A national flag is a flag that represents and symbolizes a country. Flags come in many shapes and designs, which often represent something about the country or people that the flag represents. Common design elements of flags include shapes such as stars, stripes, and crosses, layout elements such as including a canton (a rectangle with a distinct design, such as another national flag), and the overall shape of a flag, such as the aspect ratio of a rectangular flag (whether the flag is square or rectangle, and how wide it is) or the choice of a non-rectangular flag.
Many countries with shared history, culture, ethnicity, or religion have similarities in their flags that represent this connection. Sets of flags in this list within the same category may represent countries' shared connections, or the design similarity may be a coincidence.
Flags of uncommon shapes
- Belgium: Aspect ratio of 13:15
- El Salvador: Aspect ratio of 189:335
- Monaco: Aspect ratio of 4:5
- Nepal: The only national flag that is not rectangular, being made with 5 sides.
- Niger: Aspect ratio of 6:7
- Qatar: The largest aspect ratio of any national flag, 11:28, making the flag's width 2.545 times larger than the height.
- Switzerland: 1:1 (Square-shaped)
- Togo: Aspect ratio of 2:3.23607, the golden ratio which is roughly 1.618035
- Vatican City: 1:1 (Square-shaped)
Star
One five-pointed star in center
- Burkina Faso
- Cameroon
- Ghana
- Morocco
- Myanmar
- Paraguay
- Senegal
- Somalia
- Somaliland (unrecognized)
- Suriname
- Vietnam
- Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1946–1992)
See also the list of flags featuring crescents, below, many of which include a five-pointed star in the crescent.
One five-pointed star on hoist
- Central African Republic
- Cuba
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Djibouti
- East Timor
- Guinea-Bissau
- North Korea
- South Sudan
- Republic of West Papua (unrecognized) (Morning Star Flag)
One five-pointed star on canton
- Chile
- Liberia
- Togo
Multiple five-pointed stars of equal size
- Abkhazia (unrecognized) (7)
- Bosnia and Herzegovina (9, 2 of which are half stars)
- Comoros (4)
- Federated States of Micronesia (4)
- Honduras (5)
- Hong Kong (China) (5)
- Kosovo (partly recognized) (6)
- Panama (2)
- Philippines (3)
- Saint Kitts and Nevis (2)
- São Tomé and Príncipe (2)
- Singapore
- Solomon Islands (5)
- Syria (2)
- Turkmenistan (5)
- Tuvalu (9)
- United States (varies, based on number of states, currently 50)
- Uzbekistan (12)
- Venezuela (8)
Circle of five-pointed stars
- Cape Verde (10 stars)
- Cook Islands (associated state of New Zealand) (15 stars)
- Dominica (10 stars)
- Tajikistan (7 stars)
- United States (1777-1795) (13 stars)
- European Union (12 stars)
Multiple five-pointed stars in different sizes
- Brazil (varies, based on number of states, currently 27)
- Grenada (7)
- New Zealand (4)
- Niue (associated state of New Zealand) (5)
- Papua New Guinea (5)
- People's Republic of China (5)
- Samoa (5)
Six-pointed
- Bonaire (Netherlands Caribbean)
- Burundi
- Croatia
- Equatorial Guinea
- Israel
- Slovenia
Many-pointed
One many-pointed star
- Azerbaijan (8 points)
- Jordan (7 points)
- Malaysia (14 points)
- Marshall Islands (24 points)
- Nauru (12 points)
Multiple many-pointed stars
- Australia (one 5-pointed star, five 7-pointed)
- Nepal (moon and sun: one 16-pointed, one 12-pointed respectively)
Southern Cross
The Southern Cross or Crux, a constellation visible in the Southern Hemisphere, is depicted on flags and coats of arms of various countries and sub-national entities. This star constellation is visible mostly in the southern hemisphere and it therefore symbolises the southern location of its users.
(The term Southern Cross can also refer to the blue saltire as used in various flags of the Confederate States of America in the American Civil War.)
- Australia
- Brazil: the southern cross is reversed
- New Zealand
- Papua New Guinea
- Samoa
Stars and stripes
- Aruba (4 Points and 2 Stripes)
- Azerbaijan
- Cape Verde (10, 5 pointed stars)
- Chile
- Comoros
- Croatia
- Cuba
- Djibouti
- Guinea-Bissau
- Honduras
- Jordan
- North Korea
- Liberia
- Libya
- Malaysia
- Myanmar
- Nauru
- Philippines
- Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (unrecognized)
- São Tomé and Príncipe
- Singapore
- Slovenia
- Somaliland (unrecognized)
- South Sudan
- Suriname
- Syria
- Tajikistan
- Togo
- United States
- Uzbekistan
- Venezuela
- Republic of West Papua (unrecognized)
Flags Of Cresent
Facing up
- Brunei
- Mauritania
- Mongolia
- Nepal
Facing fly
- Algeria
- Azerbaijan
- Comoros
- Karakalpakstan (autonomous republic of Uzbekistan)
- Libya
- Malaysia
- Maldives
- Northern Cyprus (unrecognized)
- Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (unrecognized)
- Singapore
- Tunisia
- Turkey
- Uzbekistan
Facing diagonally
- Comoros (1978–1992)
- Croatia
- Moldova
- Pakistan
- Turkmenistan
Circle
One circle in center
- Belize
- Brazil
- Burundi
- Ethiopia
- Grenada
- India
- Japan
- Kazakhstan
- South Korea
- Laos
- Niger
- North Macedonia
- Paraguay
- Tunisia
- Uganda
One circle on hoist
- Bangladesh
- Greenland (autonomous territory of Denmark)
- North Korea
- Namibia
- New Caledonia (French overseas collectivity)
- Palau
- Portugal
One broken or implied circle
- Afghanistan
- Cabo Verde
- Cook Islands (associated state of New Zealand)
- Cook Islands (1973–1979)
- Dominica
- Eritrea
- Europe (various organisations)
- French Polynesia (French overseas territory)
- Northern Mariana Islands (US overseas territory)
Triangle
Triangle(s) in centre
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Israel (6 that make up the shape, 2 to draw it)
- Saint Lucia
Triangle(s) on hoist
- Bahamas
- Comoros
- Cuba
- Czech Republic
- Djibouti
- East Timor
- Eritrea
- Equatorial Guinea
- Guyana
- Jamaica
- Jordan
- Mozambique
- Palestine (disputed)
- Philippines
- Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (unrecognized)
- São Tomé and Príncipe
- Seychelles (1976–1977)
- Sint Maarten
- South Africa
- South Sudan
- Sudan
- Tuvalu (1995–1997)
- Vanuatu
- Zimbabwe
Stripes
Two equal horizontal stripes in two colors
- Angola
- Benin
- Burkina Faso
- Czech Republic
- Djibouti
- Guinea-Bissau
- Haiti
- Indonesia
- Liechtenstein
- Madagascar
- Monaco
- Philippines
- Poland
- Singapore
- Sint Maarten
- San Marino
- Ukraine
- Wales (UK constituent country)
Three equal horizontal stripes in two colors
- Argentina
- Austria
- Bahamas
- Belarus (1991–1995)
- Honduras
- Nicaragua
- El Salvador
- Confederate States of America (1861-1863)
Three thin-and-thick horizontal stripes in two colors
- Armenia (Constituent republic of the Soviet Union)
- Belize
- Cambodia
- French Polynesia (overseas collectivity of France)
- Guam (US overseas territory)
- Laos
- Latvia
- Lebanon
- Mauritania
- Moldavia (Constituent republic of the Soviet Union)
- São Tomé and Príncipe
- Spain
- Transnistria (unrecognized)
Three fimbriated thin-and-thick horizontal stripes in two colors
- Botswana
- Eswatini
- Kirghizia (Constituent republic of the Soviet Union)
- Kyrgyzstan (1991–1992)
- North Korea
- Suriname
- Turkmenistan (Constituent republic of the Soviet Union)
- Turkmenistan (1991–1992)
Many equal horizontal stripes in two colors
- Abkhazia (unrecognized) (7)
- Cuba (5)
- Greece (9)
- Liberia (11)
- Malaysia (14)
- Seborga (18 stripes)
- Togo (5)
- Uruguay (9)
- United States (13)
- Republic of West Papua (unrecognized) (13) (Morning Star Flag)
Three colors
Three equal horizontal stripes in three colors
- Afghanistan (1928)
- Afghanistan (1980–1987)
- Afghanistan (1987–1992)
- Afghanistan (1992)
- Afghanistan (1992–2001)
- Afghanistan (2001–2002)
- Armenia
- Republic of Artsakh (unrecognized)
- Azerbaijan
- Biafra (1967-1970)
- Bolivia
- Bulgaria
- Croatia
- Egypt
- Estonia
- Ethiopia
- Gabon
- Germany
- Germany (1867–1919, 1933–1935)
- Ghana
- Ghana (1962–1966)
- Equatorial Guinea
- Hungary
- India
- Iran
- Iraq
- Iraqi Kurdistan (autonomous region in Iraq)
- Jordan
- Kenya
- Kuwait
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Malawi
- Mozambique
- Myanmar
- New Caledonia (overseas collectivity of France)
- Niger
- Netherlands
- Oman
- Paraguay
- Palestine (partly recognized)
- Russian Federation
- Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (unrecognized)
- South Ossetia (unrecognized)
- Sudan
- Sudan (1956–1971)
- Sierra Leone
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Somaliland (unrecognized)
- South Africa (1928–1994)
- South Sudan
- Spain (1931–1939)
- Syria
- United Arab Emirates
- Upper Volta (1958-1984)
- Uzbekistan
- Venezuela
- Yemen
- Zanzibar (semi-autonomous region in Tanzania)
Three unequal horizontal stripes in three colors
- Afghanistan (1974–1978)
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Colombia
- Crimea (disputed)
- Ecuador
- Gambia
- Lesotho
- Libya
- Rwanda
- Tajikistan
Five unequal horizontal stripes in three colors
- Cape Verde
- Costa Rica
- Eswatini
- Suriname
- Thailand
4 colors, 2 Colors And 5 Colors
Four equal horizontal stripes in four colors
- Central African Republic
- Comoros
- Mauritius
Vertical
Two equal vertical stripes in two colors
- Algeria
- Malta
- Vatican City
Two unequal vertical stripes in two colors
- Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (Constituent republic of the Soviet Union)
- Pakistan
- Portugal
Two unequal serrated vertical stripes in two colors
- Bahrain
- Qatar
Three equal vertical stripes in two colors
- Barbados
- Guatemala
- Mongolia
- Nigeria
- Peru
Three equal vertical stripes in three colors
- Afghanistan
- Belgium
- Cameroon
- Chad
- Côte d'Ivoire
- France
- Guinea
- Ireland
- Italy
- Mexico
- Mali
- Moldova
- Romania
- Rwanda (1962–2001)
- Senegal
Three unequal vertical stripes
- Andorra
- Canada
- Norfolk Island (Australian external territory)
- Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Nordic Cross flag
- Åland Islands (autonomous region of Finland)
- Denmark
- Faroe Islands (autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark)
- Finland
- Iceland
- Norway
- Scania (province of Sweden)
- Sweden
Saint George's Cross
- England
- United Kingdom
- Georgia
- Guernsey (UK crown dependency)
Others
- Dominican Republic
- Georgia - Jerusalem cross
- United Kingdom - Saltire
- Dominica
- Malta
- Switzerland
Diagonal
Two diagonal stripes
- Bhutan
- Christmas Island (external territory of Australia)
- Papua New Guinea
Three fimbriated diagonal stripes
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Namibia
- Saint Kitts and Nevis
- Tanzania
- Trinidad and Tobago
Many radiating diagonal stripes
- Guyana (6)
- Eritrea (3)
- Marshall Islands (4)
- Seychelles (5)
Pall
- South Africa
- Vanuatu
Cross
Upright centred cross
- Switzerland
- Dominica
- Dominican Republic
- Martinique (overseas region of France)
Saint George's Cross
- England (UK constituent country)
- Guernsey (UK crown dependency)
- Kingdom of Great Britain
- United Kingdom
Nordic Cross
Nordic Cross in two colors
- Denmark
- Finland
- Scania (province of Sweden)
- Sweden
- Kalmar Union (1397-1523)
Nordic Cross in three colors
- Åland Islands (autonomous region of Finland)
- Faroe Islands (autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark)
- Iceland
- Norway
One cross in emblem
- Greece
- Marshall Islands
- Moldova
- Montenegro
- Montserrat (UK overseas territory)
- Portugal
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Spain
- Vatican City
Diagonal cross
- Burundi
- Jamaica
- Seychelles (1976–1977)
St. Andrew's Cross
- Jersey (UK crown dependency)
- Scotland (UK constituent country)
- United Kingdom
Upright and diagonal centred crosses
- North Macedonia
- United Kingdom
- Kingdom of Great Britain (1707–1801)
Union Jack
- Australia
- Australia (1901–1903)
- Australia (1903–1908)
- Bermuda (1910–1999)
- Canada (1868–1921)
- Canada (1921–1957)
- Canada (1957–1965)
- Kingdom of Great Britain (1707–1801)
- Fiji
- New Zealand
- Newfoundland (1907–1949)
- South Africa (1928–1994)
- South Africa (1910–1928)
- Tuvalu
- Tuvalu (1976–1978)
- Tuvalu (1978–1996)
- United Kingdom
- United States (1775–1777)
Additionally, the Union Jack features in many territorial and sub-national flags. These are often Red Ensigns (e.g., Bermuda) or Blue Ensigns (e.g., New South Wales and Anguilla). A small number have backgrounds of other colors (e.g. British Antarctic Territory and Niue) or a unique pattern in the field (e.g. British Indian Ocean Territory and Hawaii). A small number put the Union Jack somewhere other than the canton (e.g. British Columbia). Unofficial flags, such as Ross Dependency also use it.
Divisions
Upper left divided from rest of flag
A canton in a flag is a rectangular area at the top hoist corner of a flag, occupying up to a quarter of the flag's area. The canton of a flag may be a flag in its own right. For instance, British ensigns have the Union Jack as their canton, as do their derivatives such as the national flags of Australia and New Zealand. Following the practice of British ensigns, a canton sometimes contains a symbol of national unity such as the blue field and white stars of the U.S. flag. In these cases, the canton may be called simply the union.
The U.S. flag's canton derives from the British use of the Union Jack in the canton of its possessions (including, historically, the early United States). Subsequently, many New World nations (and other later countries and regions, such as Liberia or Malaysia) that were inspired by the U.S. incorporated elements likewise inspired by the U.S. flag. As a result, many extant uses of a prominent canton derive either from British territorial history, or U.S. influence and inspiration.
- Chile
- Georgia (1918–1921)
- Georgia (Constituent republic of the Soviet Union)
- Georgia (1990–2004)
- Greece
- Liberia
- Malaysia
- Myanmar (1974–2010)
- Republic of China (Taiwan)
- Samoa
- Tonga
- United States
- Uruguay
One vertical stripe on hoist
- Belarus
- Benin
- Guinea-Bissau
- Madagascar
- Oman
- Morning Star flag (Republic of West Papua, 1961–62)
- United Arab Emirates
- South African Republic (1852-1902)
Four equal rectangles meeting at center
See also #Cross section
- Dominica
- Dominican Republic
- Guernsey (UK crown dependency)
- Panama
Four equal triangles meeting at center
- Burundi
- Grenada
- Jamaica
- Jersey (UK crown dependency)
- Seychelles (1976–1977)
- St. Andrew's Cross
- United Kingdom
- Cross of Burgundy
- United Kingdom
Other symbols and pictures
Sun
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Argentina
- Bangladesh
- British Columbia (province of Canada)
- Bolivia (state flag)
- Costa Rica
- Ecuador
- El Salvador
- Greenland (Danish territory)
- Iraqi Kurdistan (autonomous region in Iraq)
- Japan
- Kazakhstan
- Kiribati
- Kyrgyzstan
- Malawi
- Namibia
- Nepal
- Nicaragua
- Niger
- North Macedonia
- Rwanda
- Philippines
- Republic of China (Taiwan)
- Uruguay
- Zaire (1971-1997)
Moon
- Laos
- Mongolia
- Palau
- Turkey
- Zaire (1971-1997)
Animal
Bird
- Ascension Island (UK overseas territory) — sea gulls and turtles
- Bolivia — condor and llama
- Christmas Island (external territory of Australia) — bird (golden bosun bird)
- Dominica — sisserou parrot
- Ecuador — condor
- Fiji — White pelican and yellow lion
- Guatemala — quetzal
- Kiribati — frigatebird
- Papua New Guinea — raggiana bird-of-paradise
- Saint Helena (UK overseas territory) — Saint Helena plover
- Sint Maarten (constituent country of the Netherlands) — pelican
- Uganda — grey crowned crane
- Zimbabwe — Zimbabwe Bird
Eagle
- Albania — double-headed eagle
- Egypt — Eagle of Saladin
- Kazakhstan — steppe eagle
- Mexico — eagle and snake
- Moldova — eagle and aurochs
- Montenegro — double-headed eagle and lion
- Serbia — double-headed eagle
- United States Virgin Islands (US overseas territory) — eagle
- Zambia — African fish eagle
Livestock
- Andorra — cow
- Bolivia — condor and llama
- Croatia — leopard, goat and marten
- Malta — St. George on a horse, fighting a dragon.
- Moldova — eagle and aurochs
- Venezuela — horse
Lion
- Canada — lion, fish
- Canada — lion
- Canada — lion
- Fiji — pelican, yellow lion
- Jersey (self-governing dependency of the UK) — lion
- Montenegro — double-headed eagle, lion
- Spain — lion
- Sri Lanka — yellow lion
- Tasmania (Australian state) — lion
Coat of arms
- Afghanistan
- Andorra
- Belize
- Bolivia
- Brunei
- Canada (1868–1928)
- Canada (1921–1957)
- Canada (1957–1965)
- Costa Rica
- Croatia
- Dominican Republic
- Ecuador
- Egypt
- Equatorial Guinea
- El Salvador
- Fiji
- Guatemala
- Haiti
- Mexico
- Moldova
- Montenegro
- Nicaragua
- Paraguay
- Portugal
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
Headgear
Crown
- Croatia
- Fiji
- Liechtenstein
- Montenegro
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Spain
- Tajikistan
- Vatican
Phrygian cap
- Bolivia
- El Salvador
- Haiti
- Nicaragua
- Paraguay (reverse side)
Weaponry
- Angola — machete
- Barbados — (trident-head)
- Bolivia — cannon, rifles and axe
- Eswatini — spears and shield
- Guatemala — rifles
- Haiti - cannon
- Kenya — spears and Maasai shield
- Mozambique — AK-47 with a bayonet
- Oman — swords and Khanjar
- Saudi Arabia — sword
- Sri Lanka — sword
- Venezuela — sword, sabre and three lances
Ships
- Belize
- Costa Rica
- Ecuador
- French Polynesia (overseas collectivity of France)
Agricultural and industrial tools
- Angola — half-gear and machete
- Belize — axes, saw
- Mozambique — hoe
- Myanmar (1974–2010) — gear
- Soviet Union (1917–1991) — hammer and sickle
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Byelorussia
- Estonia
- Georgia
- Kazakhstan
- Kirghizia
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Moldavia
- Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic
- Tajikistan
- Turkmenistan
- Ukraine
- Uzbekistan
- Transnistria — hammer and sickle (non-communist)
Plants
- Bolivia — palm, laurel and olive branches
- Canada — maple leaf
- Cyprus — olive branches
- Grenada — clove of nutmeg
- Eritrea — olive branch
- Equatorial Guinea — silk-cotton tree
- Fiji — sugarcane, coconut palm, banana
- Hong Kong (special administrative region in China) — Hong Kong orchid
- Lebanon — Lebanon cedar
- Macao (special administrative region in China) — lotus flower
- Mexico — cactus
- Myanmar (1974–2010) — rice plant
- Vanuatu — leaves of namele tree
Fleur-de-lis
- Guadeloupe (overseas department of France)
- Quebec (province of Canada)
- Saint-Barthélemy (overseas collectivity of France)
- Serbia
- Spain
Map
- Bangladesh (1971)
- Antarctica
- African Union
- Christmas Island (external territory of Australia)
- Cyprus
- Kosovo (partly recognized)
- Tuvalu: the flag of Tuvalu on the fly has 9 yellow five-pointed stars that are representing the islands and atolls of the country
Hills and mountains
- Bolivia — Cerro Rico and Cerro Menor
- Costa Rica
- Ecuador — Chimborazo
- El Salvador
- Nicaragua
- Saint Lucia — Pitons
- San Marino
- Sint Eustatius (Netherlands Caribbean) — The Quill
- Slovakia — Tatra, Mátra and Fatra
- Slovenia — Triglav
Building
- Afghanistan — mosque
- Bolivia — church (Chapel of the Sacred Heart of Jesus)
- Cambodia — Angkor Wat
- Gibraltar (UK overseas territory) — castle
- Portugal — seven castles
- San Marino — three castles
- Sint Maarten (constituent country of the Netherlands) — courthouse
- Spain — castle
Square
- Switzerland
- Vatican City
Other symbols
- Danzig (1920-1939) (King's Crown)
- Dominican Republic (Bible)
- India (Ashoka Chakra)
- Iran (Emblem of Iran)
- Isle of Man (UK crown dependency) (triskelion)
- Mongolia (Soyombo)
- Kyrgyzstan (sun with a crown of the traditional Kyrgyz yurt)
- Mozambique — book
- Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (diamonds in a V pattern)
- South Korea (Taegeuk and four black trigrams)
- Zaire (Hand holding Leading Torch, 1971-1997)
Text
Country name
- Sri Lanka (state flag)
- Costa Rica (state flag)
- Egypt – the text reads "Jumhūriyyat Miṣr al-ʿArabiyyah" in Arabic meaning "Arab Republic of Egypt".
- Guam (US overseas territory)
- Mayotte (overseas department of France)
- Nicaragua
- Paraguay
- Venezuela (state flag)
Country name and motto
- Afghanistan – the lowest line of text reads Afghanistan in the Pashto alphabet, and the calligraphic text at the top is the Shahada with the Takbir written beneath it.
- Brunei – the line of text on the crescent reads "Always render service with God's guidance", while the lower line reads Brunei Darussalam, both in the Jawi script.
- El Salvador – the name of the country encircles the coat of arms, which features the motto "Dios, Unión, Libertad" (Spanish for "God, Unity, Freedom") inside.
- Dominican Republic – the motto "Dios, Patria, Libertad" (meaning "God, Homeland, Freedom" in Spanish) can be read above the coat of arms at the center, below is the name of the country.
Motto
- Andorra – "VIRTVS VNITA FORTIOR", Classical Latin for "United virtue is stronger".
- Belize – "Sub Umbra Floreo", meaning "Under the Shade I Flourish" in Latin.
- Brazil – "Ordem e Progresso", meaning "Order and Progress" in Portuguese.
- Equatorial Guinea – "Unidad, Paz, Justicia", meaning "Unity, Peace, Justice" in Spanish
- Iran – the Takbir ("Allahu akbar", which means "God is [the] greatest") written in the Kufic script 11 times.
- Iraq – the Takbir written in the Kufic script.
- San Marino – "LIBERTAS", Latin for "Freedom".
- Saudi Arabia – the Shahada (an Islamic creed meaning "There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is his Prophet") written in the Thuluth script.
- Somaliland – the Shahada
- Spain – "PLVS VLTRA", Latin for "Further beyond".
Other texts
- California - the name of the short lived and unrecognized state "California Republic", which preceded California's admission into the Union.
- Dominican Republic - the Bible is opened to the Gospel of John, chapter 8, verse 32, which reads “Y la verdad los hará libres”, which translates to “And the truth shall set you free” from Spanish.
- Guatemala – "Libertad 15 de septiembre de 1821", a combination of the Spanish word for "Freedom" and the date of independence of the former Federal Republic of Central America from Spain.
- Haiti – "L'union fait la force" (meaning "Union makes strength" in French), which is different from the country's official motto "Liberté, égalité, fraternité".
- Malta – "For Gallantry" can be read at the George Cross carried in the canton.
Flags of another state
- Australia
- Canada (1868–1921)
- Canada (1921–1957)
- Canada (1957–1965)
- Fiji
- New Zealand
- South Africa (1928–1994)
- Tuvalu
- United States (1776–1777)
Related articles
- Similarities in flags
- Gallery of sovereign state flags
- Vexillology
External links
- Extensive list of similar flags from around the world