Flag of Vietnam

The flag of Vietnam, or cờ đỏ sao vàng (red flag with yellow star) also cờ tổ quốc (flag of fatherland), was designed in 1940 and used during an uprising against French rule in southern Vietnam that year.[1] Red symbolizes the bloodshed, revolution and struggle. The star represents the five main classes in Vietnamese society — workers, peasants, soldiers, intellectuals, and businessmen.[2]

Vietnam
NameCờ đỏ sao vàng ("Red flag with yellow star")
Cờ tổ quốc ("Flag of Fatherland")
UseCivil and state flag
Proportion2:3
Adopted30 November 1955 (in the North)
2 July 1976 (current version)
DesignA large yellow star centered on a red field.
Designed byNguyễn Hữu Tiến (or Lê Quang Sô)
Variant flag of Vietnam
NameFlag of the People's Army of Vietnam
UseWar flag
Proportion2:3
DesignA yellow star centered on a red field, and yellow words Quyết thắng (determined to win) in the upper left.
Designed byDesign is a variant of the flag of Vietnam
Variant flag of Vietnam
NameEnsign of the Vietnam People's Navy
UseNaval ensign
Proportion2:3
Adopted15 January 2014
DesignA white flag with an emblem of the Vietnam People's Navy in its upper canton with a blue strip below.
Designed byDesign is a variant of the flag of Vietnam

The flag was used by the Viet Minh, a communist-led organization created in 1941 to oppose Japanese occupation. At the end of World War II, Viet Minh leader Ho Chi Minh proclaimed Vietnam independent and signed a decree on 5 September 1945 adopting the flag as the flag of the North Vietnam.[3] The DRV became the government of North Vietnam in 1954 following the Geneva Accords. The flag was modified on 30 November 1955 to make the rays of the star sharper.[4] Until the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, South Vietnam used a yellow flag with three red stripes. The red flag of North Vietnam was later adopted as the flag of the unified Vietnam in 1976.[5]

Design/history

According to the 1992 constitution: "The National Flag of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is rectangular in shape, its width is equal to two thirds of its length, in the middle of fresh red background is a bright five-pointed golden star".[6]

The flag first appeared in the southern uprising (Nam Kỳ Khởi nghĩa) of 23 November 1940, against French rule in southern Vietnam.[1] A series of articles by Sơn Tùng on the origin of the flag were published in the state media in 1981.[7] Sơn Tùng stated that the flag was designed by Nguyễn Hữu Tiến, a leader of the uprising who was arrested by the French in advance of the failed uprising and executed 28 August 1941.[1] Tiến, who was born in the northern village of Lũng Xuyên, was unknown to the Vietnamese public before Tùng's research was published. According to a poem Tiến wrote, the red background represents blood while the yellow foreground represents "the color of our people’s skin", the five points of the star represent intellectuals, peasants, workers, traders and soldiers. Tiến's poem reads in part:

Design proportions of the flag.

... All those of red blood and yellow skin
Together we fight under the nation’s sacred flag
The flag is soaked with our crimson blood, shed for the nation
The yellow star is the colour of our race’s skin
Stand up, quickly! The nation’s soul is calling for us
Intellectuals, peasants, workers, traders and armymen
United as a five-pointed yellow star...[1]

In April 2001, Vietnam's Ministry of Culture reported that there was no documentation to support the claim that Tiến designed the flag. In 2005, Lê Minh Đức, an official of Tiền Giang province, suggested that the flag was designed by another cadre, Lê Quang Sô, a native of Mỹ Tho Province in the Mekong delta. Đức's theory is based on statements by Sô's son as well as Sô's 1968 memoir. According to Đức, yellow was chosen to represent Vietnam while the red background was inspired by the flag of the Communist Party and represents revolution. Sô experimented with stars in various positions and sizes before choosing a large star in the center for aesthetic reasons. In April 1940, the flag was approved by Phan Văn Khỏe, the Communist party chief of Mỹ Tho. It was subsequently approved by the national party in July.[2] As of 2006, the state media has not commented on Đức's version of events.[8]

The flag was displayed at a conference on 19 May 1941, at which the Viet Minh was founded.[9] The Viet Minh proclaimed it a "national flag" on 17 August 1945, at a meeting held in the village of Tân Trào in the North.[10] When the Japanese surrendered at the end of World War II, the Viet Minh entered Hanoi and proclaimed the "Democratic Republic of Vietnam" on 2 September. On 5 September, DRV President Ho Chi Minh signed a decree adopting the Vietminh flag.[3] French troops returned in October and restored colonial rule in the South. The National Assembly voted unanimously to adopt the flag on 2 March 1946.[11] Following the Geneva Accord between Viet Minh and France in 1954, the DRV became the government of North Vietnam. On 30 November 1955, the flag's design was modified slightly to make the star smaller and its rays straighter.[4] This followed a similar modification of the flag of the Soviet Union. The flag was adopted in the South after the end of the Vietnam war, and North and South were unified as the Socialist Republic of Vietnam on 2 July 1976.[5]

Colour scheme

The colours approximation is listed below:


Colours scheme
Red Yellow
Pantone 1788 Yellow 116
CMYK 0, 83, 87, 15 0, 0, 100, 0
RGB 218, 37, 29 255, 255, 0
Hexadecimal #da251d #ffff00

Historical flags

Traditional images show the Trung sisters wearing yellow turbans during their revolt against China in AD 40.[12] These were unwrapped and waved to signal the beginning of a fight.[13] A yellow banner with a red circle in the center was adopted as a standard by Emperor Gia Long (r. 1802–1820).[14] The flag of South Vietnam was originally designed by Emperor Thành Thái in 1890,[15] and was revived by Lê Văn Đệ and re-adopted by Emperor Bảo Đại in 1948.[16] The three stripes represented the Quẻ Càn, or Qian trigram, one of eight trigrams used in the I-Ching, a Taoist scripture.[13][17] Quẻ Càn is the divination sign for heaven.[13] Later, the stripes were reinterpreted to represent the northern, central and southern regions of Vietnam.[15] The French, who gradually gained control of Vietnam in the late 19th century, flew the national flag of France. As the colony of Cochinchina (1864–1945), the South was under exclusive French authority. In contrast, North and Central Vietnam were protectorates with parallel systems of Vietnamese and French administration. Several flags were flown in these regions: the French flag, the Vietnamese imperial flag, and a "protectorate flag."[18] From 1920 to 1945, the Vietnamese imperial flag had a yellow background with a single, broad red stripe.[18]

Japan occupied Vietnam in 1941–1945. In March 1945, the Japanese deposed the French colonial authorities and proclaimed an Empire of Vietnam with Bảo Đại as emperor. The Quẻ Ly Flag, also a red trigram on a yellow background, was adopted in June. Among other things, Quẻ Ly symbolizes the direction south. Bảo Đại abdicated in August when Japan surrendered. The French returned in October 1945, but were challenged by the Vietminh, especially in the North. The French proclaimed Cochinchina a republic in June 1946. This puppet state adopted a Quẻ Càn flag with blue stripes on a yellow background.[18]

In May 1948, the name of the Cochinchina government was changed to "Provisional Central Government of Vietnam" in preparation for a merger with the North outlined in the Hạ Long Bay agreements between France and Bảo Đại. Artist Lê Văn Đệ (1906–1966) met Bảo Đại in Hong Kong in 1948 and proposed that the Quẻ Càn flag of Emperor Thành Thái be restored. On 2 June 1948, Chief of State Nguyễn Văn Xuân, signed an ordinance to adopt this flag: "The national emblem is a flag of yellow background, the height of which is equal to two-thirds of its width. In the middle of the flag and along its entire width, there are three horizontal red bands. Each band has a height equal to one-fifteenth of the width. These three red bands are separated from one another by a space of the band's height."[13] This flag was used in the South until 1975. It continues to be used by many Vietnamese expatriates as the "Heritage and Freedom Flag", but is de facto banned in Vietnam.

Banning of the flag

In January 2017, San Jose, which has the largest population of Vietnamese émigrés in the United States, banned the Vietnamese flag from being displayed on city flagpoles. This was inspired by a 2016 policy adopted by Westminster, California forbidding the display of the flag on city property.[19][20] Nearby Milpitas also banned the flag from municipal display on 5 September 2017.[21]

Historical flags

gollark: I ask the goblins for BCPL help, d6.
gollark: I check the hallway for traps, d6.
gollark: I ask the wizards for a torso replacement spell, d6.
gollark: Hmm. This MAY be a problem.
gollark: d6.

See also

References

  1. "VN Embassy : Flag Designer Urban Myths Squelched", Embassy of the Socialist Republic in Vietnam in the United States of America.
  2. ""Archived copy". Archived from the original on 7 October 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)"
  3. Decree number 5 of September 05, 1945 Archived April 23, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, Archive of Vietnamese legal documents.
  4. Resolution number 249/SL of November 30, 1955, Archive of Vietnamese legal documents.
  5. "Resolution of July 07, 1976", Archive of Vietnamese legal documents.
  6. Constitution of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, Article 141.
  7. Sơn Tùng's writing was published in installments in the newspaper Sài Gòn Giải Phóng and later as a book entitled Nguyễn Hữu Tiến (1981).
  8. "Tác giả quốc kỳ: vẫn là dấu chấm hỏi", Tuổi Trẻ, November 23, 2006
  9. Ho Chi Minh, Foreign Languages Pub. House, 1988, p. 76. "on 19 May 1941 Viet Minh Front officially made its appearance, and holding high the gold star red flag."
  10. Cima, Ronald J., ed. (1990). "The General Uprising and Independence". Vietnam : A Country Study. Dept. of the Army. ISBN 978-0160181436. The following day, the Congress, at a ceremony in front of the village dinh, officially adopted the national red flag with a gold star, and Ho read an appeal to the Vietnamese people to rise in revolution.
  11. Phút Tán Nguyẽn, A Modern History of Viet-nam (1802–1954), 1964. p. 502. "The Assembly then adopted national Anthem and national flag, approved a new Cabinet and a Committee in charge of the drafting of the Vietnamese Constitution."
  12. Van Tan, "The Insurrection of the Two Trung Sisters"
  13. Khải Chính Phạm Kim Thư, "The National Flag of Free Vietnam Archived 4 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine"
  14. Nguyễn Đình Sài, "Quốc Kỳ Việt Nam: Nguồn Gốc và Lẽ Chính Thống", Vietnam Reform Party. A translation is given here.
  15. Dang, Thanh Thuy Vo (2008). Anticommunism as cultural praxis: South Vietnam, War, and Refugee Memories in the Vietnamese American Community. San Diego, California. Retrieved 28 March 2011. The three stripes represent the three distinct regions of Vietnam, connecting the geographically separated 'yellow-skinned' Vietnamese by the same red blood. The yellow flag originated during the rule of Vietnam's Emperor Thành Thái (1890) of the Nguyễn dynasty.
  16. Chế độ Cộng sản Việt Nam (4 June 2013). "Tìm lại những lá cờ hoàng gia xưa ở Việt Nam". Kỷ vật lịch sử. Cuộc vận động Sưu tầm và Tuyên truyền Kỷ vật lịch sử Công an Nhân dân. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
  17. Compare to (South Korean Flag).
  18. Vietnam, World Statesman.
  19. "California City Bans Display of Vietnam National Flag on City Poles". NBC News. 28 January 2017.
  20. "San Jose council unanimously approves banning communist Vietnamese flag". The Mercury News. 26 January 2017.
  21. "Milpitas council bans city's display of Socialist Republic of Vietnam flag". The Mercury News. 22 September 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.