Last modified: 2008-01-19 by ian macdonald
Keywords: hejaz | arab revolt | triangle: hoist (red) | pan-arab colours |
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The Hejaz used the Arab Revolt flag black, green, white horizontally with a red triangle in the hoist. In 1921 or thereabouts the white and green were swapped, making it like the modern Palestinian flag, which is directly derived from it.
Roy Stilling, 12 March 1996
After the fall of Hejaz the colors were used by Husain's sons 'Abdulla (emir of the Transjordan) and Faisal (king of Iraq). Later on they became known as the Pan-Arab colors.
Harald Müller, 13 March 1996
The Kingdom of Hejaz disappeared in 1924-25 when Emir Abdul Aziz of Nejd drove the Hashemites out of Mecca, Medina, and Jeddah, leading to the creation of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Joseph McMillan, 13 November 2000
The flag of the Hejaz was designed by Sir Mark Sykes of the British Foreign Office for the Arab forces under the Sherif Hussein operating with Allenby in Palestine. Hussein modified the shade of red, but I do not know what the original shade was. The original issues of the flag were manufactured by the British military in Egypt.
Theodore Leverett, 12 August 2000
David Fromkin's A Peace to End All Peace: The Fall of the Ottoman Empire and the Creation of the Modern Middle East (Avon, New York, 1990; orig. Holt, New York, 1989), has the following about this flag, on page 315, referring to the period in early 1918, when Allenby's multi-national army was preparing to advance from Jerusalem to Damascus:
Among their banners was one designed by Sir Mark Sykes for Hussein [Sharif of Mecca] and the Arab cause. Its colors black, white, green, and red were meant to symbolize the past glory of Moslem Arab empires and to suggest that Hussein was their contemporary champion. Hussein's only modification of the design was to change the hue of the red. Sykes had ordered flags to be made up by the British military supply offices in Egypt, and then had them delivered to the Hejaz forces.Fromkin cites Sykes's papers at the Middle East Centre, St. Antony's College, Oxford (DR 588.25) for this information. He also shows a photograph (plate 21 in the book) of Arab troops carrying the Hejaz flag. Although in black and white, it appears to match the image above. (...) For more on this subject, read this letter at The Gertrude Bell Archive:
We [King Faisal of Iraq, Gertrude Bell and others] then spent a happy hour discussing (...) the national flag and Faisal's personal flag. For the latter we arranged provisionally this [sketch] i.e. the Hijaz flag with a gold crown on the red triangle. The red I must tell you is the colour of his house so he bears his own nom[en] on it. Father, do for Heaven's sake tell me whether the Hijaz flag is heraldically right. You might telegraph. It's a very good flag and we could differentiate it for the Iraq by putting a gold star on the black stripe or the on the red triangle. The Congress will settle it directly it meets do let me know in time. Also whether you have a better suggestion for Faisal's standard.There's a hint in there (the question to Gertrude Bell's father as to the heraldic correctness of the Hijaz flag) of where the change in the sequence of the stripes may have come from. A purist might well have objected to placing black and green together.
At that point (1923 is the year I am quoting) Hejaz's flag was black, green, white horizontal stripes with a red triangle at the hoist. (...) This came from some research William Crampton did for me when I was doing a historical map of the Middle East showing the changing borders this century. I wanted to make sure that for each year we featured the flags were the correct ones.
Graham Bartram, 1 July 1997
Jordan used the same flag as Hejaz from March 1921.
Jaume Ollé, 10 November 2000
I wonder if Jaume Ollé is actually saying that Hejaz changed the order of its stripes to black-white-green on March 1921. Since the Transjordan Emirate was also created c.1921, the obvious question is, did it ever use the black-green-white flag? Or did it use the black-white-green flag before Hejaz did?
Santiago Dotor, 13 November 2000
The German Navy's Flaggenbuch 1926 shows the flag of Hejaz with a short triangle in a flag of 2:3 (labelled Hedschas und Irak).
Ralf Stelter, 28 January 2001
Hejaz and Nejd.
In the 1929 revised supplement to the 1915
"FOTW" W.J. Gordon wrote;
"The new Kingdom of the Hedjaz has chosen an excellent flag, black, white and
green, horizontal, with a red triangle based all down the hoist and having its
apex two fifths of the flag's length in the middle of the white; and Iraq is
under the same flag owing to King Feisal of Bagdad having been the son of King
Hussein of Mecca. The same flag is also flown by Trans-Jordania."
1932. Hejaz and Nejd became the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
The
National Geographic (1934), page 344, has a half-page
photograph of the flag flown during the visit of the King of Saudi Arabia to
Germany in
1932. It is similar to the present Saudi flag except that the inscription and
sword
completely cover the whole flag. In spite of this no flag is shown for Saudi
Arabia in the
coloured section of national flags. Perhaps it was thought that the flag in the
photograph
was a Royal Flag and that Saudi Arabia did not have a National Flag?
With a white stripe.
In E.H. Baxter's "National Flags" (1934); "The National Flag is formed of a green
square and
a narrow white strip at the staff; on the green square is an Oriental motto with
a
sheathed scimitar below it both in white. This flag is said to have been
designed about a
hundred years ago by the grandfather of the present King. Proportion 8 : 7."
He goes on to give the dates on which the National Flag is flown.
This flag is repeated in a number of publications until 1950 when an appendix to
the
"Book of Flags" by Campbell and Evans has, "The flags have been altered. The
Arabic
words now appear above a white scimitar on the Royal Flag and above two crossed
swords on the National Flag. The field is green, but a narrow stripe in the
hoist is
white."
Decree of 1937.
1953 "FOTW" by H. Gresham Carr. "The Royal Standard and the Ensign are the same
as the
National Flag, except for the sizes of their fields, and the Ensign has an
additional
charge in the form of a small white anchor in the upper corner of the fly. The
Army and
Air Force use the National Flag. In accordance with decree 18/1/1356 A.H., the
National
Flag is 150 by 100 centimetres, the Royal Standard 250 by 230 centimetres, and
the Ensign
is 150 centimetres square. The Merchant Flag is unique in that it is triangular
in shape
(each side being 140 centimetres); the two white swords in saltire are placed in
the
centre of the flag and a small white anchor in the upper hoist."
Illustrations of the Ensign and National Flag have crossed swords.
A web-site translates 18/1/1356 Anno Hegirae as 31 March 1937.
Observer's Book of Flags.
In the 1959 Observer's Book of Flags, Evans, who co-authored the 1950 "Book
of Flags" in
which the Royal Flag was said to have one sword, now wrote that the Royal
Standard was
similar to the National Flag which had two crossed swords. His
1966 edition is
the same,
but in the 1975 edition all flags, except the Merchant Flag, have a single
sword.
FOTW.
Editions of "FOTW" have the same information as the
1953, sometimes abbreviated,
until 1971 when on page 195 E.M.C. Barraclough wrote, "Now the Saudi Arabian flag has
only one
white sword", but on page 196, "Sometimes the Saudi-Arabian flags have only one
white
sword instead of the two in saltire."
David Prothero, 26 October 2006