When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Flag of convenience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_convenience

    In a 2006 study by the United States Maritime Administration (MARAD), sailors from the People's Republic of China comprised over 40% of the crews on surveyed ships flying the Panamanian flag, and around 10% of those flying the Liberian flag. [82] The MARAD report referred to both China and the Philippines as "low cost" crewing sources. [83]

  3. Maritime flag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maritime_flag

    Naval flags are considered important at sea and the rules and regulations for the flying of flags are strictly enforced. The flag flown is related to the country of registration : so much so that the word "flag" is often used symbolically as a metonym for "country of registration".

  4. International maritime signal flags - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_maritime...

    International maritime signal flags are various flags used to communicate with ships. The principal system of flags and associated codes is the International Code of Signals. [1] Various navies have flag systems with additional flags and codes, and other flags are used in special uses, or have historical significance. [2]

  5. Flag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag

    In addition, besides flying the national standard or a military services' emblem flag at a military fort, base, station or post and at sea at the stern (rear) or main top mast of a warship, a Naval Jack flag and other maritime flags, pennants and emblems are flown at the bow (front). In times of war waving a white flag is a banner of truce ...

  6. Freedom of navigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_navigation

    Freedom of navigation as a legal and normative concept has developed only relatively recently. Until the early modern period, international maritime law was governed by customs that differed across countries’ legal systems and were only sometimes codified, as for example in the 14th-century Crown of Aragon Consulate of the Sea (Spanish: Consulado del mar; Italian: Consolato del mare; also ...

  7. List of black flags - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_black_flags

    The Anarchist black flag has been an anarchist symbol since the 1880s. Anarchists use either a plain black flag or a black flag with an "A" and an "O" around it, this symbol is a reference to a Proudhon quote "Anarchy is Order Without Power". [2] Since the Spanish Revolution of 1936, the diagonal red-and-black flag became more widely used.

  8. Why are flags at half-staff in Tennessee today? - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-flags-half-staff-tennessee...

    The flag can be ordered to fly at half-staff by the president, a state governor or the mayor of the District of Columbia. Here are the events that usually trigger it: The death of a government ...

  9. History of flags - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_flags

    The origin of flags is unknown. Some of the earliest known banners come from ancient China to identify different parts of the army. [3] For example, it is recorded that the armies of the Zhou dynasty in the 11th century BC carried a white banner before them, although no extant depictions exist of these banners.