Flag of Saxony explained

Free State of Saxony
Nickname:Landesflagge
Use:100000
Proportion:3:5 (or 1:2)
Adoption:1920, 1947, 1991
Design:A bicolor of white over green.
Nickname2:Landesdienstflagge
Use2:010000
Proportion2:3:5 (or 1:2)
Adoption2:1991
Design2:The civil flag with the addition of the coat of arms.

Both the civil and state flag of the German state of Saxony feature a bicolour of white over green, similar to the Austrian province of Styria although they are historically not related to each other. The state flag is similar to the civil flag, except it is defaced in the centre with the coat of arms of Saxony. The colours of both flags were officially decided as state colours in 1815. The aristocracy used mostly and in first time the quadrangular version and later the rectangular.

Overview

The civil bicolour flag of white over green was used before World War II, and formally abolished in 1935, under the reforms of the Third Reich. It was readopted 1945 when Saxony became a state again, and abolished 1952 under governing reforms of the German Democratic Republic. When Germany was reunited, Saxony became a state again, and so the flag was finally officially readopted in 1991, having been a much used symbol during the demonstrations in the German Democratic Republic in 1989/90.

Landtag of the Free State of Saxony

Landtag of the Free State of Saxony uses its own flag.

Minority flags

Paragraph 4 of Article 2 of the Constitution of the Free State of Saxony guarantees other flags equality alongside the Saxon state flag.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: REVOSax Landesrecht Sachsen - Verfassung. www.revosax.sachsen.de. 2020-02-17.