
Last modified: 2007-02-10 by phil nelson
Keywords: customs and excise department: hong kong | 
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      Department flag, until 1997
      
      ![[Customs and Excise Department]](../images/h/hk_ced1.gif) by Martin Grieve and Miles Li
 by Martin Grieve and Miles Li
      
    
Jaume Ollé sent me the scan to work from and informs me that "Service was created September 1909. Flag date adoption unknown. 1-7-1997 changed"
      I shall start off with the badge detail, although really
      there is no need to 'bring out' an enlarged detail, as it
      occupies something like 8 or 9/tenths of the flag hoist
      dimension. I include it here only for posterity - and besides
      that I like badge details. Here goes - Crown and central
      badge are a faded pink colour in the scan, whilst the 'string
      of pearls' remain white - Again it is a variation of the
      standard British Crowns, but rather Edwardian I would
      propose. Who really knows if the crown had undergone an
      'overhaul' following UK change in 1953 and for that matter no
      less thn 3 different badge details would have existed during
      this time span.
      
      Martin Grieve, 16 August 2003
    
It is interesting to note that the Chinese ideograms for 'Customs' was read from left to right, instead of the traditional right to left. While individual Chinese ideogram is always written from left to right, whole line(s) of ideograms were traditionally read from right to left (whether in rows or columns). Today this rule still applies to columns. (Hence the joke 'Foreigner Looking at the Roll of Honour' - the last is mistaken to be the first!) For rows to be read from left to right - no doubt inspired by Western practices - began only in the 1950s in the PRC, and became universally accepted practice in the 1970s. So the Customs badge (and flag) probably dated from the 1970s.
      On a side note, I think the guy who designed the badge
      definitely had done his homework. Not only he chose the flag
      colour green (the traditional Chinese customs colour), but
      the presence of Chinese ideograms, in itself unique among
      colonial badges, is very beautifully written in /xiao zhuan/,
      a font dated from the Qin dynasty (221-206 BC).
      
      Miles Li, 17 August 2003
    
      Department flag, 1997-
      
      ![[Customs and Excise Department]](../images/h/hk_ced2.gif) by Martin Grieve
 by Martin Grieve
      
    
      Green is the traditional colour of HK Customs, which is
      borrowed from the Imperial and Nationalist Chinese Customs. I
      have a reproduction of the badge in a magazine, which was
      poorly printed in a dark bluish-green colour... hence the
      confusion above. One might be surprised that the 'free port'
      of Hong Kong even has a customs. It does, its main roles
      being the taxing of imported alcohol and tobacco, and the
      prevention of contraband smuggling.
      
      Miles Li, 8 August 2003