Template:Short description Template:Protection padlock Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates

The pan-Arab colors are black, white, green and red. Individually, each of the four pan-Arab colors were intended to represent a certain aspect of the Arab people and their history.<ref>Abū Khaldūn Sati' al-Husri, The days of Maysalūn: A Page from the Modern History of the Arabs, Sidney Glauser Trans. (Washington D.C.: Middle East Institute, 1966), 46.</ref>

HistoryEdit

File:Flag of Libya (1969–1972, 2-3).svg
Arab Liberation Flag, or Revolutionary flag
(A modern revolutionary flag that spread to the Arab world inspired by the 1952 Egyptian revolution)<ref name="crw">Pan-Arab Colors, crwflags.com</ref>

The four colors derive their potency from a verse by 14th century Arab poet Safi al-Din al-Hilli: "White are our acts, black our battles, green our fields, and red our swords.".<ref>Muhsin Al-Musawi, Reading Iraq: Culture and Power in Conflict (I. B. Tauris 2006), p. 63</ref> The black is the Black Standard, which was used by the Rashidun and Abbasid Caliphate, while white was the dynastic color of the Umayyad Caliphate.<ref name="Aramco">Template:Cite journal</ref> Green is a color associated with Islam, the primary religion of Arabs.<ref name="Teitelbaum 2001 p.205">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Marshall 2017 p.110-111">Template:Cite book</ref> Green is also identified as the color of the Fatimid Caliphate by some modern sources,<ref name="Aramco"/><ref name="Pan-arab">Template:Cite book</ref> despite their dynastic color having been white.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Finally, red was used as the Hashemite dynastic color.

Pan-Arab colors, used individually in the past, were first combined in 1916 in the flag of the Arab Revolt or Flag of Hejaz.<ref>I. Friedman, British Pan-Arab Policy, 1915–1922, Transaction Publ., 2011, p. 135</ref> Many current flags are based on Arab Revolt colors, such as the flags of Jordan, Kuwait, Palestine, the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, and the United Arab Emirates.<ref name="Ibof" />

In the 1950s, a subset of the Pan-Arab colors, the Arab Liberation colors, came to prominence. These consist of a tricolor of red, white and black bands, with green given less prominence or not included. The Arab Liberation tricolor or the Arab Liberation Flag was mainly inspired by the Egyptian Revolution of 1952 and Egypt's official flag under president Mohamed Naguib,<ref name="Naguib">M. Naguib, Egypt's Destiny, 1955</ref> which became the basis of the current flags of Egypt, Iraq, Sudan,and Yemen (and formerly in the flags of Syria, the states of North Yemen and South Yemen), and in the short-lived Arab unions of the United Arab Republic and the Federation of Arab Republics.<ref name="Ibof">Template:Cite book</ref>

Flags with Pan-Arab colorsEdit

Current National flagsEdit

Flags of first-level administrative divisionsEdit

Former national flags with the Pan-Arab colorsEdit

Flags of Arab political and paramilitary movements using Pan-Arab colorsEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

Template:Reflist

External linksEdit

Template:Arab nationalism Template:Vexillology