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تاريخ
العلم Flag History
Designed by
Zeljko Heimer
Flag
adopted 9 July 1971, coat ot arms adopted in 1978.
Proportion: 11:28 (very often 2:3 or 3:5)
Description: Maroon flag with a white stripe at host
limited by a serration (i.e. a zigzag)
Use: on land, national, civil and war flag,
at sea, national, civil and war ensign.
Qatar and Bahrain flags
Despite the near-villification of this flag over its
individualistic approach to proportions (11:28, a reflection
of a "do your own thing" view of national policy?), there is a
fascinating story here.
At first glance, the Qatar flag seems remarkably similar to
the flag of
Bahrain.
Both have the distinctive serrated margin between the white
band at the hoist and the "red" fly. The proportions set them
apart (Bahrain 3:5) and the colors differ, with Bahrain being
a standard "British" red (they, after all, had a strong and
"involved" British adviser throughout the 1930s) and Qatar the
distinctive "maroon." This similarity reflects an intertwined
history.
To make a long and involved story very short, the
histories of the two states have overlapped and occasionally
collided since the 18th century. The distinctive Qatari flag
emerged in the 1930s (official adoption of the maroon color
came about 1949).
Bahrain's flag as we know it now was formally adopted in 1932
and the Qatari differences in size and color (said to be what
becomes of red as it fades in the Gulf sun - a fanciful tale)
seem to be largely an effort to make the Qatar flag
DIFFERENT from the Bahrani banner.
Ed Haynes, 29 January 1996
History of the flag
- The first flag of Qatar was plain red. It has been used
until ca. 1860.
- ca. 1860 a narrow serrated white stripe was added at
hoist (some sources claim the stripe was not serrated)
- ca. 1916 was in use a white flag with a red square in
center and yellow (some sources say red) crescent in canton.
It seems this flag was short-lived and soon replaced by the
previous flag .
- ca. 1932 the vertical serrated stripe was changed to a
wavy stripe (white 1/5, ratio 1:2) and the red was then
changed to dark or violet (Crampton reports the undulated
stripe as light yellow, probably because the original white
color faded to light yellow because the use and the sun)
- ca. 1936 the violet field was changed to maroon with 9
and 1/2 serrated points and 10 diamonds in the serration.
The name of the state was written in white on ther flag.
Ratio was 11:30.
- In 1949 the shade was slightly modified and the
serration reached 1/3 of the flag. The diamonds were
suppressed.
- In 1971 (independence) the current flag was adopted,
practically identical but with ratio 11:28.
Jaume Oll? 14 April 2000
Flag of c. 1936
![[Qatar flag, c. 1936]](Qatar/qa_old.gif)
by Ivan Sache
According to Evans' Observer's Book of
Flags (1959), "the National Flag of Qatar is maroon,
with a broad white stripe along the hoist. The stripe is
serrated and may bear small maroon diamonds between the
serrations; the name of the State appears in white on the
maroon field."
Jarig Bakker, 6 April 2000
Source for the image is Flaggenbuch,
which shows the flag with the hoist at veiwer's right and a
red field. Flaggenbuch uses more or less (i.e. each
page has the same shade of red, but shades slightly differ
among pages probably due to printing or facsimiling process)
the same red shade for all of the Arabic States flag (Bahrain,
Qatar,
Yemen, Trucial
States).
Ivan Sache, 2 May 2001.
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