User:Lawrencegoriel/sandbox
File:Chaldean Flag.png | |
Design | White background with a blue circle at the center, surrounded by a yellow circle and an eight-pointed star in red with water trails between the points in blue. Two blue vertical stripes on either side of the design to symbolize the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. |
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Designed by | Amer Fatuhi |
The Chaldean flag is the flag chosen by the Iraqi Government and the Chaldean people to represent the Chaldean nation in the homeland and around the world.
Amer Fatuhi first designed the flag in 19--.
Symbolism
[edit]The golden circle at the center that represents the sun, which, by its exploding and leaping flames, generates heat and light to sustain the earth and all its living things. The four pointed star surrounding the sun symbolizes the land, its light blue color symbolizing tranquility.
The wavy stripes extending from the center to the four corners of the flag represent the three major rivers of the Assyrian homeland: the Tigris, the Euphrates, and the Great Zab. The lines are small at the center and become wider as they spread out from the circle. The dark blue represents the Euphrates. The red stripes, whose blood red hue stands for courage, glory and pride, represent the Tigris. The white lines in between the two great rivers symbolizes the Great Zab; its white color stands for tranquility and peace. Some interpret the red, white and blue stripes as the highways that will take the scattered Assyrians back to their ancestral homeland.[1] It is also said that when the stripes are reversed with the red stripes on top and the blue stripes on bottom, it symbolizes that the nation is at war.[dubious – discuss]
The archer figure symbolizes the pre-Christian god Assur.[2]
Previous flags
[edit]Prior to World War I, the Assyrian flag consisted of 3 layers of salmon, white, and red. On the top left of the first layer, 3 white stars represented the three main Churches of the Assyrian people: Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church, and Syriac Orthodox Church (it is also used by members of the Syriac Catholic Church). This flag was used during delegation meetings with Assyrian politicians and Western powers during and post World War I. The flag was used until the current design was established. The flag was created by the Syriac Orthodox community of Tur Abdin.[citation needed]
Between 1915 and 1923, the Assyrian army used a flag that resembled the flag of Switzerland. It consisted of a red background, indicating the blood spilled by the Assyrians prior to and during World War I, and a white cross. The top left corner contained a round seal, which was Agha Petros's personal stamp. The seal had his name on it in two languages (Assyrian and Russian).
Gallery
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The "feather-robed archer" figure in the 1968 flag is inspired by Assyrian Empire period iconography.
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Star symbol in the Mor Gabriel monastery.
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The flag of Iraq 1959-1963 included a red star symbolic of the Assyrian minority.
References
[edit]- ^ Ashurian, Homer (2000-06-02). "The Origins and Description of the Assyrian Flag". Atour.com. Retrieved 2012-08-17.
- ^ "The Origins and Description of the Assyrian Flag" by Homer Ashurian, Assyrian Universal Alliance, 03-1999
- ^ http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/538274/Shamash
- ^ "Syriac-Aramaic People (Syria)". Crwflags.com. Archived from the original on 4 December 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
External links
[edit]- Assyrian Information Management (AIM) - The Origins and Description of the Assyrian Flag
- Assyrian International News Agency (AINA)
- Assyrian flag at Flags of the World
- The Origins and Description of the Assyrian Flag
Category:Assyrian people
Category:Ethnic flags
Category:Assyrian nationalism