Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox flag
The national flag of France ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) is a tricolour featuring three vertical bands coloured blue (hoist side), white, and red. The design was adopted after the French Revolution, whose revolutionaries were influenced by the horizontally striped red-white-blue flag of the Netherlands.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> While not the first tricolour, it became one of the most influential flags in historyTemplate:Citation needed. The tricolour scheme was later adopted by many other nations in Europe and elsewhere, and, according to the Encyclopædia Britannica has historically stood "in symbolic opposition to the autocratic and clericalist royal standards of the past".
Before the tricolour was adopted the royal government used many flags, the best known being a blue shield and gold fleurs-de-lis (the Royal Arms of France) on a white background, or state flag. Early in the French Revolution, the Paris militia, which played a prominent role in the storming of the Bastille, wore a cockade of blue and red,<ref name=ansa>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the city's traditional colours. According to French general Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, white was the "ancient French colour" and was added to the militia cockade to form a tricolour, or national, cockade of France.<ref name="Lafayette">Marie Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert Du Motier Lafayette (marquis de), Memoirs, correspondence and manuscripts of General Lafayette, vol. 2, p. 252.</ref>
This cockade became part of the uniform of the National Guard, which succeeded the militia and was commanded by Lafayette.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The colours and design of the cockade are the basis of the Tricolour flag, adopted in 1790,<ref name=ilsole24>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> originally with the red nearest to the flagpole and the blue farthest from it. A modified design by Jacques-Louis David was adopted in 1794. The royal white flag was used during the Bourbon Restoration from 1815 to 1830; the tricolour was brought back after the July Revolution and has been used since then, except for an interruption for a few days in 1848.<ref name=secrep>Template:Cite journal</ref> Since 1976, there have been two versions of the flag in varying levels of use by the state: the original (identifiable by its use of navy blue) and one with a lighter shade of blue. Since July 2020, France has used the older variant by default, including at the Élysée Palace.<ref name=moreau /><ref name="blue">Template:Cite news</ref>
DesignEdit
Article 2 of the French constitution of 1958 states that "the national emblem is the tricolour flag, blue, white, red".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> No law has specified the shades of these official colours.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=drapeau/> In English blazon, the flag is described as tierced in pale azure, argent and gules.
The blue stripe has usually been a dark navy blue; a lighter blue (and lighter red) version was introduced in 1976<ref name=lightyear>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> by President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing.<ref name=blue/><ref name=drapeau>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Both versions were used from then; town halls, public buildings and barracks usually fly the darker version of the flag, but the lighter version was sometimes used even on official State buildings.<ref name=moreau>Template:Cite news</ref>
On 13 July 2020, President Emmanuel Macron reverted,<ref name=moreau/> without any statement and with no orders for other institutions to use a specific version, to the darker hue for the presidential Élysée Palace, as a symbol of the French Revolution.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The move was met with comments both in favour of and against the change, but it was noted that both the darker and lighter flags have been in use for decades.<ref name=blue/>
Authority | Scheme | Blue | White | Red | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ministry of Defense<ref name='milcolours'>Template:Cite tech report</ref><ref name='navycolors'>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
AFNOR NFX 08002 |
A 503 | A 665 | An 805 |
Embassy to Germany (lighter colours)<ref name='colors'>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |
CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Pantone | Reflex blue | Safe | Red 032 |
CMYK | 100.80.0.0 | 0.0.0.0 | 0.100.100.0 | ||
RGB | (0,85,164) | (255,255,255) | (239,65,53) | ||
HEX | #0055A4 | #FFFFFF | #EF4135 |
Currently, the flag is one and a half times wider than its height (i.e. in the proportion 2:3) and, except in the French Navy, has stripes of equal width. Initially, the three stripes of the flag were not equally wide, being in the proportions 30 (blue), 33 (white) and 37 (red). Under Napoleon I, the proportions were changed to make the stripes' width equal, but by a regulation dated 17 May 1853, the navy went back to using the 30:33:37 proportions, which it now continues to use, as the flapping of the flag makes portions farther from the halyard seem smaller.
When the French president or prime minister is expected to be photographed at an official or televised event, a flag with a much narrower white stripe is often used as a backdrop to ensure that all three stripes are visible when the cameras are focused on them, as using a flag with equal stripes might show only the white stripe in frame.<ref name="LObs1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
SymbolismEdit
Blue and red are the traditional colours of Paris, used on the city's coat of arms. Blue is identified with Saint Martin, red with Saint Denis.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At the storming of the Bastille in 1789, the Paris militia wore blue and red cockades on their hats. White had long featured prominently on French flags and is described as the "ancient French colour" by Lafayette.<ref name="Lafayette"/> White was added to the "revolutionary" colours of the militia cockade to "nationalise" the design, thus forming the cockade of France.<ref name="Lafayette"/> Although Lafayette identified the white stripe with the nation, other accounts identify it with the monarchy.<ref name="elysee">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Lafayette denied that the flag contains any reference to the red-and-white livery of the Duc d'Orléans. Despite this, Orléanists adopted the tricolour as their own.
Blue and red are associated with the Virgin Mary, the patroness of France, and were the colours of the oriflamme. The colours of the French flag may also represent the three main estates of the Ancien Régime (the clergy: white, the nobility: red and the bourgeoisie: blue). Blue, as the symbol of class, comes first and red, representing the nobility, comes last. Both extreme colours are situated on each side of white referring to a superior order.<ref name="flagsymbols">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The cockade of France was adopted in July 1789, a moment of national unity that soon faded. Royalists began wearing white cockades and flying white flags, while the Jacobins, and later the Socialists, flew the red flag. The tricolour, which combines royalist white with republican red, came to be seen as a symbol of moderation and of a nationalism that transcended factionalism.
The French government website states that the white field was the colour of the king, while blue and red were the colours of Paris.
The three colours are occasionally taken to represent the three elements of the revolutionary motto, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (freedom: blue), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (equality: white), {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (brotherhood: red); this symbolism was referenced in Krzysztof Kieślowski's three colours film trilogy, for example.
In the aftermath of the November 2015 Paris attacks, many famous landmarks and stadiums around the world were illuminated in the flag colours to honour the victims.
HistoryEdit
Kingdom of FranceEdit
Template:Further Template:AnchorTemplate:Anchor During the early Middle Ages, the oriflamme, the flag of Saint Denis, was used—red, with two, three, or five spikes. Originally, it was the royal banner under the Capetians. It was stored in Saint-Denis abbey, where it was taken when war broke out. French kings went forth into battle preceded either by Saint Martin's red cape, which was supposed to protect the monarch, or by the red banner of Saint Denis.
Later during the Middle Ages, these colours came to be associated with the reigning house of France. In 1328, the coat-of-arms of the House of Valois was blue with gold fleurs-de-lis bordered in red. From this time on, the kings of France were represented in vignettes and manuscripts wearing a red gown under a blue coat decorated with gold fleurs-de-lis. Charles V of France changed the design from an all-over scattering of fleurs-de-lis to a group of three in about 1376; these two coats are known in heraldic terminology as France Ancient and France Modern, respectively.
During the Hundred Years' War, England was recognised by a red cross; Burgundy, a red saltire; and France, a white cross. This cross could figure either on a blue or a red field. The blue field eventually became the common standard for French armies. The French regiments were later assigned the white cross as standard, with their proper colours in the cantons. The French flag of a white cross on a blue field is still seen on some flags derived from it, such as that of Quebec.
The flag of Joan of Arc during the Hundred Years' War is described in her own words, "I had a banner of which the field was sprinkled with lilies; the world was painted there, with an angel at each side; it was white of the white cloth called 'boccassin'; there was written above it, I believe, 'JHESUS MARIA'; it was fringed with silk."<ref name="Whitney">Whitney Smith, Flags through the ages and across the world, McGraw-Hill, England, 1975 Template:ISBN, pp. 66–67, The Standard of Joan of Arc, after quoting her from her trial transcript he states: "it was her influence which determined that white should serve as the principal French national colour from shortly after her death in 1431 until the French Revolution almost 350 years later."</ref> Joan's standard led to the prominent use of white on later French flags.<ref name="Whitney"/>
From the accession of the Bourbons to the throne of France, the green ensign of the navy became a plain white flag, the symbol of purity and royal authority. The merchant navy was assigned "the old flag of the nation of France", the white cross on a blue field.<ref>
- "...the standard of France was white, sprinkled with golden fleur de lis..." Template:Harv.
- On the reverse of this plate it says: "Le pavillon royal était véritablement le drapeau national au dix-huitième siecle...Vue du chateau d'arrière d'un vaisseau de guerre de haut rang portant le pavillon royal (blanc, avec les armes de France)" Template:Harv.
- "The oriflamme and the Chape de St Martin were succeeded at the end of the 16th century, when Henry III., the last of the house of Valois, came to the throne, by the white standard powdered with fleurs-de-lis. This in turn gave place to the famous tricolour"Template:Harv.</ref> There also was a red jack for the French galleys. A variant of the plain white Bourbon banner, a white field strewn with gold fleur de lis, was also sometimes seen.
- Oriflamme.svg
The Oriflamme, the banner of the Capetians
- Flag of France (XII-XIII).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of France under the Capetian dynasty since the twelfth century
- Flag of France (XIV-XVI).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of France under the Capetian dynasty since the fourteenth century
- Pavillon royal de la France.svg
CitationClass=web }}</ref> or "Bourbon Flag". The House of Bourbon ruled France from 1589 to 1792 and again from 1815 to 1848.
- Royal Standard of the King of France.svg
Template:FIAV The Royal Standard of France Template:Nowrap
- Pavillon royal de France.svg
Template:FIAV Template:FIAV Variant royal standard of France Template:Nowrap
- Royal Standard of King Louis XIV.svg
Template:FIAV Template:FIAV Variant royal standard of France Template:Nowrap
The TricoloreEdit
The horizontally striped red-white-blue flag of the Netherlands originally inspired the colour scheme used by the French revolutionaries after the French Revolution in 1789.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> Consequently, the French tricolour flag is derived from the cockade of France used during the French Revolution. These were circular rosette-like emblems attached to the hat. Camille Desmoulins asked his followers to wear green cockades on 12 July 1789. The Paris militia, formed on 13 July, adopted a blue and red cockade. Blue and red are the traditional colours of Paris, and they are used on the city's coat of arms. The addition of white has been attributed to Lafayette, Mayor Jean Sylvain Bailly, and even Louis XVI himself.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> This episode is supposed to have taken place on July 17, 1789, on the occasion of the king's visit to the Paris city hall. However, it is proven that the tricolor cockade began to be worn, by order of the city, from the 13th or 14th of July.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In any case, Louis XVI actually went to the Paris city hall where he received the tricolor cockade. On 27 July, a tricolour cockade was adopted as part of the uniform of the National Guard, the national police force that succeeded the militia.<ref>Clifford, Dale, "Can the Uniform Make the Citizen? Paris, 1789–1791", Eighteenth-Century Studies, 2001, p. 369.</ref>
A drapeau tricolore with vertical red, white and blue stripes was approved by the Constituent Assembly on 24 October 1790. Simplified designs were used to illustrate how the revolution had broken with the past. The order was reversed to blue-white-red, the current design, by a resolution passed on 15 February 1794.
When the Bourbon dynasty was restored following the defeat of Napoleon in 1815, the tricolore—with its revolutionary connotations—was replaced by a white flag, the pre-revolutionary naval flag. However, following the July Revolution of 1830, the "citizen-king", Louis-Philippe, restored the tricolore, and it has remained France's national flag since that time.
Following the overthrow of Napoleon III, voters elected a royalist majority to the National Assembly of the new Third Republic. This parliament then offered the throne to the Bourbon pretender, Henri, Comte de Chambord. However, he insisted that he would accept the throne only on the condition that the tricolour be replaced by the white flag.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> As the tricolour had become a cherished national symbol, this demand proved impossible to accommodate. Plans to restore the monarchy were adjourned and ultimately dropped, and France has remained a republic, with the tricolour flag, ever since.
The Vichy régime, which dropped the word "republic" in favour of "the French state", maintained the use of the tricolore, but Philippe Pétain used as his personal standard a version of the flag with, in the white stripe, an axe made with a star-studded marshal's baton. This axe is called the "Francisque" in reference to the ancient Frankish throwing axe. During this same period, the Free French Forces used a tricolore with, in the white stripe, a red Cross of Lorraine.
The constitutions of 1946 and 1958 instituted the "blue, white, and red" flag as the national emblem of the Republic.
The colours of the national flag are occasionally said to represent different flowers; blue represents cornflowers, white represents marguerites, and red represents poppies.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Flag of Paris.svg
The flag of Paris, source of the tricolour's blue and red stripes
- The french tricolor cockade.svg
The cockade of France, designed in July 1789. White was added to "nationalise" an earlier blue and red design.
- Flag of France (1790–1794).svg
Template:FIAV The flag of France used from 1790 until 1794
- Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg
The flag of France used from 1794 (interrupted in 1815–1830 and in 1848)
- Drapeau france 1848.svg
Template:FIAV The French Second Republic adopted a variant of the tricolour for a few days between 24 February and 5 March 1848.<ref name=secrep/>
- Henri d'Artois' Flag of France (proposed).svg
Template:FIAV The French tricolore with the royal crown and fleur-de-lys was possibly designed by the Henri, Count of Chambord, in his younger years as a compromise, but which was never made official, and which he himself rejected when offered the throne in 1870.<ref>Whitney Smith. Flags through the ages and cross the world. McGraw-Hill Book Company. 1975. p. 75.</ref>
- Roundel of France.svg
From 1912 onwards, the French Air Force originated the use of roundels on military aircraft shortly before World War I. Similar national cockades, with different ordering of colours, were later adopted as aircraft roundels by their allies.<ref>Royal Air Force Museum Template:Webarchive</ref>
- VichyFlag.svg
Template:FIAV Personal standard of Philippe Pétain, as Chief of the Vichy France.
- Flag of Free France (1940-1944).svg
Template:FIAV Flag used by the Free French Forces during World War II; in the centre is the Cross of Lorraine; later, the personal standard of President Charles de Gaulle, as Chief of the Free France.
- Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1974, 2020–present).svg
The flag of France, darker red and blue variant.
- Flag of France (2024–present).svg
The flag of France, lighter red and blue variant.
Regimental flagsEdit
- Vigiles du roi Charles VII 32.jpg
The French soldiers started to use white crosses, during the Hundred Years' War, to distinguish themselves from the English soldiers wearing red crosses.
- Rég d Auvergne 1635.png
lang}})
- Rég de La Sarre 1685.png
lang}})
- Rég du Roi 1757.png
lang}})
- Rég de La Reine 1661.png
lang}})
- Flag of Levis.svg
lang}}' Regiment Flag in North America. Now official flag of the city of Lévis, Quebec
- Franche de la Marine1.jpg
lang}}).
- Grenadier Pied 1 1812 Revers.png
Regimental flag of the 1st Regiment of Grenadiers of the French Imperial Guard (1812)
- Drapeaux 1RE et 2REI Paris 2003.jpg
Current regimental flags of the 1st and 2nd Regiments of the Légion étrangère
Edit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
- Flag of the Kingdom of France (1814-1830).svg
Template:FIAV Naval ensign prior to 1789 and 1814–1830
- Naval Flag of the Kingdom of France (Civil Ensign).svg
Template:FIAV The merchant flag of France Template:Nowrap
- Civil and Naval Ensign of France.svg
Template:FIAV Template:FIAV Template:FIAV The present ensign of France introduced on 17 May 1853
Colonial flagsEdit
Template:Further Most French colonies either used the regular tricolour or a regional flag without the French flag. There were some exceptions:
- Flag of Colonial Annam.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of Tonkin (French protectorate) and Annam in French Indochina
- Flag of French Laos.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of Laos in French Indochina
- Flag of the Tai Dam People.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the Sip Song Chau Tai, French Indochina (1948–1955)
- Flag of French Sudan.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of French Sudan (1958–1959), present-day Mali
- Flag of Togo (1957-1958).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of French Togoland (1916–1960), present-day Togo
- Flag of Gabon 1959-1960.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of Gabon (1959–1960)
- Flag of the Madagascar Protectorate (1885-1896).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of Madagascar under French protection (1885–1895)
- Merchant flag of French Morocco.svg
Template:FIAV Merchant flag of the French protectorate of Morocco (1912–1956)
- Flag of French Tunisia.svg
Template:FIAV Flag used by some military units based in the French protectorate of Tunisia
- Flag of the French Mandate of Syria (1920).svg
Template:FIAV Briefly used flag of the French Mandate of Syria and the Lebanon in 1920
- Flag of the State of Aleppo.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the State of Aleppo, in the French Mandate of Syria (1920–1924)
- Flag of the State of Damascus.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the State of Damascus, in the French Mandate of Syria (1920–1924)
- Flag of Syria French mandate.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the State of Syria, in the French Mandate of Syria (1924–1930)
- Flag of the Alawite State (1920–1936).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the State of Alawites, in the French Mandate of Syria
- Flag of Jabal ad-Druze (state).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of Jabal ad-Druze, in the French Mandate of Syria
- Flag of Lebanon (1920-1943).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the State of Greater Lebanon during the French mandate 1920–1943
- Flag of the Republic of Independent Guyana (1886-1887).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of Republic of Independent Guyana (1886–1887)
- Flag of Saint Barthelemy (local).svg
Template:FIAV Template:FIAV Unofficial flag of Saint Barthélemy
- Flag of Franceville.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of New Hebrides (Vanuatu) under the Anglo-French Joint Naval Commission (1887–1906)
- Flag of Uvea (1860).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the French Protectorate of Wallis and Futuna (Uvea) (1860–1886)
- Flag of Wallis and Futuna.svg
Template:FIAV Present unofficial flag of Wallis and Futuna
- Flag of the Society Islands Protectorate.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the Kingdom of Tahiti under the Protectorate of France (1845–1880)
- Drapeau Protectorat Français RuRutu (1858-1889).png
Template:FIAV Flag of the French protectorate of Rurutu in French Polynesia (1858–1889)
- Flag of French Polynesia.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of French Polynesia
- Flag of Saar (1947–1956).svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the French protectorate of Saar (1947–1956)
- Flag of French Governor in French Colony.svg
Template:FIAV Flag of the French colonial governor
- Flag of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands.svg
Flag of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands
- Flag of Louisiana (January 1861).svg
Template:FIAV Template:FIAV Unofficial flag of Louisiana (1861)
OtherEdit
Many provinces and territories in Canada have French-speaking communities with flags represents: Template:See also
- Flag of Acadia.svg
The Acadian flag used in Canada is based on the tricolour flag of France, but this flag was never used during French rule of Acadia. It was adopted in 1884. Acadians live mainly in Louisiana, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia.
- Flag of Quebec.svg
The current flag of Quebec. The use of blue and white is a characteristic of pre-revolutionary flags.
- Franco-Terreneuviens.svg
Flag of Franco-Newfoundlanders
- French Congo 1959 proposal (Flag).svg
Proposed flag of the French Congo (pre-1959)
Many areas in North America have substantial French-speaking and ancestral communities:
- Flag of Acadiana.svg
Flag of Acadiana
- Drapeau Franco-Américain.svg
Flag of United Franco-Americans
- Drapeau français-américain.svg
Flag of New England Franco-Americans
- Drapeau de l'Acadie occidentale.svg
Flag of Aroostook county Franco-Americans
- Drapeau de l'Union Saint-Jean-Baptiste d'Amérique.svg
Flag of Androscoggin county Franco-Americans
- Drapeau de la Louisiane septentrionale.svg
Flag of Illinois Country Franco-Americans
- Flag of Iowa.svg
Flag of Iowa
- Flag of New Orleans, Louisiana.svg
Flag of New Orleans, Louisiana
- Flag of Mobile, Alabama.png
Flag of Mobile, Alabama
New Hebrides used several flags incorporating both the British Union Flag and the French flag.
- Flag Vanuatu 1963.svg
CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Flag of New Hebrides (1969).svg
CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In the Shanghai International Settlement, the flag of Shanghai Municipal Council has a shield incorporating the French tricolour.
- Flag of the Shanghai International Settlement.svg
Flag of the Shanghai Municipal Council, Shanghai International Settlement
Two territories of Vietnam used flags based on the tricolour flag of France.
- Flag of the Montagnard country of South Indochina.svg
Montagnard country (1946–1950)
- Flag of Tai Autonomous Territory.svg
Tai Autonomous Territory (1946–1950)
GalleryEdit
- El 114 de infantería, en París, el 14 de julio de 1917, León Gimpel.jpg
French regimental flag, Paris, autochrome dated 1917
- Dieudonné Costes devant le Point d'Interrogation.jpg
Flag of France, color photography dated 1930
- Drapeaux français.jpg
Multiple French flags as commonly flown from public buildings
See alsoEdit
- List of French flags
- Flags of the regions of France
- National emblem of France
- Armorial of France
- Cockade of France
- Flag of Somoto, Nicaragua, similar design
- Flag of Haiti (based on French Republican flag)
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
SourcesEdit
- Template:Cite EB1911
- Template:Cite AmCyc
- {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}
Further readingEdit
- Flags Through the Ages and Across the World, Smith, Whitney, McGraw-Hill Book Co. Ltd, England, 1975. Template:ISBN.
External linksEdit
- {{#if:|
France at Flags of the World| France at Flags of the World}}{{#if:
| . Retrieved on {{{accessdate}}}{{#if: | , {{{accessyear}}} }}.
}}
- French flag at Flags Corner Template:Webarchive