Last modified: 2004-11-27 by phil nelson
Keywords: finland: historical flags (1920-1978) | scandinavian cross | lion: with sword (yellow) | cross of freedom | mannerheim (gustaf) |
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1920-1978:
See also:
by
Zeljko Heimer
Proportions: 11:18 = (4:3:4) : (5+3+10)
Adopted: 1920-02-12
Abolished: 1978-05-26
Editorial Note: The shade of blue differs from that of the current flag. although the proportions and other graphical information is the same
by Zeljko Heimer
Source: Flaggenbuch (1939)
Proportions: 11:18 = (4+3+4):(5+3+10)
Adopted: 12 February 1920
Abolished: 26 May 1978
White flag with blue cross and the Finnish coat of arms in the middle of the cross.
Because Finland decided to be a republic instead of a monarchy,
the government thought that the crown should be removed. The
shield became almost a square. Lion's armoured arm and the
blades of the weapons are coloured light grey but the roses are
white. The shade of the blue became darker.
Ossi Raivio 25 October 1998
by Zeljko Heimer
Source: Flaggenbuch (1939)
Proportions: 11:18 = (4+3+4):(5+3+10)
Adopted: 12 February 1920
Abolished: 26 May 1978
by Zeljko Heimer
Ratio: 11:19 = (4+3+4):(5+3+5+6)
Adopted: 17 May 1920
Temporarily out of use: 1944-1946
Abolished: 26 May 1978
Source: Flaggenbuch (1939)
Finnish swallow-tailed state flag with a blue-yellow Cross
of Freedom 3rd Class for Civil Merits in the upper hoist. (But:
a yellow disk in the middle, instead of the yellow rose used
today [see the present presidential
flag].)
by Ossi Raivio 27 October 1998
Presidential Pennant
by Zeljko
Heimer
Source: Flaggenbuch (1939)
by Ossi Raivio 27 October 1998
Finnish swallow-tailed state flag with a special emblem in the upper hoist: two crossed blue-yellow Marshall's staffs (decorated with yellow-white Finnish lions).
Ratio: 11:19 = (4+3+4):(5+3+5+6)
Adopted: 1944
Abolished: 1946
Marshall of Finland, Baron Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim used this flag to symbolize his position as the High Commander of the army and the President of the Republic. When Juho Kusti Paasikivi was elected president by the parliament after the war, he re-adopted the former version of the flag.
I don't know the exact dates when this flag was adopted and
abolished, but because C. G. E. Mannerheim was president from 4
August 1944 to 9 March 1946 these are quite good guesses.
Ossi Raivio
The Karelian-Finnish Soviet
Socialist Republic was established 31 March 1940 and
combined the territory of the former Karelian ASSR with areas taken from
Finland in the Winter War.
Jan Oskar Engene 29 May 1997
At the beginning of the Winter War (Nov./Dec. 1939) Kuusinen (leader of Finnish communist emigrants in the USSR) formed a communist government in Terijoki near the border with the USSR. This was (off course) recognized by the USSR as the legal Finnish government, although later the peace-treaty was signed with the government in Helsinki.
(Source: "Aanval op Finland" by Drs. Paul Luykx et.al. in
"Bericht van de Tweede Wereldoorlog").
Mark Sensen 29 May 1997