Flag of Budapest
The flag of Budapest is the official municipal flag of Budapest, Hungary. The current design features the city's coat of arms on a white field. The top and bottom edges of the flag are occupied by alternating red and green isosceles triangles. It has been in effect since 15 September 2011, following a decree from the General Assembly of Budapest.
Proportion | 2:3 |
---|---|
Adopted | 15 September 2011 |
Design | Budapest's coat of arms on a white field, with alternating red and green triangles on the top and bottom edges |
Design and symbolism
The 11 triangles (6 red, 5 green) on the top and bottom edges span the whole length of the flag and have a height of one-tenth that of the flag. The colours red, white, and green represent the national colours of Hungary,[1] as featured on the nation's flag. The colours as used on Hungary's flag symbolize strength (red), faithfulness (white), and hope (green). The coat of arms, first created in 1873,[2] depicts two castles on a red field, with the one-tower castle on top representing Pest, and the three-towered castle on the bottom representing Buda and Óbuda. Separating the two castles is a wavy white line, representing the Danube. Surrounding this shield is a lion on its hind legs to the left and a mythological gryphon to the right. On top of the shield is the Holy Crown of Hungary.[3] The shield is about one-third the height of the flag.[1]
Gallery
Historical flags of Budapest
- Flag of Buda (until 1873)
- Flag of Pest (until 1873)
- Proposed flag of Budapest (1873)
- Proposed flag of Budapest (1873)
- Flag of Budapest (1873–1930)
- Proposed flag of Budapest (1929)
- Flag of Budapest (1930–1949)
- Flag of Budapest (1984–1990)
- Flag of Budapest (1990–2011)
- Flag of Budapest in 2011
- Current flag of Budapest since 2011
References
- "48/2011. (IX. 15.) Főv. Kgy. rendelet". Wikisource. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
- Czaga, Viktória (1998). Budapest arms & colours. Throughout the centuries. Retrieved 21 May 2020.
- "5/1990. (IX. 30.) Főv. Tan. rendelet". Wikisource. Retrieved 21 May 2020.