This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website
Lower Saxony (Germany)
Niedersachsen, State of Lower Saxony, Land Niedersachsen
Last modified: 2009-06-13 by santiago dotor
Keywords: germany | lower saxony | niedersachsen | land niedersachsen | coat of arms (horse: forcene) | coat of arms (horse: white) | swallowtailed |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
2:3
image by Marcus Schmöger
Flag adopted 13th April 1951
See also:
Introduction
Lower Saxony was founded as Land Niedersachsen on 1st November 1946
as a merger of the former Länder Braunschweig
[Brunswick], Oldenburg, Schaumburg-Lippe and Hannover [Hanover].
Due to the long tradition of own arms and flags in these former territories,
it was especially difficult to find a common flag for the new Land Niedersachsen.
[Some unofficial flags existed 1946-1951].
Although a red-white (or white-red) flag
with the arms would have been appropriate for the Land Niedersachsen,
as these are the colours of the arms (livery
colours), this solution was viewed as only representing Hanover
and not the other parts of Lower Saxony. A combination of the colours of
the flags of all four constituent territories (red, white, blue, yellow)
was also not feasible, so the final compromise was to
use the German national flag (black-red-gold) with
the Lower Saxony coat-of-arms on it. Sources: Rabbow
1999; Kuhn 1991, p. 90; Schnath
1961, Reihe B Heft 6; and Schurdel 1995.
Marcus Schmöger, 22 Sep 2000
Civil and State Flag / Landes- und Landesdienstflagge
The land and state flag is black on red on gold (yellow) with the arms
in the middle. The state flag on sea is the same but
swallow-tailed. Proportions 2:3.
Pascal Vagnat, 19 Dec 1995
The black-red-gold national flag with the Lower
Saxon arms (a white saxon horse on a red field) with a narrow black border,
overlapping the black and gold stripes and slightly offset towards hoist.
Adopted 1951. Illustrated in Smith 1975
p.227 and Dorling Kindersley 1997 p. 121.
Norman Martin, Mar 1998
If I am reading this correctly, the version of this flag without coat-of-arms
is not prescribed and is not to be used, since it would be identical to
the German federal flag, thus not retaining distinctiveness.
Željko Heimer, 6 Oct 2000
Correct. The 1951 and 1993 Constitutions
say, "in the flag the colours black-red-gold with the coat-of-arms".
Marcus Schmöger, 6 Oct 2000
State Ensign / Landesflagge in der Form des Doppelstanders
2:3
image by Marcus Schmöger
Flag adopted 1951
The same [as the Landesflagge] but swallow-tailed. Adopted 1951.
Norman Martin, 1998
State ensign for use at sea and inland waters, also used as car
flag for certain authorities. I followed the drawing attached to the
Law and regulation, and some more detailed specifications in the regulation
itself. The swallowtail of the state ensign occupies just a fifth of the
flag length. (...) Regarding the black fimbriation around the coat-of-arms
there is no regulation, but I reconstructed it after the drawing in the
Law.
Marcus Schmöger, 22 Sep 2000
Construction Details
The exact pattern on some of the Lower Saxony flags is described in the
laws and regulations.
-
The coat-of-arms has a proportion of 7:6 (height to width) according to
the Muster (pattern) attached to the Law
on Coats-of-Arms, Flags and Seals of 13th October 1952.
-
The Land's flag has a proportion of 2:3; the coat-of-arms has a
height of 2/3rds of the flag's height [hoist]; the centre of the coat-of-arms
is placed 14/30ths of the flag's length away from the hoist (according
to the above mentioned pattern).
-
The car flag for ministers and the prime minister
has a black outer border of 1/16th of the flag's height and a red inner
border 1/16th of the flag's height (according to the pattern attached to
the Beschluß des Niedersächsischen Landesministeriums über Dienstflaggen
vom 22.10.1953, Resolution of the Lower Saxony State Ministry about
Service Flags of 22nd October 1953).
-
Of the other flags (car flag for the President
of the State Parliament etc.) there are just the patterns shown, but
no information on actual size and position of elements.
Marcus Schmöger, 6 Oct 2000
Coat-of-Arms
Note that opposed to the horse of Westphalia
which is rearing (or forcene, German
steigend), the horse of Lower Saxony is jumping (German springend),
like the one of Brunswick [and Hanover].
They are however of the same descent, just like the horse of the English
County of Kent (arms adopted 1933, also used on flag?), and the one used
on the unofficial flag of Twente, a region in the east of the Dutch province
of Overijssel. The latter two are leaping, and just like all the others
white on a red field. Source: Het Saksische ros in de heraldiek
(The Saxon Horse in Heraldry), G.W. Nanninga in Driemaandelijkse
bladen voor taal en volksleven in het oosten van Nederland, 1969 no.
2 (one of the sources mentioned that might be interesting: Geirg Schnath,
Das Sachsenros, Hannover, 1961).
Mark Sensen, 21 May 1999