Last modified: 2006-06-03 by phil nelson
Keywords: macau | china | portugal | lotus | star |
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image by Ivan Sarajcic, 26 April 2006
ISO Code: MO MAC 446; CN-92
FIPS 10-4 Code: MC
MARC Code: integrated into China
IOC Code: MAC
Status: special administrative region of China
See also:
Macao adopted the flag prior to re-integration into China on 20 December 1999.
The flag is light green with a white lotus above a stylized bridge and water
and beneath an arc of five stars: one large and four smaller as on the flag of
China. Source: Flagmaster no. 80. Note that the
colour of the stars isn't mentioned.
Mark Sensen, 27 December 1995
On March 8, 1998, the Xinhua news agency (China) ran a feature on the
designer of the Macao flag. The flag selected to represent Macao after
its re-integration into China was designed by Xiao Hong, a professor of arts
and crafts at the Henan University. Xiao's entry was just one of over
1,000 considered for the new design. Xiao designed the flag after
reading a 600-word tourist guide on Macao. The design was further
improved before being approved in 1993. It was not until three years
after the flag was adopted that he first visited Macao. A deputy in the
Henan 163-member delegation to the ninth National People's Congress (NPC), he
became one of the more popular members when the lawmakers learned of his role
designing the flag.
Jan Oskar Engene, 09 March 1998
The Portuguese flags where lowered on November 19 in Macao, replaced by Chinese ones. The ceremonies where not very long, but they where very symmetrical.
It all happened in a pavilion specially built for the occasion. Inside there was a vast stage with a tribune in the background and two speaker's platforms and 4 flag poles in the foreground. It was a very symmetrical ceremony: in the viewer's right it was the "Portuguese sector" with everything (and everybody) Portuguese in it, and in the left the "Chinese sector" with the vice-versa.
Behind the tribune there was a wall where were hanging two big national flags: Portugal in the viewer's right, China in the viewer's left. The speaker's platforms where also identified by national symbols, this time the coat of arms. In the case of the Portuguese coat of arms, is was the minor arms (therefore without laurel and scroll) on a green background, which is unusual.
The poles where sophisticated: despite the ceremony being held indoors, the flags flew through a system that blows air through the interior of the pole. Interesting that the flags only begin flying when they reach the very top of the pole, just hanging sadly in the rest of the "travel" along the pole.
The poles where, as I said, 4: two in the viewer's left and two in the viewer's right. The two poles closer to the center where higher than those at the sides. The difference was about one meter or something similar. Those where the poles where the national flags flew Those at the sides where used to fly the "municipal" flag of Macao under Portuguese administration, that is, the flag of the Leal Senado and the flag of the Special Autonomous Region.
In the beginning only the Portuguese flags flew. And the ceremony begun.
First, entered 3 members of the military forces of each country, the
Portuguese empty-handed and the Chinese carrying the Chinese national flag,
immediately followed by 3 members of the security forces (i. e., police) of
each country, again the Portuguese empty-handed and the Chinese carrying the
flag of the SAR. Later on, when local midnight approached, the Portuguese flag
and the flag of the city of Macao where lowered simultaneously under the
sounds of the Portuguese national anthem. After midnight, the Chinese flag and
the new flag of Macao where hoisted also simultaneously and also under the
sounds of the Chinese anthem. Only after that, the Portuguese flags where
folded and carried away by the military and security people in a mirror image
of what happened previously when the Chinese flags arrived.
Jorge Candeias, 19 November 1999