Last modified: 2003-09-06 by marcus schmöger
Keywords: rank flag: navy | austro-hungarian empire | tricolour:horizontal (red-white-red) |
star: 8 points (yellow) | star: 6 points (white) |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
1:1, by Zeljko Heimer, 9 October 2000
1:1 flag, red-white-red with crowned shield, 5 black triangles at each side.
Flag adopted 1853, although apparently this flag may not ever have been actually
used.
Norman Martin, 2 December 2001
15:17, by Zeljko Heimer, 9 October 2000
15:17, red-white-red with crowned shield, black-yellow-black canton. Vice-admiral and Rear Admiral hoisted the same flag on different
places.
Zeljko Heimer, 11 October 2000
From 1853-1874, there were 2 flags I have been able to find:
One painting for 1866 shows the Admiralflagge used by Rear Admiral Tegetthoff, so I think this was used for Admirals, Vice-Admirals
and Rear-Admirals. (Remember this was also the Prussian usage at the time).
Norman Martin, 10 October 2000
This flag is given by Siegel (1912) as the
Admiral's flag, 1828-1880, after 1880, flag of the Großadmiral.
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 14 October 2001
From 1874-23 December 1894, the Großadmiralflagge became the flag for admirals, while the
previous Admiralflagge became the flag for Generals in the Army.
Norman Martin, 10 October 2000
The British 1889 edition of Flags of All Nations shows all Austro-Hungarian admirals using a flag of the same pattern as that adopted
in 1894, but without stars. Relative grade was indicated by hoisting on main, fore, or mizzenmast.
The American 1870 and 1882 Flags of Maritime Nations show the flag
described by Norman Martin. It was the same as the central portion of the 1894 flag, without the border or stars, but with a square
canton 1/3 of the hoist, divided horizontally black-yellow-black. It was also flown at main, fore, or mizzen to denote the grade of the
flag officer represented.
Joe McMillan, 11 October 2000
Flags of admirals of the Austro-Hungarian Imperial and Royal Navy (Kaiserliche und Königliche Kriegsmarine) before the 1918 revolution. The images are based on hatched drawings in the 1905-06 Jane's Fighting Ships.
15:17, red-white-red with crowned shield, 5x6 black triangles, 0-2-1 8-armed stars.
15:17, red-white-red with crowned shield, 5x6 black triangles, 0-2-0 8-armed stars.
15:17, red-white-red with crowned shield, 5x6 black triangles,
0-0-1 8-armed stars.
Zeljko Heimer, 11 October 2000
The crown seen here is the royal crown that is neither St. Stephen's (Hungary)
nor St. Vaclav's (Bohemia). It's the same crown used on the naval and (for the Austrian arms) the merchant ensigns of the
time.
Joe McMillan, 10 October 2000
These are the rank flags adopted 23 December 1894. They were "replaced" (at least officially) 12 October 1915. At that time, the continued use of the
(1894-1915) flags was for the time being authorized and it appears that the new flags were never actually used by the time of the dissolution of the
k.u.k. Navy in 1918.
Norman Martin, 10 October 2000
German Navy's 1905 Flaggenbuch, British Admiralty's
1907 and 1916
Flags of All Nations, and US Navy's 1914 Flags of Maritime Nations
all show these flags with large stars and with the flag not square but slightly longer in the
fly than in the hoist. The central triband is 5:6, with five black triangles edging the vertical sides and six edging the
horizontal.
Joe McMillan, 11 October 2000
The 1915 flags were (not quite square) Austrian tribands with white 6-pointed stars on the red
stripes: 1-0 for Rear-Admiral, 1-1 for Vice-Admiral, 1-2 for Admiral. The Großadmiral flew a flag like the Admiral but
with a gold wreath overall, so that
the upper star falls between the branches while the lower part of the wreath falls between the two lower stars (it virtually touches them close to the top of
the lower stripe).
Norman Martin, 10 October 2000
15:17, by Zeljko Heimer, 25 October 2000
15:17, red-white-red with wreath, 1-0-2 6-pointed stars
15:17, by Zeljko Heimer, 9 October 2000
15:17, red-white-red, 1-0-2 6-pointed stars
15:17, by Zeljko Heimer, 17 October 2000
15:17, red-white-red, 1-0-1 6-pointed stars
15:17, by Zeljko Heimer, 17 October 2000
15:17, red-white-red, 1-0-0 6-pointed stars.
Zeljko Heimer, 11 October 2000
In use as Commodore's flag, since 1853, but called the Cornette
from 1786 to 1853
Norman Martin, 2 December 2001
The old versions are unclear to me. Norman Martin says quoting Baumgartner
[bmg77] that in 1880 there was no change in
the pennant. In 1894 it was described as a "broad-pennant red-white-red with
coat of arms".
Zeljko Heimer, 1 December 2001
When flown from the "Querstock", this flag was
used as a seniority pennant. The flag was adopted in 1874 (Lehnert
(1886) says 1880, but is apparently incorrect, at least as far as the date of adoption is
concerned; possibly there was a period before it was actually used). There was no previous version
as far as I know.
Norman Martin, 2 December 2001
The cornette is in the same colour and design as the Ensign since
1786: used as Commando-Signal for the commander of a Schiffabteilung (Siegel
1912)
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 2 December 2001
What was the origin of the black-yellow-black canton of the
first admirals' rank flag (later adopted with modifications for Army generals)?
Why not a black-yellow canton, i.e. the "Reichfarben" flag?
Tom Gregg, 3 September 2002
I believe that it is just that - the Reichsfarben. The thing is that there was
no requirement for the Reichsfarben to be a simple horizontal bicolour - they
could have been used in any suitable combination. For example, the lamp posts
and the like were coloured with black and yellow spirals, toll-bars were
coloured "bendy" of black and yellow etc. I guess that black-yellow-black in the
admiral's flag was just another quite suitable combination for the purpose.
Zeljko Heimer, 4 September 2002