Last modified: 2006-07-22 by ivan sache
Keywords: minister of army and navy | admiral | vice admiral | rear admiral | crown: yugoslavia | coat of arms: yugoslavia | star: 6 points (blue) |
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Flag of the Minister of Army and Navy - Images by Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003
Left, first version (1922)
Right, second version (1937)
The standard of the Minister of Army and Navy (literally "standard
of the Army and Naval Minister", steg ministra vojnog i
mornarice) is prescribed in Article 5 of the
1922 law.
The flag is horizontally divided blue-white-red, with a border
made of tricolour bars and the lesser
national coat of arms in canton. The ratio of the flag is 1:1.
There are 43 bars on each side of the flag (i.e., 5 corner
pieces + 33 bars + 5 corner pieces), and the border is 5 units wide.
The height of the eagle and crown is 8 units, centered in the blue
field, with the vertical axis 4.5 units from the left border of the
blue field.
The tricolour bar border in this (and similar) flags has more bars
then the equivalent flags designed
after the Second World War and
still in use (43 vs. 29)
The 1937 law introduced a
different flag for the Minister of Army and Navy, although
Flaggenbuch [neu39] still
shows the 1922 version, with a somewhat bigger eagle.
The flag adopted in 1937 is a white square flag with a blue border (width: 1/10 of the flag width) and the national coat of arms (width: half the flag width) in the middle.
Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003
Flag of an Admiral - Images by Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003
Left, first version (undated)
Right, second version (1937)
There is no Admiral's flag prescribed in the
1922 law. However, an Admiral's
flag is shown on the charts produced in the 1930s. This why I believe that there must have been some regulation between 1922 and 1937 prescribing such a flag.
Main sources for the flag are Isaić
[isa01] and Flaggenbuch
[neu39].
The Admiral's flag is a square white flag with the tricolour bars
border, similar to the Rear Admiral's flag
prescribed in the 1922 law, but with a crown in the canton.
The Admiral's flag (komandna zastava admirala) prescribed
in the 1937 law is a white square
flag with a blue border (width: 1/10 of the flag width) and three blue six-pointed stars (diameter 1/5 of the flag width) placed along
the descending diagonal of the flag.
Here again, Flaggenbuch
[neu39] still shows the former
version of the flag.
Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003
Flag of a Vice Admiral - Images by Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003
Left, first version (undated)
Right, second version (1937)
There is no Vice Admiral's flag prescribed in the
1922 law. However, a Vice Admiral's
flag is shown on the charts produced in the 1930s. This why I believe that there must have been some regulation between 1922 and 1937 prescribing such a flag.
Main sources for the flag are Isaić
[isa01] and Flaggenbuch
[neu39].
The Vice Admiral's flag is a square red flag with the tricolour
bars border, similar to the Rear Admiral's flag
prescribed in the 1922 law, but with a crown in the canton.
The Vice Admiral's flag (komandna zastava viceadmirala)
prescribed in the 1937 law is
similar to the Admiral's flag but with the central
star omitted.
Here again, Flaggenbuch
[neu39] still shows the former
version of the flag.
Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003
Flag of a Rear Admiral - Images by Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003
Left, first version (1922)
Middle, second version (undated)
Right, third version (1937)
The standard of a Rear Admiral (steg kontraadmirala) is
prescribed in Article 6 of the 1922
law. The flag is horizontally divided blue-white-red, with a
border made of tricolour bars and the royal crown in full colours
placed in the second quarters. The ratio of the flag is 1:1.
The law defines only this admiral rank flag, while
latter sources (for instance Flaggenbuch
[neu39]) give the crown in canton
(first quarter) and include two higher admiral ranks (see above). The
other admiral rank flags must have been added as the Navy grew,
before 1937, when entirely
different flags were introduced.
Setting the emblem in the fly top corner is indeed odd, but the
law clearly states "in the second quarter". I have not found any
logical interpretation that would allow "the second quarter" to be
the canton.
The law states that the crown width shall be 8.5 units (unit being
1/43 of the flag side, i.e., the width of a bar in the
border), however other dimensions of the crown are not specified. I
understand that the crown is centered in the second quarter.
Latter sources (for instance Flaggenbuch [neu39]) show the crown in canton (first quarter).
The Rear Admiral's flag (komandna zastava kontraadmirala)
prescribed in the 1937 law is
similar to the Admiral's flag but with only one
star in the middle of the flag.
Here again, Flaggenbuch
[neu39] still shows the former
version of the flag.
Željko Heimer, 20 November 2003