This article belongs to the lore of Anteria.

Flag and coat of arms of Freice: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:
| Use = 110110
| Use = 110110
| Symbol =  
| Symbol =  
| Proportion = 1:2
| Proportion = 5:8
| Adoption = 17 January 1970
| Adoption = 17 January 1970 <small>(original)</small><br>5 October 2021 <small>(Current version)</small>
| Design = A light blue field with a rectangle on the upper hoist-side corner bearing the colours blue, green, orange, and white in vertical bars.
| Design = A light blue field with a rectangle on the upper hoist-side corner bearing the colours blue, green, orange, and white in vertical bars.
| Designer  = De̩zȧ Tudɉe̩go and Toqư Eɉɨsta
| Designer  = De̩zȧ Tudɉe̩go and Toqư Eɉɨsta
Line 21: Line 21:


Upon independence in 1969, the Tudɉe̩go flag was adopted as the de facto national flag, widely used by both government and civil society but without any legal recognition. Opposition from non-Freician groups, particularly the Riamese community resident on the island, prevented the formal adoption of the flag in its existing form.<ref>[https://i.imgur.com/LJrd3HN.jpg/ Riamese community fears over Freician flag debate]. ''Guri Telegraph''. Retrieved 15 July 2007.</ref> Local artist Toqư Eɉɨsta, who's husband was Maricoenian, submitted a compromise design that incorporated the core elements of the flag, in the form of a verticle quadband in the canton of a light blue field. Eɉɨsta summarised the design as representing the Freician people as a 'cornerstone' but only 'one constituent part' of the Freician nation, with the light blue representing the ocean and the many communities that had travelled across it to settle on the island.<ref>Eɉɨsta, Toqư E. ''Freice and Myself''. (Frɨs ưɟte̩qąl: National Press), p.92.</ref> The flag was formally adopted by the provisional Freician legislature on 17 January 1970.<ref>"National Flag Act". ''Provisional Council of the Country of Freice''. 1970. Archived from the [https://i.imgur.com/LJrd3HN.jpg/ original] on June 2, 2004. Retrieved January 2, 2011.</ref>
Upon independence in 1969, the Tudɉe̩go flag was adopted as the de facto national flag, widely used by both government and civil society but without any legal recognition. Opposition from non-Freician groups, particularly the Riamese community resident on the island, prevented the formal adoption of the flag in its existing form.<ref>[https://i.imgur.com/LJrd3HN.jpg/ Riamese community fears over Freician flag debate]. ''Guri Telegraph''. Retrieved 15 July 2007.</ref> Local artist Toqư Eɉɨsta, who's husband was Maricoenian, submitted a compromise design that incorporated the core elements of the flag, in the form of a verticle quadband in the canton of a light blue field. Eɉɨsta summarised the design as representing the Freician people as a 'cornerstone' but only 'one constituent part' of the Freician nation, with the light blue representing the ocean and the many communities that had travelled across it to settle on the island.<ref>Eɉɨsta, Toqư E. ''Freice and Myself''. (Frɨs ưɟte̩qąl: National Press), p.92.</ref> The flag was formally adopted by the provisional Freician legislature on 17 January 1970.<ref>"National Flag Act". ''Provisional Council of the Country of Freice''. 1970. Archived from the [https://i.imgur.com/LJrd3HN.jpg/ original] on June 2, 2004. Retrieved January 2, 2011.</ref>
In October 2021, slight amendments were made to the proportions of the flag along with the formalisation of the Pantone colour scheme contained within the original legislation establishing the flag.<ref>[https://i.imgur.com/LJrd3HN.jpg/ National flag receives facelift]. ''Taɱą ǡduƞe̩ frɨs''. Retrieved 5 October 2021.</ref>


==Symbolism==
==Symbolism==
Line 33: Line 35:
{| class="wikitable" width="600px" border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" style="background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px solid #aaaaaa; border-collapse: collapse; white-space: nowrap; text-align: left"
{| class="wikitable" width="600px" border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" style="background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px solid #aaaaaa; border-collapse: collapse; white-space: nowrap; text-align: left"
|- style="text-align: center; background: #eee"
|- style="text-align: center; background: #eee"
! [[File:Flag of Freice.png|30px]]<br />(1970–present)
! [[File:Flag of Freice.png|30px]]<br />(1970–present)<ref group=Note name=Note02/>
!style="background:#79adc3; color:#FFF; width:150px"| Light blue
!style="background:#79adc3; color:#FFF; width:150px"| Light blue
!style="background:#4b6c7f; color:#FFF; width:150px"| Dark blue
!style="background:#4b6c7f; color:#FFF; width:150px"| Dark blue
Line 41: Line 43:
|-
|-
| Hex
| Hex
| #79adc3
| #89b2c4
| #4b6c7f
| #506d85
| #3a523f
| #385542
| #f1a245
| #F1be48
| #ffffff
| #ffffff
|-
|-
| RGB
| RGB
| 121, 173, 195
| 137, 178, 196
| 75, 108, 127
| 80, 109, 133
| 58, 82, 63
| 56, 85, 66
| 241, 162, 69
| 241, 190, 72
| 255, 255, 255
| 255, 255, 255
|-
|-
| Pantone<ref group=Note name=Note02/>
| Pantone
| 2205c
| 2205c
| 2167c
| 2167c
Line 62: Line 64:
|-
|-
| CMYK
| CMYK
| 38, 11, 0, 24
| 47, 14, 10, 1
| 41, 15, 0, 50
| 70, 42, 21, 19
| 29, 0, 23, 68
| 71, 30, 67, 52
| 0, 33, 71, 5
| 0, 21, 77, 0
| 0, 0, 0, 0
| 0, 0, 0, 0
|-
|-
Line 86: Line 88:
{{reflist|group=Note|refs=
{{reflist|group=Note|refs=
<ref name=Note01>There is some debate about the exact specifications of the flag's design. The Schedules of Government and its predecessor, the Constitution, specify the design of the flag in CMYK. However, the initial legislation that officially adopted the flag differs slightly in the shades of colour used, having used Pantone. The government has not, as of 2021, identified a correct way of rendering the flag.</ref>
<ref name=Note01>There is some debate about the exact specifications of the flag's design. The Schedules of Government and its predecessor, the Constitution, specify the design of the flag in CMYK. However, the initial legislation that officially adopted the flag differs slightly in the shades of colour used, having used Pantone. The government has not, as of 2021, identified a correct way of rendering the flag.</ref>
<ref name=Note02>Colour variation as specified in the National Flag Act.</ref>
<ref name=Note02>Colour scheme formally adopted for all flags in October 2021.</ref>
}}
}}



Revision as of 21:16, 5 October 2021

Freice
Flag of Freice.png
UseCivil and state flag, civil and state ensign
Proportion5:8
Adopted17 January 1970 (original)
5 October 2021 (Current version)
DesignA light blue field with a rectangle on the upper hoist-side corner bearing the colours blue, green, orange, and white in vertical bars.
Designed byDe̩zȧ Tudɉe̩go and Toqư Eɉɨsta

The National Flag of the Country of Freice (Freician: Serɉeɱą ie̩tiaļi ġiḡurą pưƞqyǡ 'gi frɨs), often referred to simply as the flag of Freice and sometimes as the Blue and Bars (Ɨgo ol e̩siqɨǡ) was adopted in its current form by the provisional Freician legislature on 17 January 1970.[1] The flag consists of a light blue field with a canton featuring four verticle stripes of stripes of blue, green, orange, and white.[2][Note 1]

The origins of the current flag can be traced to 1959, when a horizontal tricolour flag featuring the colours blue, green, and orange, and a white depiction of Freice, was first flown. The flag's creator remains unknown, but it was quickly adopted by Freician nationalists as a symbol of nationhood and sovereignty.[3] In 1961, a new version of the flag was adopted that took the tricolour flag and added a fourth white band in place of the central island symbol.[4] This design was incorporated into the current national flag.

History

Although a single Freician community has inhabited the island for centuries, there was no single flag used by the islanders prior to the mid-twentieth century. Historically, various banners of different colours were used to represent different groups, with a particular colour assigned to different classes of people.[5] The most common colours were red, orange, white blue, and green. These historical banners formed the basis of the first flag, which incorporated the latter four colours, three of which were in the form of a horizontal triband.

This early flag was not widely adopted, limited only to a small group of nationalist activists. These political associations, which resulted in the flag being suppressed by the colonial government, led to the creation of a new flag. De̩zȧ Tudɉe̩go is credited as the creator of this flag, which took the colours featured in the previous flag and arranged them in a horizontal quadband.[6] This flag was widely used as a symbol of Freician nationality rather than nationhood, and was recognised by the colonial government as a representative flag for the Freician people.

Upon independence in 1969, the Tudɉe̩go flag was adopted as the de facto national flag, widely used by both government and civil society but without any legal recognition. Opposition from non-Freician groups, particularly the Riamese community resident on the island, prevented the formal adoption of the flag in its existing form.[7] Local artist Toqư Eɉɨsta, who's husband was Maricoenian, submitted a compromise design that incorporated the core elements of the flag, in the form of a verticle quadband in the canton of a light blue field. Eɉɨsta summarised the design as representing the Freician people as a 'cornerstone' but only 'one constituent part' of the Freician nation, with the light blue representing the ocean and the many communities that had travelled across it to settle on the island.[8] The flag was formally adopted by the provisional Freician legislature on 17 January 1970.[9]

In October 2021, slight amendments were made to the proportions of the flag along with the formalisation of the Pantone colour scheme contained within the original legislation establishing the flag.[10]

Symbolism

The blue field, which continues the majority of the flag's design, embodies the Kaldaz Ocean that surrounds the island and dominates economic, social, and political life in the country. The colour blue was also chosen to symbolise tranquility and harmony, both between Freice and the ocean and between the different groups resident on the island.[11] The canton references the Freician ethnic flag in use before the national flag's adoption, with alterations to the design to provide a symbolic separation between the flag of Freice and the flag of the Freicians.

Although the colours of the Freician flag relate to the traditional banners flown prior to colonisation, the colours featured in the flag's canton bear additional meanings:[12]

  • Blue represents the integrity of the Freician people and the truth that they embody.
  • Green represents the renewal of the nation on its independence and the relative youth of the modern Freician state.
  • Orange represents the warmth of the Freician land and of its people.
  • White represents the purity and the goodness of Freice's aspirations within the international community.
Flag of Freice.png
(1970–present)[Note 2]
Light blue Dark blue Green Orange White
Hex #89b2c4 #506d85 #385542 #F1be48 #ffffff
RGB 137, 178, 196 80, 109, 133 56, 85, 66 241, 190, 72 255, 255, 255
Pantone 2205c 2167c 7736c 142c 1c
CMYK 47, 14, 10, 1 70, 42, 21, 19 71, 30, 67, 52 0, 21, 77, 0 0, 0, 0, 0

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. There is some debate about the exact specifications of the flag's design. The Schedules of Government and its predecessor, the Constitution, specify the design of the flag in CMYK. However, the initial legislation that officially adopted the flag differs slightly in the shades of colour used, having used Pantone. The government has not, as of 2021, identified a correct way of rendering the flag.
  2. Colour scheme formally adopted for all flags in October 2021.

References

  1. Iqe̩, Pe̩gȧ, A. (2007). The National Encyclopedia of Freician History and Culture (2nd ed.). Guri: University of Guri Press. p. 391. ISBN 918-0-28319-399-2.
  2. "CHAPTER X. GENERAL PROVISIONS". Usa pưƞqyǡ. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  3. A history of the Blue and Bars. Taɱą ǡduƞe̩ frɨs. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  4. Badu, George. F., A History of Flag Design. (Trueview Press, 1999), p.129.
  5. (Flag of) Freice. Flags of the World. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  6. OBITUARY: De̩zȧ Tudɉe̩go was the man who created modern Freice. Taɱą ǡduƞe̩ frɨs, 1987.
  7. Riamese community fears over Freician flag debate. Guri Telegraph. Retrieved 15 July 2007.
  8. Eɉɨsta, Toqư E. Freice and Myself. (Frɨs ưɟte̩qąl: National Press), p.92.
  9. "National Flag Act". Provisional Council of the Country of Freice. 1970. Archived from the original on June 2, 2004. Retrieved January 2, 2011.
  10. National flag receives facelift. Taɱą ǡduƞe̩ frɨs. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  11. Eɉɨsta, Toqư E. Freice and Myself. (Frɨs ưɟte̩qąl: National Press), p.100.
  12. Flag celebrates golden jubilee. Taɱą ǡduƞe̩ frɨs. Retrieved 18 March, 2020.
  13. "National Flag Act". Provisional Council of the Country of Freice. 1970. Archived from the original on June 2, 2004. Retrieved January 2, 2011.

External links