
Last modified: 2004-11-27 by phil nelson
Keywords: finland |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
Civil Flag
|
State Flag
|
Civil Flag Construction Sheet
|
War Flag
|
See also:
The flag of Finland is a rectangular Scandinavian cross.1. The cross is blue against a white field in the dimensions of 11:18. The state flag bears the state arms in the intersection of the tree and arms of the cross. The War (military) flag and ensign are a tongued swallowtail version of the state flag with the proportions of 11:19.
Adopted: 27 May 1918
Designed by: Eero Snellman and Bruno Tuukkanen2
Last modified: 26 May 19783
Colors: White and Blue (PMS 294C)
Meaning of the colors: blue represnts the lakes of Finland; white the snows of winter.4
The coat of arms of Finland dates back to about 1580. Its official present design is the work of Olof Eriksson (1911-87) and it was adopted when the coat of arms were codified by law on 26.5.1978 (simultaneously with the present design of the flags). The form of the lion used on the flags is the same as on the state coat of arms.5
(Dated May 26, 1978; Act No. 380/78)
1 §
The Finnish flag includes a blue cross on white background.
The flag is either national or state flag.
2 §
The national flag is rectangular and its proportions are:
1) width 11 and length 18 measure units;
2) width of arm of the cross 3 measure units; and
3) width of the fields 4, length of the hoist fields 5 and
length of the fly fields 10 measure units.
3 §
The state flag is either rectangular or swallow-tailed. It
includes the coat-of-arms of the state in the middle square
formed by the arms of the cross. The square has a yellow
contour, the width of which is 1/40 of the width of the cross.
The rectangular state flag has the same proportions as the
national flag.
The swallow-tailed state flag is one mesure unit longer, so
that the length of its fly fields is 6 and the length of the
tails 5 measure units. The middle tail is isosceles and the arm
of the cross forms its base. The outer tails do not form angle
with the upper or lower side of the flag.
4 §
Everybody has the right to use the national flag.
All Finnish vessels use as a nationality sign the national
flag, apart from those mentioned in the fifth paragraph. A
yacht may use as its nationality sign a special flag; a
separate statute will be given for further regulations.
5 §
The rectangular state flag is to be used by the Parliament;
the Government and its ministries; the Supreme Court; the
Supreme Administrative Court; central administration boards and
all comparable civil service departments and institutions;
Courts of Appeal; provincial governments; ecclesiastical
chapters; the Orthodox Synod; Finnish embassies and consulates
and all comparable diplomatical representations; the Bank of
Finland; the National Pension Fund; the Finnish Academy;
frontier guard; state universities and high schools; and
state's vessels.
Institutions, apart from those mentioned in the first clause,
can be given the right to use the rectangular state flag with a
separate statute.
The swallow-tailed state flag is to be used by the Defence
Forces, its departments, institutions, units, and vessels.
President of the Republic uses a swallow-tailed state flag
with a blue-yellow Cross of Freedom in the upper hoist
field.
6 §
It is not allowed to add any extra signs to the Finnish flag,
apart from cases mentioned in this law.
A swallow-tailed flag with a special sign in the upper hoist
field may be used as a command flag of Minister of Defence or
Commander of the Defence Forces and as a navy command flag in
armed vessels. President of the Republic determines the form of
that sign.
7 §
The Government will give more detailed specifications about
the colours of the Finnish flag.
8 §
The one who damages the Finnish flag, or treats it in an
unrespectful way, or without permission takes off an openly
out-put Finnish flag, shall be fined for disgracing the Finnish
flag.
The one who without permission uses the flag of President of
the Republic or other state flag, or sells a Finnish flag with
extra signs that are prohibited in the sixth paragraph, or
sells as a Finnish flag such flag that does not fulfill the
regulations in this law or other instructions, shall be fined
for disobeying regulations about the Finnish flag.
9 §
More detailed regulations about enforcing of this law and
about flagging with the Finnish flag will be given in a
separate statute.
10 §
This law takes effect on June 1, 1978. This law revokes the
Law about the Finnish flag, given on May 29, 1918.
A association flag or other flag that is against the sixth
paragraph of this law may be used till the end of year 1980.6
(Given on May 26, 1978; Act No. 383/78)
Due to Prime Minister's proposal based on the 9 § of the Law About the Finnish Flag (380/78) this is prescribed:
1 §
If a building is used by state's bureau or institute or
building is Aland Island's official building, a Finnish flag
shall be rised on it or nearby it on an official flagging day.
The flag has to be that kind of Finnish flag, which the bureau
is prescribed to use.
2 §
The official flagging days are:
1) February 28, day of Kalevala, the day of Finnish
culture;
2) May 1, day of Finnish work;
3) second sunday of May, Mother's Day;
4) June 4, day of flag celebration of the Defence Forces;
5) Saturday between July 20 and July 26, Midsummer Day,
the day of the Finnish flag;
6) December 6, Independence Day;
7) the day, when national election, municipal election,
European Parliament election or advisory referendum is being
held everywhere in the Republic;
and
8) the day, when President of the Republic takes
office.
3 §
Each ministry can in special occasion order state's bureaus
and institutes to flag nationally or in single municipalities
even when it is not an official flagging day.
Ministries and provincial governments can order bureaus and
institutes subjected to them to flag even when it is not an
official flagging day.
State's bureau or institute has right to flag due to a special
celebration or when a common flagging is being held in its home
municipality.
State's vessel shall flag according to international
habits.
4 §
Flagging begins at 8.00 and ends when the sun sets, not later
than at 21.00. The chief of a bureau or institute can order to
make an exception to this due to some special reason or due to
local circumstances.
The flagging on the day of the Finnish flag begins on
Midsummer Eve at 18.00 and ends on Midsummer Day at 21.00. On
Independence Day and on such election day, when the voting ends
after the sunset, flagging ends at 20.00.
5 §
If the Finnish flag is used publicly with other flags,
standards, pennants, or comparable, the Finnish flag has to be
placed in the most valuable position.
6 §
Each ministry gives more detailed orders about flagging.
7 §
This statute takes effect on June 1, 1978.
This statute revokes:
1) the statute about official use of the Finnish flag and
about public flagging with other kinds of flags, given on April
27, 1934 (178/34), with its later changes;
2) the statute about the flags and pennants of the
National Board of Navigation, given on March 18, 1919;
3) the statute about using Finnish state flags, given on
November 12, 1920 (283/20); and
4) the statute about pilot, postal and customs flags,
given on April 14, 1939 (117/39). 7
The origin of the choice of the 4th of June is explained on http://www.mannerheim.fi/01_elama/e_lipjuh.htm as follows:
Mannerheim's birthday, the 4th of June, was nominated the Flag Day of the Defence Forces by a decision of the government on 4 June, 1942. The Flag Day is celebrated with a national parade, rewardings and promotions From 1918 till 1942 the Flag Day was celebrated on 16 May, the anniversary of the end of the War of Independence. Up to 1939 a parade was organized on the 16th of May. In spring 1940 the parade was replaced by the nation-wide memorial day of those fallen in action. This arrangement then became annual.
The long career of Marshall Carl Gustav Emil von Mannerheim (1867-1951) is explained in great details in the aforementioned website.8
1Defined in
this document as a Saint George cross shifted towards the
hoist. [Editor]
2Ministry of
Interior, 2004
3Flags of the
World, Adoption Dates of Flags, <http://flagspot.net/flags/flagdate.html>
4
Virtual Finland,
<http://virtual.finland.fi/netcomm/news/showarticle.asp?intNWSAID=27078>,
last accessed: November 6, 2004.
5Marco Pribilla,
E-mail dated 19 November 2001
6Ossi Raivio, E-mail
dated 30 September 1996
7Ossi Raivio, E-mail
dated 2 October 1996
8Ivan Sache, E-mail
12 June 2002
Civil, State and War flags by Zeljko Heimer
State arms by Zeljko Heimer
construction sheet: Edward Mooney, Jr.
Flags of the World
November, 2004