The national flag of the Czech Republic, a classic rectangular cloth with two equal horizontal stripes — white at the top and red at the bottom, and a blue triangle at the staff, is one of the most recognizable national symbols in the world. Its colors and composition carry deep historical and heraldic significance, rooted in the Middle Ages. Each color represents not just an aesthetic choice, but a coded message reflecting the history of the Czech lands and their path to sovereignty.
Heraldic Origins: the Coat of Arms of Bohemia
The key to understanding the origin of the flag's colors is the historical coat of arms of the Kingdom of Bohemia — a silver (white) lion in a leap on a crimson (red) shield. The combination of white and red is traditional for the Czech lands and has been fixed in royal seals since the 13th century. These so-called "Bohemian colors" have been used in banners, standards of monarchs, and military uniforms for centuries. Although the blue color was not present on the original coat of arms of Bohemia, it has no less important significance, symbolizing the historical regions of Moravia and Silesia, thus emphasizing the unity of the three lands that make up modern Czechia.
The Creation of Czechoslovakia and the Birth of a New Symbol
With the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918, the new state of Czechs and Slovaks faced the task of creating their own national symbols that would be distinct from the red-white Austrian and red-white-blue Hungarian flags. Initially, a white-red bicolour identical to the Polish one was used, which caused diplomatic confusion and did not reflect the Slovak component of the federation. In 1920, the National Assembly of Czechoslovakia approved the current design with a blue triangle. The author of this brilliant solution is heraldic researcher and archivist employee Jaroslav Kursa. The blue triangle, reaching the middle of the cloth, visually distinguished the flag from the Polish one and brought the symbo ...
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