Flag of Germany
\n German Confederation (only 1848) |
\n German Empire (1871-1918) |
\n Weimar Republic (1919-1933) |
\n Third Reich 1933-1935 (then forbidden by the Nazis as "reactionary") |
\n Third Reich 1933-1945 (Civil Ensign) |
\n Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) (since 1949) |
\n German Democratic Republic (1959-1990) (East Germany) |
\n
The article is about the
flag of Germany.
Civil flag and ensign of
Germany is made up of three equal horizontal bands coloured black (top), red and gold. There are two main theories on the exact origins of these colours: the first claims they go back to the uniforms of the Lützow Free Corps, comprised mostly of university students, that formed during the end of the struggle against the
Napoleonic occupation of much of Germany; the other holds that they are derived from the similar colours of the Imperial
coat of arms of the
Holy Roman Empire. The first seems the more accepted theory nowadays and it may be that the second explanation simply provided the true origin with a more extensive historic background. In either case, these colours soon became to be regarded as the national colours of Germany during the period of the
German Confederation in the first half of the
19th century. The revolutionary year of
1848 saw a
nationalistic movement try to transform the loosely-knit Confederation into a more unified state. When the
Frankfurt parliament convened on
March 9,
1848, they declared them as official federal colours and adopted the black-red-gold (
schwarz-rot-gold) flag.
Prussia however, the most influential German state, resisted this movement, though it would work to establish a unified Germany more favourable to Prussia's interests. An important step in this direction was the founding of the
North German Confederation in
1867, which on
June 25 of that year adopted a flag that blended the Prussian colours (black and white) and the colours of the
Hanseatic League (red and white) into a new black-white-red (
schwarz-weiß-rot) horizontal tricolour. This flag would also be the national flag for the subsequent
German Empire from
1871 to
1918, which finally replaced the German Confederation.
Following Germany's defeat in
World War I this Imperial flag fell into disuse and the new
Weimar Republic officially reinstated the black-red-gold sequence on
August 11,
1919. Throughout the days of the Weimar Republic there was a debate on which flag to use, with monarchists in favour of re-adopting the black-white-red flag. When the Nazis came to power in
1933 they did just that, though they would eventually, on
September 15,
1935, replace virtually all German governmental flags with designs based on the
swastika flag that had been their party flag. It featured the same colours as the Imperial flag, but it was arranged as a red flag with a white disk in the centre containing a black swastika. The old black-white-red flag was then banned by the Nazis as "reactionary".
After the defeat of Nazi Germany in
World War II, Germany was occupied by the Allies. The occupation government banished the existing national flags, and issued an order designating the international signal pennant representing the letter "C" (minus a triangular cutout) as the ship flag of Germany.
After the Allied occupation ended, the black-red-gold flag was once again adopted as the federal flag for the Federal Republic of (
West) Germany on
May 9,
1949 which it has remained to this day. The
German Democratic Republic (East-Germany) had initially used the same flag, but on
October 1,
1959 it introduced a
communist emblem to the centre of the flag, which remained until East Germany was reunited with the Federal Republic in
1990.
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