Flag of the Central African Republic
The national flag of the Central African Republic was created in 1958 by first president of Ubangi-Shari Barthélemy Boganda.[1]
Use | |
---|---|
Proportion | 3:5 or 2:3 |
Adopted | 1958 |
Design | Four horizontal stripes of blue, white, green and yellow, and a single vertical band of red, with a yellow five pointed star in the upper left corner |
Designed by | Barthélemy Boganda |
Appearance
It has four horizontal stripes of blue, white, green and yellow, and a single vertical band of red, with a yellow five pointed star in the upper left corner.
Symbolism
The golden star is symbol of independence and bright future. The president Boganda announced that the colours of the four horizontal stripes represents four territories of French Equatorial Africa (Ubangi-Shari, Gabon, Congo and Chad), which he wanted to see united with maintaining relationship with France. The red stripe symbolizes blood, same for the every races and nations, in this case especially for the Africans The green color stands for forest areas, the yellow for savanna, blue for the sky. Other interpretation of the colours emphasizes national ideals, where the color blue symbolizes freedom, white – purity, green – hope, yellow – tolerance and hospitality, red – friendship and equality of every race and need of common respect.[1]
Construction sheet
The aspect ratio of the flag is 3:5 or 2:3.[1]
Historical flags
Imperial Standard of Bokassa I during Central African Empire (1976–1979)
Flag Of The Central African Republic Media
CAR flag in Niem Yéléwa, Nana-Mambéré prefecture
President David Dacko and CAR flags on a carpet; the flag is depicted incorrectly with two stars instead of one.
Flag of France, used during colonial Ubangi-Shari from 1903 until 1960
Related pages
- Coat of Arms of the Central African Republic
- La Renaissance, the national anthem of the Central African Republic
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Wrona, Jerzy (2020). Flagi i herby opowiadają (in polski). Rzeszów. p. 184. ISBN 978-83-7586-158-7.