Last modified: 2025-05-10 by bruce berry
Keywords: congo |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
When the Congo Free State was formed in 1885, its flag, reputedly designed
by the explorer H.M. Stanley, was blue with a gold star in the centre.
One explanation of its symbolism was the light of civilization (i.e., the
star) shining in the darkness of Africa. No change was made to the flag
when the Free State became Belgian territory in 1908.
Stuart Notholt, 10 March 1996
I am writing on the flag used by the Congo Free State. According to
J Roland and E Duchesne, Cours Complet de Geographie, Le Congo Belge,
Namur 1914, p.9; the Congolese flag had been hoisted since 1877 by the
Association Internationale Africaine (presided by King Leopold of Belgium)
founded at the Brussels Geographic Conference (1876).
Alexander Ganse, 19 October 2000
The Roland/Duchesne booklet states:
"Two months after the closing of the conference [that is: April 1885], Leopold II requested, conforming with the Belgian constitution, and obtained from the Chamber of Representatives and the Senate the authorization to become the Sovereign of the Independent State of the Congo. One of the first acts of the new state was to declare itself perpetually neutral. It adopted a blue flag with a golden star in it's center, which the International African Association had hoisted since 1877."
It appears from those pages that Stanley was very busy traveling, exploring and civilizing and that he had hardly time to do some flag-designing. And I haven't found the reference to the mysterious African prince.
Jarig Bakker, 5 February 2001
At
http://digilander.libero.it/breschirob/congofig.jpg (as an
illustration in Berschi's site at
http://digilander.libero.it/breschirob/aggiorna.html), are shown some
pre-independence symbols of Belgian Congo: flag, Coat of Arms and traditional
costume (?).
The flag is the well known big yellow star on blue and the Coat of Arms is (a
shield with parallel sides and triangle tip) azure a fess argent, overall on an
escutcheon Sable a lion rampant Or.
The said escutcheon shows the same armorial bearings as in
Belgian royal flags, which is
consistent with Belgian Congo's official status: not a colony of Belgium but the
personal property of the Belgian King.
The blue background with a white stripe may be influenced by the (pre-existing?)
blue flag with the stripe standing either for the equator line which crosses the
territory or for the eponymous river Congo/Zaire.
Either way, this design (blue background with a white horizontal stripe) may
have been the basis for the basic design of (the successive versions of) the
municipal flag of Kinshasa (former Leopoldville).
António Martins-Tuválkin, 5 September 2006
I have been reading Thomas Pakenham's "The Scramble for Africa"
(London: Abacus, 1992) which includes the following interesting reference:
Chapter 14, p. 243: In 1884 King Leopold of Belgium was looking for
international recognition for the newly invented flag of the International
Association of the Congo. Pakenham adds that the design of a blue flag with a
gold star was "borrowed from the old kingdom of Congo in Angola",
a fact that is not mentioned in any of your articles.
Unfortunately, although the book is footnoted, this reference is not.
Kenneth Fraser, 3 March 2011
From a series of Cigarette Silks Iron-on Transfers, the subject of which
is: Nation Animals & Flags, the flag of the Belgian Congo.
(source)
Olivier Touzeau, 28 October 2002
Flag in b/w shown here
(archived here) as the first of the
3×2=6 flags on p.14 of [niz48], the 19081960 flag of the
Belgian Congo, recanvased to 1:2.
(While this book is mostly about the national flag of Israel, its design
and usage, there are several illustrations showing other flags, mostly
of national flags of other countries, some of them as flag diagrams, and all of them in 1:2 ratio.)
António Martins, 30 November 2024