Last modified: 2018-12-15 by rob raeside
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Netherlands army units carry a color (vaandel) or standard (standaard)
depending on whether the unit is considered "mounted" or not. The
difference between the two is the size, the vaandel for foot units
being 87 cm square, the vaandel for mechanized units 60 cm square,
and the standaard for mounted units 50 cm square. All of these
are made of orange silk, with
the initial of the monarch hand embroidered in metallic gold thread
beneath the royal crown in full color on the center. The field is
bordered by orange branches in color. For army regiments and similar
units, the name of the unit is inscribed in straight lines of gold
letters below the royal initial, and the battle honors in arcs of gold
letters surrounding it. The reverse is framed with orange branches
like the obverse, but with the royal coat of arms in full color (without
the pavilion) encircled by a green oak and laurel wreath. The flag
is trimmed on all four sides with 25 mm gold fringe on all four sides.
The pike is black, 2.5 m long for foot units, 2.2 m for mechanized, and
2 m for mounted, with a gilt bronze finial consisting of a column surrounded
by an oak wreath, supporting a rectangular platform 17 x 7 x 7 cm, on which
rests a lion couchant holding a sword over his right shoulder, his left
forepaw resting on a sheaf of seven arrows. The platform is inscribed
with the royal initial on the short sides and the motto "Konigin en
Vaderland (Queen and Fatherland)" on the long sides. Below the
finial are tied a 50 cm gold cord with tassels and, if entitled, an orange
cravat embroidered with additional battle honors and orange leaves.
Units that have been cited for valor have the appropriate decoration tied
to the wreath portion of the finial on a 30 cm long ribbon.
The flags of guards regiments have, in addition to the above, an 11 mm strip of gold braid surrounding the field in addition to the 25 mm fringe.
The initials of all three of the Netherlands most recent queens appear on current colors and standards, "W" for Wilhelmina, "J" for Juliana, and "B" for Beatrix. The old initials seem to appear even on new colors of some units. The regulation on the flags says the following in Dutch which I believe explains the practice; hopefully someone will translate it:
At renewal of the cloth the existing initial will be maintained. Eventual new assigned inscriptions will be added. If the unit carrying the banner or standard gets a new name it will become a new unit, which will inherit the traditional values of the former unit, among which the right to carry its own new banner or standard. The initial of the King, who signed the Royal Resolution for the formation of the unit, will be put on it.
Two units, the Royal Military Academy and the Royal Military School, have somewhat different designs, that of the academy being especially elaborate, but both with the same principle of orange silk field bearing a royal cipher in gold. I will describe them in a later post in this series.
Source: DP-20-30, Vaandels en Standaarden bij de Nederlandse
Krijgsmacht (Colors and Standards of the Netherlands Armed Forces),
available in Dutch
online.
Joseph McMillan, 14 Mar 2005
The Johan Willem Friso Infantry Regiment was formed in 1950 by amalgamating
several units dating back to the Netherlands regaining of independence
following the Napoleonic Wars. It is now an armored infantry battalion.
The color has the initial J for Queen Juliana on the center and battle
honors for "Tiendaagse Veldtocht 1831" in the upper hoist and "Citadel
van Antwerpen 1832" in the upper fly. A third battle honor, for "Java
en Sumatra 1946-1949" appears on a cravat tied below the finial.
The reverse is the same for all Dutch colors and standards with a few
special exceptions.
Joseph McMillan, 14 Mar 2005
The Koninklijke Marechaussee is one of the four Dutch military services.
It is a police force with both military and civil roles, similar to the
French Gendarmerie or the Italian Carabinieri, and functions under the
supervision of several different ministries depending on the duties being
carried out. As a historically mounted unit (and it still has a horse-mounted
component, which provides an escort to the Queen on ceremonial occasions)
the Marechaussee carries a standard (standaard), 50 x 50 cm, of the same
design as other colors and standards. Since the Koninklijke Marechaussee's
first standard was presented in 1931 by Queen Wilhelmina, the standard
carries the initial W, but has no battle honors inscribed. As will
be seen by comparing this flag with that of the Johan Willem Friso Infantry
Regiment, the size of the royal initial is adjusted depending on the other
inscriptions on the flag. The reverse is the usual reverse with the
Netherlands
royal arms.
Joseph McMillan, 15 Mar 2005
Another military color from the Netherlands, this time turning to the Navy (Koninklijke Marine.)
Most colors (vaandels) of naval commands are of the same basic design as those of the Army. The principal difference is that the date the organization was established is inscribed on a line above its designation. As with the army, battle honors are inscribed in arcs surrounding the royal initial of the sovereign who presented the organization its first color.
Colors are authorized for the following naval organizations, with the
date the first color was presented in parentheses:
- Corps of Cadets of the Royal Institute for the Navy (1904)
- Marine Corps (1929)
- Submarine Service (1964)
- Naval Aviation Service (1964)
- Mine Service (1982)
- Fleet (2002)
Although its history dates back over 500 years, the Fleet (Eskader)
of the Royal Netherlands Navy was not issued a color until 2002.
It therefore bears the initial B for Queen Beatrix. Battle honors
are inscribed for Krijgsverrichtingen 's Lands Vloot [War Operations
of the National Fleet] 1597-1795, Krijgsverrichtingen 's Lands Vloot 1816-1870,
Nederlands-Indie
1817-1927, and Tweede Wereldoorlog [Second World War] 1940-1945.
The reverse is the same as for the army colors.
Joseph McMillan, 17 Mar 2005
The image of the colour posted with your posting, shows the colour of
the Fleet with the date 1488. Now, I am no expert on Dutch history,
but to the best of my knowledge the Eighty Years War which eventually led
to the recognition of the independence of the Netherlands Republic from
Spain, commenced in approximarely 1572 with the capture of Den Briel
from the Spanish and ended in 1648 with the Peace of Westphalia (or Münster).
How come the Eskader can claim its date of establishment as 1488 when
the Dukes of Burgundy were still their overlords - a century earlier than
the commencement of the war of independence?
Andries Burgers, 25 Mar 2005
See the website
of the Royal Netherlands Navy:
"The central authority tried to get more influence on the war fleet,
but in vain. In 1488 Maximilian of Habsburg issued the Ordinance about
the Admiralty, with which for the first time a permanent navy organisation
for the Netherlands was founded. The defense at sea was regulated legally
and commissioned to an admiral as replacement of the prince. The headstrong
Dutch sea-region however continued to form its own war fleets without knowledge
of the admiral."
Mark Sensen, 25 Mar 2005
The Korps Mariniers (Marine Corps) of the Royal Netherlands Navy was
established on 10 December 1665 as the Regiment de Marine. Its present
name was adopted in 1817 and its first color (vaandel) was presented by
Queen Wilhelmina on 16 September 1929. The flag generally follows
the pattern for other vaandels of the Netherlands armed forces, except
that the border wreath of orange branches is interrupted in each corner
by a dark blue fouled anchor surrounded by a laurel wreath. As with
other naval units, the name of the Korps Mariniers on the obverse of the
flag is preceded by the date of its establishment, 1665. The obverse
is also inscribed with battle honors for Spain, Algiers, West Indies, Sennefe,
Kijkduin, Dogger Bank, Atjeh, Bali, Chatham (the daring and devastating
raid conducted on the British fleet in the Medway in 1667), Rotterdam,
Java Sea, Java and Madoera, and New Guinea.
The ribbon and medal of the Military Order of William, the country's
highest honor for gallantry, is tied to the wreath portion of the finial
described in an earlier message.
Since the anchors in the corners differentiates both sides of this flag
from others of the Netherlands Armed Forces, I'm sending images of both
sides.
Joseph McMillan, 20 Mar 2005
Until 1814, Dutch and Belgian units were part of the French Army, and
there had only been enough time to re-organise the regiments into a non-Bonpartist
force before the Campaign of the Hundred Days took place.
A committee, under a Lieut.-General Janssens, was set up in August
1814 to consider the matter of colours and standards, but did not report
back until December 1815, and the first issues of the pattern that the
committee had decided on were not made until 23rd September 1820!
The colours that you thinking of are the '1815' pattern, which have appeared in at least one book, along with a speculative statement to the effect that these 'might have been carried' in the Waterloo campaign, but this was not the case.
For the record, the body of the flag, both colour and cavalry standard,
was orange. On one side (with the staff on the viewer's left) was a crowned
letter W, with the regimental designation underneath, both in gold; around
the four edges was a wavy gold laurel wreath. On the other side were the
arms of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The shield was blue and was strewn
with small upright rectangles; the main device was a crowned rampant lion,
holding a sword in its upper paw. The lion and rectangles were gold, whilst
the blade of the sword was silver. Supporting the shield on either side
was a gold rampant lion, facing outwards towards the viewer. There was
a gold crown above the shield; whilst below it was a blue scroll with the
motto Je Maintiendrai in gold. The shield and lions were surrounded
by a wreath of green palm leaves, and there was another wavy gold laurel
wreath around the edge.
The infantry colour was 90cm x 60cm, the cavalry standard 50cm square,
with a gold fringe. The staff was black wood, the finial was a simple gold
laurel wreath at this period.
A company of volunteer riflemen carried a company marker, perhaps 30cm square, which was composed of yellow and green quarters, with a border of the opposite colour, and marked on it in gold capitals conp / vriy // villeg / jager. The unit which carried it is unknown, but it may have been attached to one of those in the field. The line infantry equivalent may have been coloured in blue and white.
My sources are:
The block and lion were not part of the original pattern, but were introduced
soon afterwards, at some time in the 1820s.
Battle honours were not awarded for the Waterloo campaign until 7th
August 1896 for some regiments,; on 3rd November 1913 for others; and for
the Engineers, not until 1927. The first award of the Willemsorde
was in 1849, to 7th Infantry Battalion, but I don't know if there was any
particular reason.
Ian Sumner, 7 Mar 1999
Which part of the 17th century? For the war with Spain, you could try
Braekman, E. M., 'L'armée des gueux', in: Revue belge d'histoire
militaire 19 (1971) pp 5-46
van Ham, W.A.: 'Symbolen uit de opstand in de Nederlanden: vaandels,
standaarden, pennoenen en uniformen van Nederlanders, Schotten, Fransen
en Spanjaarden rond 1600, volgens het Manuscript De Gortter', in: De Nederlandsche
Leeuw, 95th year, no.9, September 1978, columns (it doesn't seem to have
page numbers) 263-306
van Kerkhoven, J.G., 'Een veelomstreden vendelvlag uit 1600?', in:
Armamentaria 22 (1988) pp.9-25
Smit, J.P.W.A., De legervlaggen uit an aanvang van den 80-jarigen oorlog
(Assen, van Gorcum & Co., 1938)
Salomonson, J. W., 'The officers of the white banner: a civic guard
portrait by Jacob Willemsz', in: Simiolus 18 (1988) pp 13-62
Sierksma, K., 'Nederländische Kriegsflaggen des 17. Jahrhundert',
in: Proceedings of the 1st International Congress on Vexillology, Muiderberg,
1965 pp 47-51
Van Ham's article is simply an analysis of the illustrations in the de Gortter manuscript (in the Koninklijke Bibliotheek, Brussels) and includes a good number of coloured and black-and-white repreductions. Smit covers some of the same ground, but the de Gortter illustrations are in black and white; on the other hand, it does use a number of other contemporary sources as well, and has a more general text. Both have good bibliographies. Don't know the others, I'm afraid. I don't know of a complete _vexillological_ analysis of colours in civic guard portraits (now there is a project for someone!).
If you mean the Nine Years' War and the War of the Spanish Succession
against France, then try
[Belaubre, J.], Les armées qui combattirent Louis XIV 3: Les
Provinces Unies des Pays Bas 1er partie - Gueldre (Paris, The Author, n.d.)
Belaubre, J., Les armées qui combattirent Louis XIV: Les Provinces
Unies 2 - Frise, Groningue, Overijssel, Drenthe (Paris, The Author, n.d.)
Belaubre, J., Les armées qui combattirent Louis XIV 5: [Les
Provinces Unies] 3e partie Zélande, Hollande cavalerie (Paris, The
Author, n.d.)
Belaubre, J. and De Wilde, F. G., Les armées qui combattirent
Louis XIV: Les Provinces Unies 4 - Infanterie de Hollande (1ère
partie) (Paris, The Authors, n.d.)
Belaubre, J., 'Les drapeaux pris aux régiments suisses au service
néerlandais pendant la campagne de 1712', in Vexilla Helvetica 2
(2) (1972) pp 15-22
Goldberg, Claus-Peter, Bemalungsangaben für die Zeit des Spanischen
Erbfolgekrieges 1701-14 (Hannover-Linden, Siegbert Wagner, no date [but
the 1960s])
Rochat, Michel et al., 'Nouvelles des drapeaux flammés', in
Vexilla Helvetica, 9, 2000-01, pp.87-107 [includes 'Les drapeaux des régiments
suisses au service de Hollande, figurant dans "Les Triomphes de Louis XIV"',
pp.92-100]
The Belaubre books are very good, and includes black and white illustrations
of regimental colours; the Goldberg book covers some of the same ground,
but Belaubre also includes the 1670s-90s.
Ian Sumner, 5 Jan 2008