Flag of Iran
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article may contain improper references to self-published sources. Please help improve it by removing references to unreliable sources where they are used inappropriately. (May 2008) |
| Use | National flag and ensign |
|---|---|
| Proportion | 4:7 |
| Adopted | 29 July 1980 |
| Design | A horizontal tricolour of red, white, and green charged with the emblem of Iran in red centred on the white stripe. The takbir is written in white a total of 22 times on the fringe of both the green and red bands in the Kufic script. |
The current flag of Iran (Persian: پرچم ایران) was adopted on July 29, 1980, and is a reflection of the changes brought to Revolution. The emblem in the center of the flag is a highly stylized composite of various elements representing different facets of Islamic life: Allah, the Book, the Sword, the five principles of Islam, balance, unity, neutrality, and the universal government of the downtrodden.
The coat of arms of Iran has been placed in the center of the white band which is meant to have multiple meanings, but is essentially a geometrically-symmetric form of the word Allah as well as overlapping parts of the Islamic phrase "la ilaha illa Allah" ("There is no god but God"), forming a monogram.
The symbol consists of four crescents and a sword. The four crescents form the word Allah: from right to left the first crescent is the letter "Aleph", the second one is the letter "Laam", the sword (straight line) is the second "Laam", and the third and forth crescents together form the letter "Heh". Above the sword (central part) is a tashdid (a diacritical mark for gemination resembling a letter W). The sword represents a powerful and sovereign state. The shape of the emblem is chosen to remind people of a red tulip, for the memory of the (young) people who died for Iran, building on a legendary belief that red tulips grow on the blood of martyrs, valuing patriotism and self-sacrifice. It also bears strong resemblance to ancient Iranian Sassanid art forms usually found on royal crowns and coins[citation needed], as well as the ends of certain types of vajra. The symbol was designed by Hamid Nadimi, and was officially approved by Ayatollah Khomeini on May 9, 1980.
A further change to the flag following the Revolution has been the addition of writing on the borders between the white, and the green and red bands reading, Allahu Akbar ("God is great") in a stylized version of the Kufic script used for the Qur'an. There are 22 (2×11) copies of this inscription, symbolic of the 22nd day of the 11th month (Bahman) in the Persian calendar—the date of the Islamic revolution (22 Bahman 1357 = February 11, 1979) over the Pahlavi dynasty. The addition of this writing renders the flag non-reversible.
Physical requirements for the Iranian flag, the exact shape of the emblem and a compass and straightedge construction are described in the national Iranian standard ISIRI 1 (in Persian).
Contents |
[edit] Modern interpretation of colours
| Scheme | Textile color |
|---|---|
| Green | Islamic faith of the people of Iran |
| White | Symbol of peace |
| Red | Symbol of the martyrs' blood |
[edit] Historical Flags
| Years of Use | Flag | Ratio | Government | Notes |
| 1502–1524 | Safavid Dynasty | Flag of Ismail I. Green with a golden full moon on top. | ||
| 1524–1576 | Safavid Dynasty | Flag of Tahmasp I. Green with an emblem resembling the lion and sun, but with a sheep in place of a lion. | ||
| 1576–1747 | Safavid Dynasty | Typical flag used by Ismail II and his successors. Green with a lion and sun emblem embroidered in gold. | ||
| 1736–1747 | Afsharid Dynasty | Royal Flag of Nader Shah, made of yellow silk with a red border and adorned with the Lion and Sun emblem. | ||
| 1737–1796 | Afsharid Dynasty | Imperial Standard and State flag. A seven-striped precursor to the modern Iranian tricolour, but with blue instead of green because green was the colour of the Safavids. | ||
| 1750–1794 | Zand Dynasty | A triangular white flag with a green border and the Lion and Sun in the centre. | ||
| 1779–19th century | Qajar Dynasty | Flag of Mohammad Khan Qajar. The Lion and Sun emblem was altered to include a sword. | ||
| 19th century | Qajar Dynasty | Diplomatic flag introduced during the reign of Fat′h Ali Shah Qajar. There also existed a war flag with a red background and a peace flag with a green background. | ||
| 19th century | Qajar Dynasty | State flag designed by Amir Kabir. Similar to the previous diplomatic flag, but with a thin green band on the top and a thin red band on the bottom. This was the direct ancestor of the modern Iranian tricolour. Introduced sometime between 1848 and 1852, during the reign of Nasser al-Din Shah Qajar. | ||
| Late 19th century–1906 | Qajar Dynasty | Common design of the Persian Flag in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, during the reign of Mozaffar al-Din Shah Qajar. | ||
| 1906 | Qajar Dynasty | Early State flag used during the Iranian Constitutional Revolution, before the horizontal tricolour became official. | ||
| 1906–1910 | Qajar Dynasty | Early National flag and used during the Iranian Constitutional Revolution, like the state flag but without the emblem. Remained the Civil Ensign until 1910. | ||
| 1906–1925 | 1:3 | Qajar Dynasty | State flag. Adopted during the Iranian Constitutional Revolution, which formalized the design of the flag. The colours were given symbolic meanings: Green represented Islam, red represented the blood of the martyrs, and white represented peace and Zoroastrianism. | |
| 1925–1964 | 1:3 | Pahlavi Dynasty | State flag. Like the last Qajar flag, but with a darker red and green. | |
| 1964–1979 | 4:7 | Pahlavi Dynasty | Civil Flag. Like the 1925 flag, but with a different ratio. The 1964 flag also bears the addition of a crown hovering over the lions head, symbolizing the monarchy, and a ribbon for the lion to stand over. | |
| 1979–1980 | 4:7 | Bakhtiar Ministry | Briefly used from Feb 5 1979 - Jul 29 1980, by the government of Prime Minister Dr. Shapour Bakhtiar, following the Shah's departure, and before Khomeini seized full control and erected a new constitutional government. | |
| 1980–Present | 4:7 | Islamic Republic of Iran | The modern Flag of Iran. |
[edit] Earlier Historical Flags
| This section does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2008) |
Flags, standards and banners have always been important national and imperial symbols for Iranians, both in war and peace. Xenophon tells us that Cyrus the Great's standard was a golden eagle with spread wings mounted on a long shaft.
The best-known symbol of Iran in recent centuries, however, has been the lion and sun motif, which is a graphic expression of the astrological configuration of the sun in the house of Leo, although both celestial and animal figures independently have a long history in Iranian heraldry.
Late in the nineteenth century an earlier scimitar motif was combined with the lion and sun and superimposed on a tricolour of green, white and red, and, with minor modifications, this remained the official flag until the revolution of 1979.
[edit] Achaemenid Empire (559–323 BCE)
During the Achaemenid, especially at the time of Cyrus the Great, the Persian Imperial Flag was made of up of a kinglike image, rectangular in shape, split into four equivalent triangles. Each two of these four train triangles had the same colour.
In the excavations at Persepolis, archaeologists have found a standard, depicting a falcon (shahin) with open wings, regarding which the current belief is that this was the official flag of Iran under the reign of Cyrus the Great and his heirs.
[edit] Sassanid Dynasty (224–642 CE)
See main article: Derafsh Kaviani
The Flag at this historical juncture was again made of rectangular leather, covered with a thin layer of silk ornamented with jewels, in the center of which there was a four cornered star, pointing to the four corners of the world. This is the same star referred to as Akhtare Kaviani (the Kaviani star) by Ferdowsi in the epics of Shahnameh (the Book of Kings). This Flag was larger than the original Derafshe Kaviani installed on a long javelin, the tip of which was shown above the flag. At the bottom of this flag there were woven strings of yellow, magenta and scarlet, hanging from them were large jewels. The flag was destroyed by Arabs after the decisive Sassanid defeat against invading Muslim Arabs.
[edit] Islamic Iran
The Sassanid empire collapsed with the emergence of an Islamic Empire in the Middle East. Since Islam strictly prohibited figurative or other expressive symbols as idol worship, all the traditional symbology used in Iranian flags was eliminated. Throughout this period there were no fixed flags within Iran and the use of Islamic banners was common.
[edit] Ghaznavid Dynasty (975–1186)
Mahmud of Ghaznavid (998–1030) reinstated the use of symbolic expressions on the Iranian flag. The flag developed by Mahmud contained an inscribed golden moon drawn on a solid black background.
A second flag has been attributed to the Ghaznavid Empire, with a silver crescent moon and a peacock on a green field. [1]
[edit] Khwarezmian Empire (992–1220)
The Khwarezmian Shahs flew a plain black flag.
[edit] Il-Khanate (1256–1335)
According to the Catalan Atlas, the Il-Khans flew a golden yellow flag with a red square in its centre. The Atlas is not a reliable source, however, so the flag may never have existed.
[edit] See also
- Pan-Iranian colors
- Coat of arms of Iran
- Imperial Standards of Iran
- The Lion and Sun
- Flag of Tajikistan
- Flag of the Tajik SSR
- Flag of Kurdistan
- Talysh-Mughan Autonomous Republic
[edit] External links
- Iran at Flags of the World
- Iran Flag—Flags and Nations of the World
- Flags of Persia—Rooyintan's Flags of Persia/Iran Website
- Flags i. Of Persia—Encyclopaedia Iranica
|
||||||||

