw by Soviet forces and Polish People s Army on 17 January 1945 Polish flags were raised on the Belvedere palace and ruins of the Main Railway Station On 2 May 1945 after the capture of Berlin soldiers of the 7th Battery 3rd Division 1st Light Artillery Regiment planted Polish flags on the Berlin Victory Column 11 Polish flags were also used by anti government demonstrators under the Communist rule During the bloody riots of 1956 in Poznan and 1970 in Gdynia protesters carried flags that were blood stained on the white stripe 11 Shades of red edit Shades of red comparisonCrimsonAmaranthVermilionCurrent statutory a HTML red nbsp nbsp Flag of Poland 1919 1927 nbsp nbsp Flag of Poland 1927 1980 nbsp nbsp nbsp Flag of Poland 1980 present Historical flags Until 1927 the exact shades of the national colours were not legally specified In practice the actual hue particularly of red depended on what kind of red dye was available In pre partition Poland crimson due to its high price was a colour associated with the rich and the privileged It could be obtained from the domestically harvested Polish cochineal although imported alternatives were also available kermes from the Mediterranean Basin hence karmazyn the Polish name of the colour and Mexican cochineal after the discovery of the New World Crimson was reserved for the nobility and considered a symbol of the aristocracy so that karmazyn became synonymous with a magnate A royal ban on wearing this colour could be a form of punishment in the 14th century the Nalecz clan of Greater Poland were forbidden to dress in crimson for their ancestors complicity in the assassination of King Premislaus in 1296 11 In the first half of the 19th century due to the influence of French fashion crimson was largely replaced with the cheaper amaranth 12 The National Cockade Act of 1831 did not specify the shade of red for which it was criticised by Joachim Lelewel 11 nor did the Coat of Arms and National Colours Act of 1919 In 1921 the Ministry of Military Affairs issued a pamphlet with illustrations of the Polish flag and other national symbols which used the crimson shade of red 14 The pamphlet was not however an official source of law and was published for informative purpose only The shade of red was first legally specified by a presidential decree of 13 December 1927 which stipulated that the official shade was vermilion This specification was upheld by a decree of 7 December 1955 11 The Coat of Arms Act of 31 January 1980 2 replaced the verbal prescription with trichromatic coordinates in the CIE colour space as proposed by Nikodem Sobczak an expert in colorimetry 15 bringing the resulting hue closer to crimson again Related and similar flags editSee also List of Polish flags nbsp Polish naval ensign nbsp Polish naval airbase flag nbsp nbsp Flag of Lower Silesia 2001 2008 nbsp Flag of Lesser PolandExamples of related flags The flag of the Grand Duchy of Posen a Polish populated autonomous province of the Kingdom of Prussia created in 1815 was a red and white horizontal bicolour Its colours were taken from the duchy s coat of arms which consisted of the Prussian Black Eagle with an inescutcheon of the Polish White Eagle With Germany s increasingly anti Polish policy and a rising identification of white and red as Polish national colours the red and white flag of Posen was replaced in 1886 with a white black white horizontal triband 16 Today many flags used in Poland are based on the design of the national flag This applies especially to flags defined by Polish law and used by the Polish military and other uniformed services such as the naval ensign a swallow tailed horizontal bicolour of white and red defaced with the arms of Poland in the white stripe 17 Flags of some administrative subdivisions also resemble the national flag Examples include the former flag of the Lower Silesian Voivodeship a horizontal bicolour of white and red defaced with the arms of the voivodeship or the flag of the Lesser Poland Voivodeship a horizontal tricolour of white yellow and red with the yellow stripe half as wide as any of the other two 18 Controversies editPolish law says that treating the national symbols including the flag with reverence and respect is the right and obligation of every Polish citizen and all state organs institutions and organisations 2 Public disrespect destruction or intentional removal of the flag is considered a crime punishable by a fine penal servitude or up to one year of imprisonment 19 Official statistics show that crimes against national symbols are rare 43 such crimes in 2003 and 96 in 2004 were less than 0 001 of all crimes registered in Poland in those years 3 Other unspecified violation of regulations on the Polish flag is an infraction punishable by a fine or up to one month imprisonment 20 See also editList of Polish flags List of Polish naval and maritime flagsNotes edit a b Statutory colour specifications rendered into sRGB for web display assuming the white point at 6500 K The resulting RGB values in hexadecimal notation are white E9 E8 E7 and red D4 21 3D The shades actually visible on your screen depend on your browser and screen settings as well as the surrounding context and other factors An intensely luminous light background may make the statutory white colour appear grey Many websites which display the Polish national colours use a simplified approximation of the legally specified shades by using basic HTML colours white FF FF FF and red FF 00 00 The Pantone equivalents are 656 C and 1795 C References editCitations edit a b Konstytucja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej a b c d e f g h i j k l Ustawa o godle 1980 with amendments a b c d e f g h i j k l m Informacja o wynikach kontroli NIK 2005 Ustawa o godle 1980 original various authors Renata Brzezinska et al 2007 Polska pelna uroku in Polish Warsaw Petit Fute p 716 ISBN 978 83 60496 85 5 Niezabitowska prezydent pl Magiera Polish Religious flags FOTW a b c d e f Protokol flagowy a b c d e f g h i j k l m Znamierowski a b c d Russocki Kuczynski Willaume Ustawa o zmianie przepisow o godle 1990 Loza Czaykowski Bajtlik Grand Duchy of Posen FOTW Ustawa o znakach Sil Zbrojnych Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej 1993 Kromer Article 137 1 of the penal code Kodeks karny of 6 June 1997 Article 49 2 of the infraction code Kodeks wykroczen of 20 May 1971 Sources edit nbsp The largest Polish flag flying from the Freedom Mast in Warsaw which at 63 metres 207 ft is Poland s tallest flag poleBooks edit Russocki Stanislaw Kuczynski Stefan Willaume Juliusz 1970 Godlo barwy i hymn Rzeczypospolitej Zarys dziejow Arms Colors and Anthem of the Republic A Historical Sketch in Polish Warsaw Wiedza Powszechna Znamierowski Alfred 1995 Stworzony do chwaly Created for Glory in Polish Warsaw Editions Spotkania ISBN 83 7115 055 5 LawKonstytucja Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej z dnia 2 kwietnia 1997 r Constitution of the Republic of Poland Dz U z 1997 r Nr 78 poz 483 1997 04 02 Ustawa z dnia 6 czerwca 1997 r Kodeks karny Penal Code Dz U z 1997 r Nr 88 poz 553 1997 06 06 Ustawa z dnia 18 stycznia 1951 r o dniach wolnych od pracy Non Working Days Act Dz U z 1951 r Nr 4 poz 28 1951 01 18 Ustawa z dnia 31 stycznia 1980 r o godle barwach i hymnie Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej oraz o pieczeciach panstwowych Arms Colors and Anthem of the Republic of Poland and State Seals Act Dz U z 1980 r Nr 7 poz 18 1980 01 31 Ustawa z dnia 6 kwietnia 1990 r o przywroceniu Swieta Narodowego Trzeciego Maja Reestablishment of the National Day of the Third of May Act Dz U z 1990 r Nr 28 poz 160 1990 04 06 Ustawa z dnia 9 lutego 1990 r o zmianie przepisow o godle barwach i hymnie Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Amendment to the Arms Colors and Anthem of the Republic of Poland Act Dz U z 1990 r Nr 10 poz 60 1990 02 09 Ustawa z dnia 19 lutego 1993 r o znakach Sil Zbrojnych Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Insignia of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Poland Act Dz U z 1993 r Nr 34 poz 154 1993 02 19 Official documents edit Informacja o wynikach kontroli uzywania symboli panstwowych przez organy administracji publicznej PDF in Polish Warsaw Supreme Chamber of Control Najwyzsza Izba Kontroli 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 26 March 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help in Polish and French Loza Stanislaw Czaykowski Zygmunt 1921 Godlo i barwy Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Armoiries et couleurs de la Republique polonaise Warsaw Ministry of Military Affairs p 10 in Polish Projekt ustawy o zmianie ustawy o godle barwach i hymnie Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej Druk 2149 Warsaw 15 October 2003News edit Bajtlik Stanislaw 1 May 2008 Szyjemy flage narodowa Gazeta Wyborcza in Polish Agora Retrieved 4 May 2008 Magiera Marek 9 June 2006 Zaczyna sie mundial Zycie Czestochowskie in Polish Beta Press S C Archived from the original on 11 December 2008 Retrieved 2 February 2008 Molak Wieslaw Sakiewicz Tomasz 2 May 2007 Bogdan Borusewicz gosciem w Sygnalach dnia Interview with Bogdan Borusewicz in Program 1 Polskiego Radia in Polish Law and Justice Archived from the original on 25 October 2007 Retrieved 2 February 2008 Niezabitowska Malgorzata January 1988 Discovering America National Geographic Web edit Flaga Official website of the President of the Republic of Poland in Polish Chancellery of the President of the Republic of Poland Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 30 September 2007 Flags of the World subpages Bohemia Czech Republic Retrieved 2 November 2007 Colors of Flags Retrieved 4 November 2007 Grand Duchy of Posen 1815 1849 Posen Province 1849 1920 Prussia Germany Retrieved 2 November 2007 Polish Religious flags Retrieved 2 February 2008 Kromer Adam Flagi wojewodztw polskich Polskie flagi choragwie bandery in Polish Archived from the original on 4 February 2008 Retrieved 2 February 2008 Protokol flagowy Jak postepowac z flagami in Polish Instytut Heraldyczno Weksylologiczny 11 July 2005 Archived from the original on 1 July 2008 Retrieved 30 September 2007 Sarajcic Ivan Flag Identifier Retrieved 3 February 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to National flag of Poland Flag of Poland at Flags of the World Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flag of Poland amp oldid 1216820290, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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