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Flag
adopted 3 July 1962, coat of arms adopted 1 November 1976.
Proportion: 2:3.
Description: Flag vertically divided green-white with a red
crescent and star in the middle.
Use: on land, national, civil and war flag, on sea,
national and civil ensign.
Official description of the flag
![[Construction sheet]](Algeria/dz-sm.gif)
by Zeljko Heimer
The national flag of Algeria is officially described as
follows:
Features
The flag of the Democratic and Popular Republic
of Algeria is constituted by a green and white rectangle embossed
by a red star and a red crescent.
Colors
The green must be a composition of equal yellow
and blue having, according to the diagram of contrasts of Rood, a
wavelength of 5.411 and the position 600 on the normal spectre.
The red must be pure, of primary non-decomposable colors, and
exempt of blue and yellow having, according to the above-indicated
diagram, a wavelength of 6.562 and the position 285 on the normal
spectre.
Proportions and disposition
The length of the rectangle is equal to one and
half its width (height of the flag). This rectangle is divided
according to the small median in two halves. The green colors half
is placed inside, against the shaft. The white colors half is
placed outside.
The star has five branches. It is inscribed in
a circle whose radius is equal to the eighth of the height of the
flag. It is entirely placed on the white field of the flag; two
points are on the small median of the rectangle and a point is on
the big median.
The radius of the outside circle of the
crescent is equal to the quarter of the height of the flag.
The radius of the inner circle of the crescent is equal to the
fifth of the height of the flag. The two points of the crescent
delimit a big equal bow to the five sixth of the circumference of
the outside circle.
The centre of the outside circle of the
crescent is in the centre of the rectangle.
Thanh-Tâm L?/em>, 2 January 1999
History of the flag
The flag was first officially hoisted on 3 July 1962. The flag is
said to be a variation of the flag of liberation forces of Abd el-Kader
in 1837-1847, but there is no proof of that.
Zeljko Heimer, 28 November 1995
According to Dorling-Kindersley flag book
[udk97],
"...the flag was adopted by the National Liberation Front in 1954,
based on an older design, created in 1928 by the nationalist leader
Messali Hadj. From 1958 - 1962 it was the flag of the provisional
government in exile, but was retained when independence was achieved
in 1962 and has remained unchanged ever since."
Meanings of the colors are:
- Green for Islam
- White for purity.
According to Herzog and Hannes
[heh90],
the white color also reminds of Abd al-Kadir, who used a white flag
in his fight against the French in 1847.
Volker Moerbitz Keith, 11 April 2000
Naval ensign
![[Naval ensign]](Algeria/dz-navsm.gif)
by Jaume Oll?/i> & Pascal Gross
National flag with two red fouled anchors crosed in saltire in
canton.
Source: Album des Pavillons
[pay00]
Presidential flag (unconfirmed)
The list of the Algerian Heads of State since the independence is
as following:
- 1962-1963 Ferhat Abbas (Chairman of the Parliament)
- 1963-1965 Ahmed ben Bella (President)
- 1965-1976 Houari Boumediene (Chairman of the Council of the
Revolution)
- 1976-1978 Houari Boumediene (President)
- 1978-1979 Rabah Bitat (acting)
- 1979-1992 Chadli Bendjedid (President)
- 1992-1992 Mohammed Boudiaf (Chairman of the High Committee
of State)
- 1992-1994 Ali Kafi (Chairman of the High Committee of State)
- 1994-1999 Liamine Zeroual (President)
- 1999- Abdelaziz Bouteflika (President)
![[President flag?]](Algeria/dz_pres1sm.gif)
by Jaume Oll?/i>
In 1979, President Benjedid appears on a photograph together with
a variant of the national flag that may be the Presidential flag. An
identical flag was also reported as a possible presidential flag by
a correspondent of Aldo Zigiotto.
Jaume Oll?/i>, 24 December 2001, translated by Joe
McMillan
![[Presidential flag?]](Algeria/dz_pres2sm.gif)
by Jaume Oll?/i>
In the nineties, a Presidential flag was reported by J.L. Cepero
on 23 March1999, seen at Presidential facilities on Algerian
television. The inscription says Algeria and was confirmed by
Algerian sources. The above image is approximate.
Jaume Oll?/i>, 24 December 2001, translated from Spanish by
Joe McMillan
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