Last modified: 2008-07-19 by ian macdonald
Keywords: lion (yellow) | sun (yellow) | sword (yellow) | imperial standard | crown (yellow) | crown prince | prince |
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Source: Flaggenbuch [neu92], Pedersen (1971) [ped71]
The flag of the Shah was a square blue flag with a centered
crown
(of the same design as in the coat of arms) with a small square
canton in the upper left corner including the national flag with the
coat of arms.
Marcus Wendel & Ivan Sache, 15
September 1999
In Flaggenbuch, the size of the imperial
Standard is given
as 124 x 124 cm, with square canton of 21 cm.
Željko Heimer, 14 November 2001
Source: Flaggenbuch
[neu92]
Similar to the imperial Standard, but without the emblem in
the
tricolour canton.
Željko Heimer, 14 November 2001
Source: Flaggenbuch [neu92]
Light blue square flag with the crown in the middle.
Željko Heimer, 14 November 2001
image located by Pascal Vagnat, 1 June 2008
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org
and
WIPO
Pascal Vagnat,
1 June 2008
image located by Pascal Vagnat, 1 June 2008
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org
and
WIPO
Pascal Vagnat,
1 June 2008
A more recent version of the imperial standard is shown on Farah Pahlavi's website, which says:
The Imperial standard consists of a pale-blue field with the
official flag in the upper left corner and the Pahlavi coat of arms
in the centre. At the top of the coat of arms is the Pahlavi crown,
created for the Coronation of Reza Shah the Great in 1926. Beneath is
the Imperial motto:
Mara dad farmud va Khod Davar Ast (Justice He bids
me do, As
He will judge me).
Pale blue is the colour of the Imperial Family.
Santiago Tazon, 13 June 2001
A similar flag (although with the shield reversed) is found at http://en.wikipedia.org
and
WIPO.
Pascal Vagnat,
1 June 2008
image by Klaus-Michael Schneider, 30 October 2007
Persia kings standard
It is a light blue square flag with a green over white over pink
horizontal tricolour in the canton and a golden coat of arms in the
centre of the flag. There is however a contradiction. The flag shows
obviously the colours, which have been used, according to FOTW, by the Qajars, but the crown in the
coat of arms is that one of the Pahlavis. So it might be a very early
Pahlavi standard. Note: Source denotes the flag as kings standard,
literally translation from "shah" to "König". I guess however the
rulers thought themselves being emperors.
Cigarette Source:
ALBUM "Die Welt in Bildern
Album 7 : Flaggen der Welt, aussereuropäische Staaten",
edited between 1928 and 1932 according to the international boundaries
in the included map of the world. The flag is depicted in the ALBUM on
p.8, image no.259.
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 30 October 2007