Last modified: 2025-03-29 by martin karner
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Flag of Seelze, Germany; Flag of Veltheim, Switzerland;
Flag of Galafura e Covelinhas, Portugal
Flag of Leuzigen, Switzerland;
Flag of Northeim County (Germany);
Flag of Laranjeiro, Portugal
Flag showing the Allies in the Great War
c1914
Command Flags/Flags of Command of an Admiral,
Vice Admiral and Rear-Admiral, Croatia
Squadron Command Pennants: UK;
Denmark;
Flotilla Command Pennant: The Netherlands
Notes
a) With regard to 1) not to be confused with the senior
officer afloat pennant which (certainly in the case NATO and related services, and of countries whose navy
bases its traditions on those of the RN) is only flown whilst alongside or in harbour.
b) A distinction has been drawn between the standard masthead pennant flown
by commissioned warships (occasionally called a pennant of command), and the command
pennants as defined above that are flown subordinate to it.
c)
Further to 1), in the former Austro-Hungarian Navy and in some others, the practice of
hoisting a command pennant with (or without) the hoist being stiffened by a frame was itself indicative of rank
see ‘frame 2)’.
C-in-C’s Commendation Banner, Canada
Navy Unit Commendation Pennant, US (Seaflags)
Golden Jubilee of HM The Queen 2002, UK;
WWII Commemorative Flag, US;
IAF 60th Anniversary Flag
TZQ in the 1866 Commercial Code of Signals
House Flag of Allantone Supplies Ltd., UK;
Flag of the Arctic Steam Fishing Co. Ltd., UK;
Commercial Flag/Civil Ensign, Spain 17851927
Flag of McDonalds, Worldwide
Commissioning/Masthead Pennant,
Canada
Commodore’s Broad Pennant, Pakistan
The Common/Tricolour Pendant, England then UK 1661c1850
Notes
a) Display of a common/tricolour pendent
became (or was designed as) a visual indication that the vessel wearing it
was under Admiralty orders and (therefore) not subject to the authority of
any local flag officer whether of the red, white or the blue
see ‘distinction of colour’, however;
b) There is evidence to suggest that, when introduced, its use was less restricted than became the practice later.
Company Colour, No 1 Company, 1st Battalion of The Irish Guards, UK (Graham Bartram); No 2 Company, Governor General’s Foot Guards, Canada (Official Website)
Please note that, while ten was the theoretic maximum, and six or seven the more usual, a regimental stand of nine colours was not unknown for an English regiment of foot in the mid-17th century.
Flag of BOAC, UK
National Arms 19322000, South Africa;
A Flag for Generals at Sea 16491653, England (CS);
National Arms, Tanzania
Flag of Cambridge, UK; Arms of
the Dukes of Wellington, UK (Wikipedia);
Flag of Bexley, UK
Flag of Estévenens, Switzerland
Flag of Zeihen, Switzerland
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