Flag of Aucuria
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Name | Dvispalvė (Bicolor) Raudona-žalia (Red-and-green) Baltažvaigždėtas (White-Starred) Vieniša žvaigždė (the Lone Star) |
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Use | National flag and ensign |
Proportion | 10:5.13 |
Adopted | 22 March 1786 |
Design | A vertical bicolor of red and green with an eight-pointed star centered along the dividing line. |
Use | State flag |
Proportion | 10:5.13 |
Design | A vertical bicolor of red and green with the Aucurian coat of arms centered along the dividing line. |
The flag of Aucuria (Ruttish: Aukurijos vėliava) is a vertical bicolor of red and green with an eight-pointed star centered along the dividing line. Originally adopted in 1786 during the Aucurian War of Independence, it has been used in Aucuria in some form by every iteration of the Aucurian state since; the First and Second Aucurian States, regarded by the Aucurian Republic as illegitimate, used a version of the banner without the central star. Aucuria's current law of national symbols was adopted in 1980 following the Velvet Revolution, and governs the use of the country's flag.
With proportions of 10:5.13, the Aucurian flag is notable as one of the few national flags having a width more than twice its height. Aucuria celebrates its Flag Day on March 22, the anniversary of the flag's original adoption by the Revolutionary Saeimas.