Last modified: 2024-06-08 by rob raeside
Keywords: royal standard | queen | prince regent | crown prince | coat of arms: yugoslavia | crowns: 4 |
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Royal standard, first version - Images by Željko Heimer, 11 November 2003
Left, after Neubecker
Right, after local sources
The 1922 law does not prescribe the Royal standard. In fact it does mention it in Article 12, first paragraph:
For the hoisting (use) of the royal standards shall be valid the decisions of His Majesty the King.
This sentence is the only one in the law mentioning the Royal standard, leaving it to the King's whim, in a way. Therefore it is not surprising that sources have different representation of it. Neubecker's 1936 Flaggenbuch [neu39], as well as 1926 Flaggenbuch [d9e26], shows the Royal coat of arms placed in the middle of a square tricolour flag bordered with tricolour triangles.
Local sources show a variant of the Royal standard where the greater state coat of arms is placed in the middle instead of the Royal coat of arms. These sources are Isaić [isa01], p. 27, showing the set of naval flags of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, no doubt based on an (unnamed) source from the 1920s-1930s, and an other chart I got in personal correspondence from Isaić, being a photocopy from some book or encyclopaedia of that period. As the two sources show very similar images, I suppose that the first may be based on the second.
Željko Heimer, 11 November 2003
Royal standard, second version - Image by Željko Heimer, 22 November 2003
The Royal standard (Standart Kralja) prescribed in the 1937 law is a dark red square flag with tricolour triangles around the border and a yellow fimbriated white cross formy throughout over which is set the state coat of arms. The artistic representation of the coat of arms is modernized from the 1920s design used previously, and lacks the red background shield.
The cross has the shape of the cross used on the Order of the Karađorđe's Star (Orden Karađorđeve zvezde). It is the highest order of Serbia, established after the Karađorđević dynasty took over the Obrenović dynasty. It was established in 1904 as part of the centenary celebrations of the First Serbian Uprising. The order was continued to be awarded in the Kingdoms of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and Yugoslavia, and the holders of the Order were granted certain rights even after the Second World War. In his book Odlikovanja (Zagreb, 1984), Boris Priester, the Croatian expert in orders, calls the cross the Rupert's cross.
Željko Heimer, 22 November 2003
Queen's standard - Image by Željko Heimer, 16 November 2003
Standards for other members of the Royal family than the King seem to have been introduced for the first time in the 1937 law. The Queen's standard (Standart Kraljice) was similar to the King's standard but without the cross.
Željko Heimer, 16 November 2003
Prince Regent's standard - Image by Željko Heimer, 16 November 2003
The standard of the Prince Regent as a member of the Royal House (Standart Kneza Namesnika, u svojstvu Člana Kraljevskog Doma) is presribed by the 1937 law. The flag is similar to the Queen's standard but with a blue instead of red background.
When King Alexander I was murdered in 1934 in Marseilles, young Crown Prince Peter (1923-1970) was not yet an adult. Therefore, a Regency was constituted to act in his name. If I am not mistaken, the Regency (Namjesnistvo) consisted of three members - one being Alexander's brother, Prince Paul (Pavle) Karađorđ:ević, and the other two Radenko Stanković and Ivo Perović. The latter two were actually only the figures, and the Prince Regent in practice inherited the absolute power from King Alexander. The Regency was formally dissolved only after the German occupation of Yugslavia (1941), when Peter was in exile in London, where he was proclaimed adult (and King Peter II) on his 18th birthday.
It seems clear that the standard shown above was used by the Prince Regent, while the other flag prescribed for Regents was probably for the use of the two other members of the Regency.
Željko Heimer, 16 November 2003
Crown Prince's standard - Image by Željko Heimer, 18 November 2003
The Crown Prince's standard (Standart Prestolonasljednika) is prescribed in the 1937 law. It is a blue square flag with the coat of arms in the middle and four royal crowns, one in each corner.
Željko Heimer, 18 November 2003
Royal House members' standard - Image by Željko Heimer, 18 November 2003
The Royal House members' standard (Standart Članova Kraljevskog Doma) is prescribed in the 1937 law. It is similar to the Crown Prince's standard but without the crowns.
Željko Heimer, 18 November 2003
image located by Bill Garrison, 16 May 2024
Source: https://en.topwar.ru/177945-padenie-karageorgievichej-poslednie-koroli-serbii-i-jugoslavii.html
King Peter II Karageorgievich and regent Pavel (Prince Regent Paul and Peter
II at the review of the royal guard).
This flag is certainly understudied -
flags of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia seem to have been long neglected due to
ideological reasons, first in favour of WW2 Partisan and post-WW2 Socialist
Yugoslav flags, then in favour of pre-1918 Serbian flags. However, the flag is
certainly a specimen of Royal Yugoslav military colours, being derived from
their pre-1918 Serbian counterparts: a square flag in national colors, bearing
the national arms in circular form and the motto, inherited from Serbian flags
as well, only the second part of it being visible on this photo - ZA KRALJA I
OTADŽBINU (For the King and Fatherland); the first part - S VEROM U BOGA (With
faith in God) is inscribed above the arms on the part of the top field which is
folded away from the viewer.
According to [szd83],
Serbian pre-1918 colours, as adopted in 1908, had actually been charged with
the arms on the reverse side only, while the obverse side was charged with a
circular medallion bearing the depiction of St Andrew the Apostle, official
patron saint of Serbia; also, two parts of the motto had actually had swapped
places in comparison with the Yugoslav colours. As can be seen, the Yugoslav
flags had had the arms on the obverse as well, since the religious imagery was
dropped due to the new country being multi-confessional, unlike Serbia, which
was predominantly Orthodox Christian.
Whether this flag, being used by
the royal guard, differed in design details from the other colours and was
there any variation in the design at all, depending on the type of military
unit, I don't know for sure, but I do believe that it was not the case, since
the military colours were already given a uniform design in Serbia in 1908;
being modelled on those, the 1918-1941 Yugoslav colours must have had a uniform
design as well.
Tomislav Todorovic, 16 May 2024