Buy State Flags from Allstate FlagsBuy US flags from Five Star Flags
This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website

Miscellaneous Flags (North Korea)

Last modified: 2006-01-07 by phil nelson
Keywords: north korea | supreme commander: north korea | stamp | star: red | star: silver | star: gold | hammer and sickle: 17 | rice plant | worker |
Links: FOTW homepage | search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors



See also:


Flag of the Supreme Commander

image from stamp
[Supreme Commander - Head of State] contribued by Jordi Perez

A stamp from North Korea shows this flag, mentioned as "Flag of the Supreme Commander and an officer of military parade". It a flag for the Head of State, as Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces?
Jordi Perez, 15 November 2001

Supreme Commander flag to April 2002
[Supreme Commander - Head of State] image by Željko Heimer
Proportions: 2:3
Source: Correction numéro 3 ŕ l’ Album des Pavillons nationaux et des Marques distinctives [pay03]

Alternative version
[Supreme Commander - Head of State] image by Željko Heimer
Proportions: 1:2

Supreme Commander flag since April 2002
[Supreme Commander - Head of State] image by Željko Heimer
Proportions: 2:3

Alternative version
[Supreme Commander - Head of State] image by Željko Heimer
Proportions: 1:2
Source: Correction numéro 4 ŕ l’ Album des Pavillons nationaux et des Marques distinctives [cor03]

The is included in the Corr 3. of the Album 2000 with the note that it is not confirmed. In the Corr. 4 of the Album it was replaced with a similar but slightly different (and multicoloured) version, still noted to be unconfirmed.
Željko Heimer, 22 October 2005


The flag seems to have changed in April 2002 to the present one according to North Korea Magazine and videos.

Both former and new flags have two version: 2:3 emblem centered; 1:2 emblem towards hoist
Nozomi Kariyasu, 23 October 2005

See also:


Dubious 1948 flag

[1948 reported flag of Korea] image by David Martucci

The Flag Bulletin [fbn], Vol. XIII, No. 5 [#51] September-October 1974, pgs. 99-108 contains an article by Whitney Smith (and illustrated by Dave Martucci) entitled "Symbols of the K.D.P.R." of which the following is excerpted:

The first documentation available to the Western world concerning the arms and flag of this new state [the Korean Democratic People's Republic] appears to be that presented in the Album de Banderas y Escudos de Todo el Mundo, published in Barcelona by Fher (in 1948?). ...

Reference is made in this book to the proclamation of a Communist Republic in North Korea and a flag of most unusual--if doubtfully authentic--design is illustrated. The field is square and red; it bears a white disc in the center surrounded by seventeen crossed yellow hammers and sickles. Within the disc is a worker dressed in blue cap, overalls, and apron, plus a pink shirt; he is holding a hammer. To his left are green plants, presumably intended to be rice, growing from water. Between these two emblems (symbolic of industry and agriculture) is a red star.

This flag may be pure fantasy, perhaps created when the publishers found they were unable to determine the correct design needed to fill the space in their album planned for the Korean Democratic People's Republic. Another possibility is that this flag was actually flown officially (or unofficially) during the period between Soviet liberation and the September 1948 proclamation of the republic. Finally, it could be that a somewhat similar flag was in actual use, its details having been distorted through reconstruction of the flag from a written description. This author believes the first alternative most likely.

Another intriguing reference to a flag for the Korean Democratic People's Republic about which no further information seems to be available is found in Robert Payne's Red Storm Over Asia. He states on p. 236: 'We may still see the Tibetans flying a flag like the flag which Kim Il Sung designed for northern Korea: a white powerhouse on a blue ground below a red star.' This suggests a flag based on the coat of arms of the Korean Democratic People's Republic or, possibly, confusion in the mind of the author between that coat of arms and the flag of the country."

David Martucci, 28 September 1999