Last modified: 2021-07-17 by rob raeside
Keywords: armenia | armenian ssr | hammer and sickle (yellow) | star: 5 points (fimbriated) | ararat | grapes: 1 (golden) | wheat |
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Dark blue bar in the middle of the flag, 1/4 width;
approved on 17 December 1952.
Željko Heimer, 17 April 1996
Specs.: stripes 3+2+3; hammer-and-sickle placement and size unknown!
(Identical to the Moldavian flag except
for the color.)
António Martins, 19 June 2001
The Third Republic of Armenia was proclaimed
on September 21, 1991.
Gevork Nazaryan, 24 March 2001
image by Željko Heimer, 19 June 2001 | |
No hammer, sickle and star on the
reverse side.
Mark Sensen, 25 May 1997
Officially reverse looked like obverse without star and hammer-sickle.
But in fact I never saw these flags without star, hammer-sickle. Real flags
(all 15) usually were either with reverse analogous
to obverse (but with star and hammer-and-sickle near the hoist) or with
reverse = mirrored obverse.
Victor Lomantsov, 30 November 2002
Draft designs of the flag of Armenian SSR, from the database of National Gallery of Armenia (item No: 12122-12160).
(image1,
image2)
http://www.gallery.am/en/database/item/12139
Jason Saber, 08 May 2016
There are in total at least 141 flag proposals in this database.
This is where you can find them all.
Jos Poels, 09 May 2016
The emblem was introduced in 1937
(according to Hesmer [hes92])
and replaced by the current one (already used in
1919) in 1992. The inescutcheon of the current emblem
shows the Mt. Ararat, which was also the central symbol in 1937-1992.
M. Schmöger, 16 September 2001
The coat-of-Arms of Soviet Armenia was illustrated from an initial
prototype sketch by Martiros Sarian, a famous Armenian painter of the XXth
century. Mount Ararat, the symbol of the Armenian nation, is at the center
of the coat-of-Arms of Soviet Armenia. Grapes immediately beneath Mount
Ararat represent the Biblical traditional account of the first vineyard
that Noah, who is considered the patriarch of the Armenian people, planted
upon his descent from Mount Ararat after the Great Flood as a sign of
rebirth of humanity. The inner rim on the sides of the grapes includes
wheat, symbolic of the sacredness of the soil. Above Mount Ararat is the
Red Star with hammer and sickle and geometric rays encompassing the Red
Star. In the center of the outer rim is the famous motto of «Proletarians
of all countries, unite!» continued with spiral Armenian caption «the
Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic».
Gevork Nazaryan, 24 March 2001
I translated the words written on the coat of arms of the Armenian
SSR ("Հայկական
Սովետական
Սոցիալիստական
Հանրապետություն
| Haykakan Sovetakan Soc̛ialistakan Hanrapetowt̛yown")
and got this: Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic,
of course.
Carsten Linke, 6 June 1996 (updated)