Last modified: 2010-01-30 by ivan sache
Keywords: yugoslavia | coat of arms: yugoslavia | star (red) | torches: 5 (red) | torches: 6 (red) | civil ensign |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
Flag of Socialist Yugoslavia - Image by Željko Heimer, 19 November 1997
See also:
The successive names of the so-called "Socialist Yugoslavia" were:
Flags to be used on land all had 1:2 proportion, whereas those for
use at sea were 2:3. Most of them were based on former national
flags, removing the national emblem in the middle and putting the
star instead of it.
The blue-white-red flag was invented after the First
World War, as the only heraldically correct combination of these
colours not previously used. Red-white-blue was the other acceptable
combination, but was then already long established as the
Croatian flag.
Smith [smi75c] claims that the flag with the red star has been used since September 1941. I believe it has been used since July when the uprising started. However, Federal Republics with stars were made a year later (1947).
The new Constitution of Yugoslavia was adopted on 31 January 1946, as well as the new national flag. This flag was not changed until the early 1990s when the state fell apart.
Construction sheet for the flag of Yugoslavia - Image by Željko Heimer, 19 November 1997
The star is inscribed in an imaginary circle with diameter 2/3 of the flag length and with the center matching the crossing points of the diagonals of the flag (i.e., the center of the flag). In this way the top point of the star would reach exactly the middle of the blue stripe, while the lower two points would not reach that far, but accordingly less. The width of the yellow fimbriation was never explicitely defined. The flag proportion is 1:2.
The flag was designed by Đorđe Andrejević-Kun. According to Marijan Grakalić's Hrvatski grb (NZMH, Zagreb, 1990), referring to Enciklopedija Jugoslavije (1980), it is supposed that Andrejević-Kun and A. Augustinčić are the authors of the coat of arms of Yugoslavia and that Kun might be the author of the coat of arms of the republics.
Officially, this flag was for use by government and army on land, but practically it was also used by civilians as the national flag.
Source: Pomorska enciklopedija VII: Zastava, Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod, Zagreb, 1964
Željko Heimer, 19 November 1997
Coat of arms of Yugoslavia - Images by Željko Heimer, 25 October 2003
Left, first version, 1946-1963
Right, second version, 1963-1991
The coat of arms of the new state was designed by the artist
Đorđe Andrejević-Kun around 1943,
with the date of the Jajce conference added after it. It was
officially adopted only in the 1946 Constitution, with a slightly
different artistic representation.
The silver circular shield was as a rule omitted, especially in
the latter time, but the Yugoslav heraldists (e.g,. Miloš
Cirić, in Heraldika 1, Belgrade, 1988) claim that it was an
essential part of the coat of arms.
Source: Symbol und Wirtschaft [suw50i]
In 1963 the name of the state was changed to Socialist Federative
Republic of Yugoslavia, just as all the people's
republics forming it were renamed
Socialist republics. Mainly due to the question of the Bosnian
Muslims not being represented in the five torches representing the
five Yugoslav nations, the number of the torches was increased to
six, with a new meaning, which was the number of the constituent
republics.
As for the first version, the silver circular shield was often
omitted, even in official use, although the heraldists of the period
insisted that it should be there.
The national flag was not changed, but the
naval flags that included the coat of
arms were modified.
Željko Heimer, 25 October 2003
Civil ensign of Yugoslavia - Image by Željko Heimer, 25 October 2003
The civil ensign is prescribed by the law on establishment
of the merchant ensign and inland navigation ensign of FPRY (Zakon
o ustanovljenju zastave trgovačke mornarice i brodarstva unutražnje
plovidbe FNRJ), adopted on 21 March 1950 and published in
Službeni list FNRJ 11/50. The ensign was prescribed to
be similar to the national flag, but in proportion 2:3.
The civil ensign was used by all ships except those in military
and border guard service, which included the other state services.
Source: Pomorska enciklopedija VII: Zastava, Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod, Zagreb, 1964
Željko Heimer, 25 October 2003