Flag of Guatemala
Use | State and war flag, state and naval ensign |
---|---|
Proportion | 5:8 |
Adopted | 17 August 1871 |
Design | A vertical triband of Maya blue (hoist-side and fly-side) and white with the National Emblem centered on the white band. |
Civil ensign | |
Use | Civil flag and ensign |
Proportion | 5:8 |
Adopted | 17 August 1871 |
Design | A vertical triband of Maya blue (hoist-side and fly-side) and white. |
The flag of Guatemala, often referred to as the National Pavilion (Pabellón nacional) or the Blue-and-White (Azul y Blanco), features two colors: sky blue and white. According to decree, the two sky blue stripes represents strength, justice, truth and loyalty. The white color signifies purity, integrity, firmness and light.[1] The blue and white colors, like those of several other countries in the region, are based on the flag of the former Federal Republic of Central America.
In the center of the flag is the Guatemalan coat of arms. It includes the resplendent quetzal, the national bird of Guatemala that symbolizes liberty; a parchment scroll bearing the date of Central America's independence from Spain, 15 September 1821; crossed Remington Rolling Block[2] rifles, indicating Guatemala's willingness to defend itself by force if need be; a bay laurel crown, the symbol for victory; and crossed swords, representing honor. It is one of four national flags among UN member states that features a firearm, along with those of Mozambique, Haiti, and Bolivia.
It is one of five national flags that use the ratio 5:8, with the others being Argentina, Palau, Poland, and Sweden.
History
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (December 2022) |
The Federal Republic of Central America flag was used in Guatemala until 1851, when a pro-Spanish faction took over and added the Spanish colors of red and yellow to the flag. The original colors were restored on 17 August 1871, but as vertical (rather than horizontal) stripes in order to distinguish it from other flags and with a new coat of arms.[citation needed]
The resplendent quetzal previously appeared in the 1830s in the flag of Los Altos, the sixth state in the Federal Republic.[citation needed]
In 2008 a flag called the Bandera de Los Pueblos (Flag of indigenous peoples) was adopted by law and is shown together with the national flag of Guatemala in all events featuring the President of Guatemala since then. The flag is divided in four parts, red, yellow, white and black, each colour representing Xinca people, Garifuna people, Maya people, and Ladino people, respectively.[3]
These colours are also part of the Qʼanil, a Maya symbol in which each color represents a point of the compass, an element of nature and a part of the human being. Qʼanil means "seed" in Mayan languages,[which?] and is also one of the 20 days of the Maya calendar.[which?] Aimed at promoting "interculturality"[citation needed] in Guatemala, the Bandera de los Pueblos was received with disinterest by the leaders of the peoples, who do not seem to have been consulted.[4]
Promoting the flag
[edit]Since 1961, 17 August has been commemorated as Flag Day.[5]
Colors
[edit]Color scheme | Maya blue | White | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Pantone[4] | 297 | Safe | ||
RGB | 73-151-208 | 255-255-255 | ||
CMYK | 64.9-27.4-0-18.4 | 0-0-0-0-0 | ||
Web colors | 4997D0 | FFFFFF |
Ethnic group flags
[edit]Flag | Use |
---|---|
Bandera de los Pueblos, flag attributed to indigenous peoples. | |
Flag of Garifuna |
Government flags
[edit]-
Flag of the president of Guatemala
-
Flag of the vice president of Guatemala
-
Flag of the president of the Congress of Guatemala
-
Flag of the president of the Supreme Court of Justice Guatemala
Military flags
[edit]Flag | Use |
---|---|
Flag of the Minister of Defence | |
Flag of the Chief of the General Staff |
Political flags
[edit]Flag | Use |
---|---|
Flag of the National Liberation Movement | |
Flag of the Guatemalan Party of Labour | |
Flag of the Guatemalan National Revolutionary Unity |
Department flags
[edit]Historical flags
[edit]The Guatemalan flag has changed throughout history, arriving to its current design in 1871.
Flag | Date | Use |
---|---|---|
1524–1821 | Flag of the Kingdom of Guatemala | |
1821–1823 | Flag of the First Mexican Empire | |
1823–1824 | Flag of the United Provinces of Central America | |
1824–1838 | Flag of the Federal Republic of Central America | |
1825–1838 | Flag of Guatemala within Central America | |
1838–1843 | Flag of Guatemala | |
1838–1840 1848–1849 |
Flag of the State of Los Altos | |
1843–1851 | Flag of Guatemala | |
1851–1858 | Flag of Guatemala | |
1851–1858 | State Flag of Guatemala | |
1858–1871 | Flag of Guatemala | |
1858–1871 | State Flag of Guatemala | |
1871–1968 | State flag used until 1968, similar to modern flag but with minor differences and additions of blue and white ribbons; some variants contained red ribbons or multiple[6][7] | |
1871–1968 | State Flag of Guatemala (variant, used before c. 1920s) |
References
[edit]- ^ www.congreso.gob.gt https://www.congreso.gob.gt/noticias_congreso/6921/2021/4#gsc.tab=0. Retrieved 3 June 2024.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ "Guatemala". Flagspot.net. Archived from the original on 13 June 2006. Retrieved 31 January 2016.
- ^ Flags of the World page "Guatemala" ,Archived 17 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Flags of the World page "Guatemala" Archived 17 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ AGN (17 August 2023). "Guatemala conmemora el Día de la Bandera - Agencia Guatemalteca de Noticias" (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 June 2024.
- ^ nicka21045 (12 April 2013), Guatemala, retrieved 10 June 2024
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ nicka21045 (19 November 2013), Guatemala, retrieved 10 June 2024
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)