Presidential standard
The presidential standard or presidential flag is the flag that is used in many countries as a symbol of the head of state or president. In some countries it may be for exclusive use of the president or only raised where the president is present. An equivalent in a monarchy is a royal standard, and in an empire, an imperial standard.
- Presidential Standard of Argentina
- Presidential Standard of Armenia
- Presidential Standard of Austria
- Presidential Standard of Azerbaijan
- Presidential Standard of Bangladesh
- Presidential Standard of Belarus
- Presidential Standard of Botswana
- Presidential Standard of Brazil
- Presidential Standard of Chile
- Presidential Standard of Colombia
- Presidential Standard of Croatia
- Presidential Standard of Cuba
- Presidential Standard of Cyprus
- Presidential Standard of the Czech Republic
- Presidential Standard of Egypt
- Presidential Standard of Estonia
- Presidential Standard of Finland
- Presidential Standard of France
- Presidential Standard of Gabon
- Presidential Standard of Georgia
- Presidential Standard of Germany
- Presidential Standard of Ghana
- Presidential Standard of Greece
- Presidential Standard of Guatemala
- Presidential Standard of Guyana
- Presidential Standard of Hungary
- Presidential Standard of Iceland
- Presidential Standard of India
- Presidential Standard of Indonesia
- Presidential Standard of Ireland
- Presidential Standard of Israel
- Presidential Standard of Italy
- Presidential Standard of Kazakhstan
- Presidential Standard of Kenya
- Presidential Standard of Kosovo[a]
- Presidential Standard of Latvia
- Presidential Standard of Liberia
- Presidential Standard of Lithuania
- Presidential Standard of Madagascar
- Presidential Standard of Malawi
- Presidential Standard of the Maldives
- Presidential Standard of Malta
- Presidential Standard of Mauritius
- Presidential Standard of Mexico
- Presidential Standard of Montenegro
- Presidential Standard of Namibia
- Presidential Standard of Nigeria
- Presidential Standard of Pakistan
- Presidential Standard of Panama
- Presidential Standard of Peru
- Presidential Standard of the Philippines
- Presidential Standard of Poland
- Presidential Standard of Portugal
- Presidential Standard of Romania
- Presidential Standard of Russia
- Presidential Standard of Serbia
- Presidential Standard of Seychelles
- Presidential Standard of Sierra Leone
- Presidential Standard of Singapore
- Presidential Standard of Slovakia
- Presidential Standard of Slovenia
- Presidential Standard of South Korea
- Presidential Standard of Sri Lanka
- Presidential Standard of Srpska
- Presidential Standard of Sudan
- Presidential Standard of the Republic of China
- Presidential Standard of Tanzania
- Presidential Standard of Transnistria
- Presidential Standard of Trinidad and Tobago
- Presidential Standard of Tunisia
- Presidential Standard of Turkey
- Presidential Standard of Uganda
- Presidential Standard of Ukraine
- Presidential Standard of the United Arab Emirates (the President of United Arab Emirates is a monarch)
- Presidential Standard of the United States
- Presidential Standard of Venezuela
- Presidential Standard of Zambia
- Presidential Standard of Zimbabwe
Former presidential standards
- Presidential Standard of Czechoslovakia (1918–1939, 1945–1992)
- Presidential Standard of the German Democratic Republic (1955–1990)
- Presidential Standard of the Spanish Republic (1931–1939)
- Presidential Standard of the Republic of Vietnam (1955–1963)
- Presidential Standard of Yugoslavia (1949–1992)
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gollark: £150 for a good one for modern i9s, I assume. Probably more.
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See also
- Heraldic standard
- Gallery of head of state standards
Notes
a. | ^ Kosovo is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Kosovo and the Republic of Serbia. The Republic of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence on 17 February 2008, but Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. The two governments began to normalise relations in 2013, as part of the 2013 Brussels Agreement. Kosovo is currently recognized as an independent state by 97 out of the 193 United Nations member states. In total, 112 UN member states recognized Kosovo at some point, of which 15 later withdrew their recognition. |
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