Last modified: 2017-11-11 by rob raeside
Keywords: fiav | vexillological associations | associations: vexillological | associations: flag | fédération internationale des associations vexillologiques | flag informatoin code |
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The Flag Information Code was adopted on August 27, 1981. The code has been amended only once, on July 5, 1995. The current text of the code is set out below. It contains the exact text as adopted and amended.
The International Federation of Vexillological Associations officially recognizes the following Flag Information Code and recommends its use to its members, to individual vexillologists, and to publishers and others concerned for flags.
(a) to allow basic information about flags to be recorded and transmitted concisely, accurately, and in a manner which (1) insofar as possible eliminates misunderstandings and (2) which is both comprehensible to persons knowing different languages and easy to learn;
(b) to standardize knowledge of flags in order to facilitate comparative studies of flag characteristics;
(c) to provide a convenient system for researchers, publishers, and others to record data for personal use and for exchanges and publication of information; and.
(d) To eliminate, insofar as possible, the confusion that exists in the terminology employed by governments and others to describe national flags and their use.
- | (Light) |
-- | (Very light) |
+ | (dark) |
++ | (very dark) |
Adopted August 27, 1981 by the Seventh Session of the General Assembly held during the Ninth International Congress of Vexillology at Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Amended July 5, 1995 (III. A.) by the Fourteenth Session of the General Assembly held during the Sixteenth International Congress of Vexillology at Warsaw, Poland.
Amended July 23, 2001 (adding new section 1 and renumbering and amending remaining articles) by the Seventeenth Session of the General Assembly held during the International Congress of Vexillology at York, England, United Kingdom.
Credits:
The grid shown for national flag usage was rendered by Antonio Martins