Flag of Turkey
Use | National flag and ensign |
---|---|
Proportion | 2:3 |
Adopted | 1844 |
Design | A red field defaced with a white crescent moon and five-pointed star slightly left of centre. |
The flag of Turkey consists of a white crescent moon and a star on a red background. The flag is called Ay Yıldız (literally, moon star) or Alsancak (red banner) in Turkish.
The flag has a complex origin since it is an ancient design, and uses the same symbols of the late flag of the Ottoman Empire which was adopted in 1844 with the Tanzimat reforms; though the shape, placement and shade of the color varies. The geometric proportions of the flag were legally standardized with the Turkish Flag Law in 1936. The shade of red used in the flag is approximated by Pantone 186, or RGB (227, 10, 23).
History
The crescent and star, while generally regarded as Islamic symbols today, have long been used in Asia Minor and by the old Turks,[citation needed] quite before the advent of Islam.[citation needed]According to one theory, the figure of crescent has its roots in tamghas, markings used as livestock brand or stamp, used by nomadic Turkic clans of Central Asia.[citation needed]
The current design of the Turkish flag is directly derived from the late Ottoman flag, which had acquired its final form in 1844. It is known that the Ottomans used red flags of triangular shape at least since 1383, which came to be rectangular over the course of history.[citation needed]
Ottomans used several different designs, most of them featuring one or more crescents, for different purposes, such as the flag with green background signifying the caliphate. During the late imperial period, the distinctive use of the color red for secular and green for religious institutions became an established practice. In 1844, the eight-pointed star was replaced with a five-pointed star and the flag reached the form of the present Turkish flag; Red was the colour of Umar I, the Caliph who ruled from AD 634 to 644 and was known as a great consolidator of the Islamic Empire. In the 14th century red became the colour of the Ottoman Empire The crescent and star is the symbol of Islam.
Possible Origins of the Flag
The crescent moon and star are holy symbols for pre-Islamic Turkish tribes while red is the cardinal colour for west[citation needed]. It has been recently found out in 2004 in Bishkek in archaeological excavations that Gokturks used crescent and star on their coins around 6th century AD.[1]
Another possibility regarding the flag dates it back to Byzantium and then the Byzantine Empire. Byzantium first produced coins with the crescent and star symbol in the 4th century BC. According to legend, this was to honour the moon-goddess Hecate, who the inhabitants believed had saved the city from attack by Philip II of Macedon in 340-339 BC[2][3]. The crescent and star were used as the symbol of the Greek city of Byzantium for 8 centuries before adopted by the Byzantines as the banner of Constantinople and when the Ottomans captured Constantinople, and Mehmed II adopted the title Roman Emperor it was in tandem adopted as the symbol of the Ottoman Empire (the moon refers to the Greek goddess Artemis, while the star refers to the Blessed Virgin Mary).[citation needed]. In 330 AD Constantine I had added the Virgin Mary's star to the flag also commonly found on Icons of Greek Orthodoxy to this day[citation needed].
The origin of the flag is the subject of various legends in the country, some contradicting the historical knowledge about the Ottoman Flag.
Legends
The most accepted legends of the flag in Turkey is that in a pool of blood of Turkish warriors there was a reflection of the crescent the moon and a star. Three theories are:
- In the year 1071, after the Battle of Manzikert and the defeat of the Byzantine army, the Seljuk Khan, Alp Arslan was roaming the battlefield where he saw the reflection of the crescent moon and the star on a pool of blood of Turkish warriors. After he saw this image he decided that this would be the flag representing the Turks.
- After the Battle of Kosovo on July 28 1389, Murad I was assassinated and on that night there was a unique moment of Jupiter and the Moon next to each other. If one considers this sight on a pool of blood, the current structure of the Turkish flag can be seen easily. One problem with this theory is that the Battle of Kosovo actually took place over a month earlier - on the 15th of June in the Julian Calendar (23rd of June in the Proleptic Gregorian Calendar).
- Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the founder of the modern Republic of Turkey, walking on a battlefield one night after a victorious battle in the Turkish War of Independence, saw the reflection of the star and crescent formation in a large pool of blood on the rocky hill terrain of Sakarya.
Other theories include:
- A dream of the first Ottoman Emperor in which a crescent and star appeared from his chest and expanded, presaging the dynasty's seizure of Constantinople.[4]
- A crescent and star were spotted on the night of the fall of Constantinople to Mehmet II in 1453.
- In respect of Turkish heritage, red represents the hegemony and white represents power, justice, exaltation, purity.
Legal Basis
The fundamentals of the Turkish flag were laid down by Turkish Flag Law No. 2994 on May 29, 1936. Turkish Flag Regulation No. 2/7175 dated July 28, 1937, and Supplementary Regulation No. 11604/2 dated July 29, 1939, were enacted to describe how the flag law would be implemented. The Turkish Flag Law No. 2893 dated September 22, 1983, and Published in the Official Gazette on September 24, 1983, was promulgated six months after its publication. According to Article 9 of Law No. 2893, a statute including the fundamentals of the implementation was also published.
Construction
Letter | Measure | Length |
---|---|---|
G | Width | 1 |
A | Distance between the centre of the outer crescent and the seam of the white band | 1/2 G |
B | Diameter of the outer circle of the crescent | 1/2 G |
C | Distance between the centres of the inner and outer circles of the crescent | 1/16 G |
D | Diameter of the inner circle of the crescent | 0.4 G |
E | Distance between the inner circle of the crescent and the circle around the star | 1/3 G |
F | Diameter of the circle around the star | 1/4 G |
L | Length | 1 ½ G |
M | Width of the seam band | 1/30 G |
Note that the above specification is what is given by Turkey's flag law, according to Flags of the World. The number 1/3 appears to be inaccurate; the other figures imply that distance E is really 0.34875 G.
Similarity with the Aceh Independentist Flag
The flag used by the independence-seeking rebels in the Indonesian province of Aceh, who have conducted a decades-long struggle against both Dutch colonial rule and the post-1949 Indonesian government, bears an obvious resemblance to the flag of Turkey; presumably dating from the devoutly Muslim inhabitants of 16th century Aceh who declared allegiance to the Ottoman Sultan and Caliph Suleiman the Magnificent in 1566 and asked for his support against the encroaching Portuguese and Dutch, upon which the Ottoman Indian Ocean Fleet under Kurtoğlu Hızır Reis arrived at Aceh in 1569.[5]
Notes and references
- ^ Coin discovery sheds light on Turkic civilization - Turkish Daily News Mar 10, 2005
- ^ Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece by Nigel Guy Wilson (Routledge, 2006) p.136
- ^ The Complete Dictionary of Symbols by Jack Tresidder (Chronicle Books, 2005) p.127)
- ^ Flagspot.net: Meaning of the Turkish Flag, retrieved on Dec 6, 2006
- ^ "Bayrak yasağını Türk ay-yıldızıyla deldiler" (in Turkish). February 10, 2005.
{{cite news}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help)
External links
- Türk Bayrağı Kanunu, the Turkish text of the Turkish Flag Law No. 2893 dated September 22, 1983, establishing the proportions, production and rules of usage of the flag of Turkey
- Turkey at Flags of the World