Republic of Bulgaria | |
Use: | 110100 |
Proportion: | 3:5 |
Adoption: | 1879 (first adoption) 27 November 1990 (readoption)[1] |
Design: | A horizontal tricolour of white, green and red. |
Designer: | Stiliana Parashkevova (original version) |
Use2: | Flag using official specifications for the RGB colour space |
Proportion2: | 3:5 |
Adoption2: | --> |
Design2: | A horizontal tricolour of white, green and red. |
The flag of Bulgaria is a tricolour consisting of three equal-sized horizontal bands of (from top to bottom) white, green, and red. The flag was first adopted after the 1877–1878 Russo-Turkish War, when Bulgaria gained de facto independence. The national flag at times had as a supplement the state emblem, especially during the communist era. The current flag was re-established with the 1991 Constitution of Bulgaria and was confirmed in a 1998 law.
In 866, Pope Nicholas I advised Prince Boris who had recently Christianised his people to switch from the practice of using a horse tail as a banner to adopting the Holy Cross.[2]
Later illuminated versions of the chronicles of John Skylitzes and Constantine Manasses depict the army of Khan Krum carrying flags either in monotone red,[3] or red with a black border.[4] The army of Simeon the Great is also depicted carrying red banners of varying shape.[4] The Radziwiłł Chronicle also depicts Tzar Simeon I's army under a red flag in the 921-922 campaign against Byzantium, but the depiction of the Hungarian invasion of 894 featured the Bulgarian fortress of Drastar under a white flag with a crescent and a six-pointed star. Any pictorial representations of flags in the manuscripts mentioned above, regardless of the faction or time depicted, conform strongly to the overall illustration style used in each manuscript. In addition, none of those manuscripts dates to the time of the First Bulgarian Empire. The historicity of those flags is thus impossible to verify.
Depictions of Bulgarian flags can be seen on various portolan maps from the 14th and 15th centuries. On those maps, the flags commonly have a white or golden[5] [6] background and depict either the insignia of the ruling House of Shishman,[7] or unknown symbols[8] [9] in red. Those drawings are markedly more diverse than the flags of the neighbouring countries such as the Eastern Roman Empire, the Golden Horde or the Serbian Empire, which in the same maps are largely consistent.
After the liberation of Bulgaria following the Russo-Turkish War in 1878, the flag was described in the Tarnovo Constitution of 1879 as follows:
After the establishment of the People's Republic of Bulgaria in 1946, the new Dimitrov Constitution of 1947 changed the flag: the colors and their order remained the same, but the new national emblem was placed on the left side of the white stripe. The new emblem contained a lion within a wreath of wheat ears below a red star and above a ribbon bearing the date 9.IХ.1944 (9 September 1944), the day of the coup d'état of 1944 which had ended the monarchy. In 1971, the emblem (and thus the flag) was slightly modified - the ribbon was parted in two, bearing the years 681 and 1944, the former being the year of the establishment of the First Bulgarian Empire.
After the fall of Communism in 1990, the then-enforced Zhivkov Constitution was amended so the flag could be reverted to the pre-Communist era.[10] The new Constitution of Bulgaria, adopted in 1991, describes the Bulgarian flag as follows:
A popular version of the flag, which has no official status, is also commonly known. It has the full coat of arms on the left of the flag, placed across the white and green fields only.[11]
According to the Law for the State Seal and National Flag of the Republic of Bulgaria, promulgated on 24 April 1998:
Appendix 2 to the Law for the State Seal and National Flag of the Republic of Bulgaria specifies colours when the flag is sewn from textiles or printed on paper.[12]
The law does not specify what colour values should be used in digital renderings of the flag. The website of the Bulgarian civil service recommends approximate colours (note that the decimal RGB values are inconsistent with the hexadecimal "web-safe" values).[13]
White | Green (Digital) | Red (Digital) | Green (Textile) | Red (Textile) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pantone textile[14] | Whiteness greater than 80% | 17-5936 TCX[15] | 18-1664 TCX[16] | |||
Pantone | Whiteness greater than 80% | 347 U | 032 U | |||
RGB | Red = 255 Green = 255 Blue = 255 Hex = #FFFFFF | Red = 0 Green = 128 Blue = 0 Hex = #009900 | Red = 200 Green = 0 Blue = 0 Hex = #CC0000 | Red = 0 Green = 150 Blue = 110 Hex = #00966E | Red = 214 Green = 38 Blue = 18 Hex = #D62612 | |
CMYK | Cyan = 0% Magenta = 0% Yellow = 0% Black = 0% | Cyan = 100% Magenta = 0% Yellow = 100% Black = 0% | Cyan = 0% Magenta = 100% Yellow = 100% Black = 0% | Cyan = 100% Magenta = 0% Yellow = 26.67% Black = 41.18% | Cyan = 0% Magenta = 82.24% Yellow = 91.59% Black = 16.18% |