Last modified: 2006-08-19 by ivan sache
Keywords: serbia | karadjordje | swords: 2 (blue) | cross (white) | crown (white) | crescent (white) | star: 8 points (yellow) | star: 7 points (yellow) | ocila | firesteel | boar |
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Karađorđe led the so-called First Serbian Uprising (1804-1813) against Ottoman Turks. It is known that the Hapsburg monarchy provided Serbian forces with weapons and other war necessities, as well as flags. There was a flag embroidery store in Sremski Karlovci in wich these flags were made.
Ivan Sarajčić, 15 January 1999
The guidebook of the Military Museum in Belgrade [gmb8X] describes flags from the First Serbian Uprising.
On page 45 two flags are shown. The first one is the most famous flag from that period, and it was also showed on several Yugoslav stamps. It is a square banner with painted heraldical emblem consisting of two almond-shaped (mandel) coats of arms - Serbia (cross with four ocila) and Rascia (arrow pierced boar's head), Below this on the page, there are some weapons including two different flags (one seems to be monocoloured, the other is red with a wide white cross troughout). The flag is ringed on all sides.
The other flag shown on the same page is a banner for vertical hoisting, roughly in ratio 1:1, swallow-tailed with tongue, where indentations reach some 1/3 into the flag. It seems that the flag was yellow or white, and have painted three "Teutonic" crosses (red?) 1/3 from the top.
The text beside these pictures does not say anything about them,
apart from the caption: "The banners from the First Serbian uprising".
However, on page 48 there is the description of the showcase
9/room 21, which I believe consists of the aforementioned two flags:
Banner from the early days of the Uprising, 1804.
In the beginning of the Uprising, the banners were borrowed from churches or some of the haiduk [partisan fighters of pre-Uprising period] banners were used. Since 1805, Karađorđe and other outstanding leaders ordered banners from Vojvodina. The banners were without any fixed colours or heraldic signs.
Later, on page 49, showcase 13 is described, but unfortunately there are no images with the text:
Banners and clothing of the Serbian regular army from 1809-1810.
The Government Council (Praviteljstvujuči sovjet) decided in 1808 to establish a regular army, although the people's army, which in the middle of 1813 numbered about 50,000 men, remained the backbone of the armed forces until the end of the Uprising. The banners for the regular insurgent army were made in 1809. They were light yellow with painted symbols on both sides of the banner and with an inscription. The heraldic signs, a cross with characteristic symbols and a wild boar's head pierced with an arrow, were taken from the work of Hristofer Zeferović Stematogerfija (Stematography). The cross originates from the Serbian medieval heraldry and the boar's head is an alleged coat of arms of the Serbian Empire (it appears for the first time in the XVth century).
On the same page there is the description of another flag:
Commander's banner.
In 1811, when the rank of voivode was established, red and white banners, probably made in Russia, were also assigned.
Željko Heimer, 31 January 1998
Flag found in Gračaniča - Image by Ivan Sarajčić, 15 January 1999
This flag was found in the belfry of the Gračaniča church, near Valjevo (Serbia). It is unusual in Serbia, horizontally divided red-blue-red with three tails. The tails are curved triangles. The central emblem contains a cross with four tilted ocila, two branches, crown, cross, and saber.
Source: Vojne zastave Srba do 1918 (Military flags of Serbs until 1918), Vojni Muzej, Belgrade, 1983.
Ivan Sarajčić, 15 January 1999
Unidentified flag, reverse and obverse - Images by Ivan Sarajčić, 15 January 1999
This flag with different sides was made before 1807. It is another example of unusual colors (blue-red-blue). Besides that, it has white parts, thick red borders and unusual symbols: a white crescent with yellow seven-pointed star on the obverse and an eight-pointed star on the reverse. It is still unindentified, and the only doubtless fact is that it flew with a little Serbian tricolor attached above on the hoist.
Source: Vojne zastave Srba do 1918 (Military flags of Serbs until 1918), Vojni Muzej, Belgrade, 1983.
Ivan Sarajčić, 15 January 1999
Nahum Shereshevsky's Heraldry in Philately includes a Yugoslav postage stamp (15 YUD; inscribed "STT VUJNA" and "1804-1954"), showing what seems to be a military flag, with a golden background, a red wolfteeth border and two shields over a black arm
holding a scimitar. The shields are: at hoist, or a boar's head
sable, at fly Serbia (gules around a cross argent throughout four
firesteels
This is commemorative stamp issued for the 150th anniversary
of the First Serbian Uprising against the
Ottoman Empire.
António Martins & Valentin Poposki, 9 January 2006
The Yugoslav stamps overprinted or inscribed STT VUJNA referred to the
Yugoslav occupation of Zone B, as the southern portion
of the Territory of Trieste was known in the years
immediately after the Second World War.
Zone A consisted of the northern part of the
Territory, including the city of Trieste itself. Zone
A was eventually annexed to Italy during the
mid-1950s, while Zone B became first part of
Yugoslavia and after the breakup of that country it
became part of Slovenia.
Certain corrections were actually made when the zones were disbanded so
Yugoslavia actually got a bit more than just zone B.
STT stands for Slobodna teritorija Trsta, Free Territory of Trieste, and
VUJA (later VUJNA) for Vojna uprava Jugoslavenske (Narodne)
Armije, Military Government of the Yugoslav (People's) Army.
Ron Lahav & Željko Heimer, 11 January 2006
The stamp is numbered 625 in the Jugomarka catalogue (the main Yugoslav
catalogue) and 797 in Zumstein, 656 in Yvert, 751 in Michel and 778 in Stanly Gibbons. The STT overprint is Yu 138, Zu 141, Yv 104
and Mi 135. The Jugomarka catalogue describes it simply as a flag
from the period of uprising. Stanley Gibbons desribes it as "Serbian flag".
It is not known if there is an actual flag on which this was based.
Željko Heimer & Richard Mallett, 11 January 2006