Last modified: 2006-05-05 by ivan sache
Keywords: eagle: double-headed (black) | crown: royal | fasces | king's lieutenant | skanderbeg | helmet |
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Flag of Albania, 1939-1943 - Image by Jaume Ollé, 15 July 1996
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On 7 April 1939 Italian forces landed in Albania and took control of the country. An assembly gathered in Tirana deposed Zogu and offerred the crown of the country to the Italian king, Vittorio Emmanuele III, by the way of a personal union. On 13 April 1939 the offer was accepted and a new national or Royal flag was adopted.
The flag was adopted in the Constitution of 3 June 1939, whose article 3 reads:
The flag of Albania is red with the double-headed eagle in the center, together with the fascist fasces
This constitutional provision was supplemented by the Royal Decrees of 28 September 1939-XVII, # 141 & 142, relative to the national arms and flag. The article 15 relative to the flag reads:
The national flag of Albania consists of a red rectangular cloth, measuring of height two thirds of its length and containing in its center a red shield outlined in black containing the double-headed eagle, crowned by the Skanderbeg helmet. The shield is supported by two black fasces whose heads face outwards, connected above by two Savoy ribbons in black and below with a black scroll, where the word FERT is written three times.
The Royal Decree was signed by the King, by the Prime Minister Sh. Verlaci and by the Ministers of Interior and Justice.
Jaume Ollé, 15 June 1996
State flag - Image by Mario Fabretto, 12 March 1998
Mario Fabretto, 12 March 1998
King's Lieutenant's flag - Image by Mario Fabretto, 12 March 1998
Mario Fabretto, 12 March 1998
In May 1942, after several incidents involving demands for the readoption of the old State flag of Zogu times, it got back into use. The Fascist Union of Tirana accepted its use, whereas the Fascist Union and the State authorities kept on using the flag with the fasces.
Jaume Ollé