Flag of North Vietnam

The Flag of North Vietnam, also known as "red flag with yellow star", was adopted as the national flag of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (North Vietnam) on 30 November 1955. It became the national flag of Vietnam following reunification with South Vietnam on 2 July 1976.

Democratic Republic of Vietnam
NameCờ đỏ sao vàng ("Red flag with a gold star")
UseCivil and state flag
Proportion2:3
Adopted1955
DesignA large yellow star centered on a red field.
Designed byNguyễn Hữu Tiến (or Lê Quang Sô)
Variant flag of Democratic Republic of Vietnam
NameFlag used from 1945–1955
UseWar flag
Proportion2:3

History

The flag was designed by Nguyễn Hữu Tiến , a communist revolutionary of the 1940 Cochinchina Uprising ("Nam Kỳ Khởi nghĩa") against French colonialism, when the flag was seen on the first time. The uprising failed, and Tiến was arrested and executed along with other leaders of the uprising. The Western heraldic blazon is Gules, a mullet Or. The five points of the star represents peasants, workers, intellectuals, traders, and soldiers working together to build a socialist state; while the red background represents the blood and toil of the people to achieve revolution.[1]

The flag of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (the Viet Minh-controlled areas in Northern and Southern Vietnam and later just North Vietnam) in the period of 1945-1955 was similar to the current flag of Vietnam but with the points of the star set at a more obtuse angle.[1]

Colours scheme

The colors 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 #da251dff #ffff00ff

References

  1. "Vietnam". CIA World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 29 May 2013.

See also

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