Last modified: 2007-05-05 by ivan sache
Keywords: france | naval ensign | naval jack | masthead pennant | church pennant | cross (red) |
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French naval ensign and jack - Image by Željko Heimer, 22 September 2001
The proportions of vertical stripes on the French flag when used at sea as the civil or naval ensign or jack are 30:33:37, to give a good visual effect when flying; they are therefore called "optical proportions".
Željko Heimer, 23 September 1995
The Tricolore ensign was adopted by a Decree dated 27 Pluviose of the Year II (15 February 1794) and by a Decree dated 7 March 1848. The proportions 30:33:37 were decided by a Regulation dated 17 May 1853. This Regulation gives the precise sizes, in metres and centimetres, of the standard legal ensigns, numbered from 1 to 16. #1 is 9 m x 13.5 m, whereas #16 is 50 cm x 75 cm.
Armand du Payrat & Pierre Gay, 24 September 1998
French masthead pennant - Image by Željko Heimer, 23 September 2001
The masthead pendant in its present form (replacing the interim design adopted on 24 October 1790), was established by Article IV of a Decree of the National Convention dated 27 Pluviose of the Year II (15 February 1794). The Decree gave the construction details of "one-fifth blue, one-fifth white and three-fifths red", while the table of standard sizes were confirmed by Naval Regulations issued in April 1987.
Christopher Southworth, 1 August 2004
Album des Pavillons
[pay00] shows the masthead pennant as a triangular tricolour pennant, proportion 1:20~ or 1:(4+4+12)~)
Flaggenbuch [neu92] gives
the following table for the size (in cm) of the pennant:
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Width |
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Ivan Sache, 30 September 2001
French former church pennant - Image by Miles Li, 25 December 2006
The French Navy church pennant is illustrated in Flaggenbuch, 1905 [ruh05], the year this pennant probably fell into disuse, after the French government passed a law seperating the church and the state.
Miles Li, 25 December 2006