Last modified: 2007-01-06 by jarig bakker
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Certainly not dark red. The text of the Organisationsbuch distinguishes
red, bright red and dark red. Dark red is clearly darker. Bright red and
red are not far apart, but bright red seems a bit yellower to me. In any
event the Organisationsbuch calls the color of the main field simply
red.
Norman Martin, 11 Jun 2000
A red flag, in the center the golden Party Membership Insignia (Goldenes
Ehrenzeichen) which consists of a black swastika in a white circular
disk surrounded by a dark red ring with the inscription "National-Sozialistische
D.A.P." in white, surrounded by a gold wreath. Ratio 6:7. Surrounded
by a gold fringe (except at hoist).
Norman Martin, Feb 1998
A Swastika flag with a small rectangle (bright red for a Gau,
rust brown for a Kreis, light brown for
an Ortsgruppe) in the canton. Ratio 6:7. Surrounded by a silver
fringe (except at hoist).
Norman Martin, Feb 1998
However, both the Organisationsbuch illustrations in Pia 1971 and very similar illustrations in Lilliane and Fred Funcken's Arms and Uniforms of the Second World War, volume 1, show the flag canton rectangles being:
According to the Organisationsbuch der NSDAP 1943 edition, p.
35, we have:
"(...) the rectangles are (on a 90 x 120 cm. flag) 16 x 21 with 1 cm
borders, positioned 5 cm from edge, with colors:
However the illustration (Tafel 2, following p. 38) shows the border on the Ortsgruppe as definitely light blue, rather than light brown. In addition, the main body of the rectangle on the Kreis looks to me to be a very dark gray (so to speak, black but not as black as the swastika - under magnification there are a substantial number of white dots). There is no explanation in the text as to the difference. Ordinarily, one would regard the text as more decisive. I have no information as to adoption date or earlier versions except that very early party flags appear to lack the rectangles (these are from photos and may not be intended to be Hoheitsfahnen.)
Additional information. From the Organisationsbuch 1943 and a fine book, Lt. Col. John R. Angolia, Cloth Insignia of the NSDAP and SA, Bender Publishing, San Jose, California, 1985, 336 pp., I discover that from 1934 on, the NSDAP had a set of standard colors for a variety of purposes, as follows:
So, I think that this would imply that the dark rectangles on the Kreis
flag would be rust brown with a white border and the border of the rectangles
on the Ortsgruppe flags would be light blue, rather than light brown, despite
the text of the Organisationsbuch (but in agreement of the illustrations
of the Organisationsbuch). If these flags existed and had rectangles
before 1939 (which I think likely, but I have no authority), the rectangle
of the Gau flag would have a somewhat
lighter medium red border and that of the Kreis
a black border. Of course absent definitive authority, we have to keep
the door open for conflicting evidence.
Norman Martin, 10 Jun 2000