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The Pan-Slavic flag was a plain blue-white-red tricolor in the horizontal sense against a vertical staff, and the national flag and civil and state ensign during the 1918–1943 period (Kingdom of Yugoslavia) was exactly the same. [4] The naval ensign during the period was the blue-white-red tricolor with the simplified lesser coat of arms of ...
Flag Date Use Description 1929–1945 [1]: National flag, civil and state ensign : Three equal horizontal bands in the pan-Slavic colors, blue (top), white, and red.: 1945–1946 [2]
The five major colors of European heraldry (black, red, green, blue, and purple) are sorted next. Miscellaneous colors (murrey, tan, grey, and pink) are sorted last. Similar colors are grouped together to make navigation of this list practical.
Yugoslavia, both the Kingdom (Kingdom of Yugoslavia, 1918–1943) and the Republic (SFR Yugoslavia, 1943–1992) was a union of several Slavic nations, and therefore not only sported the pan-Slavic colors but adopted the pan-Slavic flag as its own (later adding a red star).
White, blue and red Green San Marino: White and light blue Serbia: Red, blue and white [16] [17] [18] National colours of Serbia: Slovakia: White, blue and red Slovenia: White, blue and red [19] Green, blue and white (sports) [20] Spain: Red and gold (During the Second Spanish Republic: also Purple) Sweden: Blue and yellow See Flag of Sweden
In Cambodia, the Colours of the Military and other uniformed institutions follow British, US, and French practice.. Until 2022, what was essentially a large version of the Flag of Cambodia with the unit name below in white in the bottom blue stripe was used as the King's Colour of RCAF formations before being reassigned as the National Colour for parades and ceremonies.
The state flag of the Karachay-Cherkess Republic is formed from three colors: light blue, green, and red. The colors are arranged in three horizontal stripes of equal width: light blue on top, green in the middle, and red on the bottom. In the middle of the green strip, in its entire width, there is a bright circle (ring), in which the sun ...
Emblem once placed on the building of University of Niš, restored and repainted and now located in the city garden of Niš Fortress. During World War II (1943–1945), the Yugoslav state was named Democratic Federal Yugoslavia (DFY), in 1945 it was renamed Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (FPRY), and again in 1963 into Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY).