Last modified: 2007-09-08 by victor lomantsov
Keywords: mongol | chinghiz-khan | falcon | crow |
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This flag is shown in Znamierowski's World Encyclopedia of Flags.
Phil Nelson, 18 February 2000
Modern 'scientists' have very many reconstructions of flag of Chinghiz-khan but all they are very doubtful. Ancient chronicles says about white and black banners of Chinghiz-khan with 9 tails. White colours was sacred in that times. Black colour was the colour of gods of death. May be it was real horse`s tails. May be it was cloth banner with 9 tails. The number of tails was showed the rank of commander. The symbol of Chinghiz-khan was a falcon with a crow in his claws. Poor ancestor of Chinghiz, Boduanchar, was the hunter. He made his job with tamed falcon. Source. V.Jan, novel 'Batu-khan' Mongol scientists think that the falcon was the main element of the white banner of Hiad-borjigin tribe (E.Har-Davan "Chinghis the Commander and His Successors"), father-tribe of Chinghiz-khan.
Victor Lomantsov, 22 April 2001
Scaned images of three flags (two different flags) from photo
of 700th anniversary of birth of Mongol Empire Festival in Mongolia 2006.
They used two flags:
1 blue triangle bearing white bird with red fringe
2 blue rectangle bearing white flame sun and moon like a part of soyombo
with three red long tails.
Nozomi Karyasu, 7 October 2006
In the Catalan Atlas, the distribution of flags of four main Mongol khanates is based mostly on the "Book of Marco Polo" and "Libro del conoscimiento de los reinos". In some cases, the flags above the cities are
not the correct ones, considering the then state boundaries. It might be discussed if these flags were
really used, although they might be partly based on real-life informations. Although other classifications are also possible (as noted below), all the flags are
classified here as Mongolian, because the rulers of three western khanates were nominally vassals of the
Grand Khan and the state boundaries generally do not allow identification of a khanate with a single modern
state.
Description of the flags see below. Sources:
[1] Polo, Marco: Milion (Original title: Il Milione di Marco Polo) Zagreb: Mladost, 1954
[2] Enciclopedia universal ilustrada, vol. XXI, Espan~a Madrid: Espasa-Calpe S.A., 1968
[3] Istorija otkric'a i istraz<ivanja, vol. I: Poc<etak istraz<ivanja; Mladinska knjiga,
Ljubljana, 1979; Original title: A History of Discovery and Exploration, vol. I: The Search
Begins;(C) 1973 Aldus Books Limited, London
[4] Web page about Guyuan, Hebei (in Italian): crioracle.cri.com.cn/italian/panorama/Viaggiare/Weng%20Yi/articoli/Guyuan.htm
[5] "Book of Marco Polo" at Biblioteca Italiana (in Italian): www.bibliotecaitaliana.it/ScrittoriItalia/catalogo/show-text.xq?textID=mets.si20\3
[6] Wikipedia page about the Timurid dynasty: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timurid_Dynasty
[7] Libro del Conoscimiento. Viajes medievales, vol. I Madrid: Fundacio'n Jose' Antonio de Castro, 2005 ISBN 84-96452-11-5 (complete edition) ISBN 84-96452-12-3 (vol. I)
[e9s50]
[8] Apendices. (Ibid.)
[9] Catalan Atlas - image of the part showing Persia: www.georgeglazer.com/maps/world/catalanasia.JPG
[10] Catalan Atlas - image of the part showing central Asia: tigger.uic.edu/~adsera/i8_0000h.jpg
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 April 2007
This book in our Biliography as [c2q75]:
Title: Mapamundi vol dir aytant com ymage del món … Medium: chart
Languages: Catalan; Latin
Authors:
* Cresques Abraham / כרשכש
אַבְרָהָם;
* Jafudŕ Cresques / כרשכש
יְהוּדָה / Jehudŕ Cresques /
Jaume Ribes
Title in English: Mapamundi, image of the world and of the regions
there are on Earth and the various peoples which inhabit it
Publisher: Corona de Aragó: Palma de Mallorca
Date: 1375
Edition: 1st
Height: 65 cm
Width: 50 cm
Pages: 6
Remarks: So called “Catalan Atlas” or “Charles Quint Atlas”.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 23 April 2007
The silver flag with engrailed fly, charged with three
red crescents, is
hoisted above numerous cities held by the Grand Khan.
The name of the country, Cathay (spelled Catayo), is
also inscribed on the map (so the flag might be
classified as Chinese, too). The cities with the flag
which can easily be identified are [1, 2, 3]: Cambaluc
(spelled Chambalech), Grand Khan's capital
(present-day Beijing); Zayton (present-day Quanzhou,
Fujian province), the port from which Marco Polo
eventually left China; Lop, off the Lop Nor lake, the
westernmost city held by the Grand Khan; Camul
(spelled Camull; present-day Khamil or Hami, in
Xinjiang autonomous region), Sindaciu (spelled
Sinacius; present-day Xuanhua, Hebei province) and
Ciagannor (spelled Ciagamor; present-day Guyuan, Hebei
province [4]), the cities which Marco Polo passed
through on the way from Lop to Cambaluc; and Fugui,
which might be a misspelling of Fugiu (Fuzhou, Fujian
province[5]) - although there is also a city of Fugio
(without the flag), Fugui is the one whose location
seems to better correspond to the real city. About the
flag itself, there seems to be no evidence that the
Grand Khan had really used a flag with such design: it
seems to be more appropriate to some of other
khanates, whose rulers and their Mongol subjects had
converted to Islam by the time when the Catalan Atlas
was made. In Wikipedia, a black flag with three red
discs, which is shown as the Timurid flag [6], seems
to be erroneously derived from the Grand Khan's flag
described here, whose silver field has darkened by age
to almost black and crescents are no longer easy to be
recognized as such. Nevertheless, all this seems to
speak in favour of the suggestion that a flag of a
Muslim khanate might have been attributed to the Grand
Khan by the mapmaker.
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 April 2007
The golden flag with the red square in centre is in
fact the flag of Persia from the "Libro del
conoscimiento de los reinos" [7] (so it might also be
classified as Iranian). In the Catalan Atlas [2, 9],
it is shown with engrailed fly, except above the city of Hormuz
(spelled Hormissiom), where it is rectangular. Of other cities with the
flag, those easy to identify are Kerman (spelled
Creman), Qeshm (spelled Chesi), Bukhara (spelled
Bocar) and Samarkand (spelled Samarchanti), although
the last two were actually in the Chagatai Khanate.
Curiously, Tabriz, the capital of Ilkhanate, is not
shown in the map, although the Il Khan himself is
depicted as "King of Tabriz" ("Rey del Tauris").
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 April 2007
The flag of this khanate, whose ruler Kebek ("Lo rey
Chabech") is depicted in the map, is white with a gold
square in centre. It has engrailed fly, except above a city called
Baldassia [2, 9, 10], where it is rectangular. Of other cities with the
flag, those easy to identify are Khotan (spelled
Cotani) and "Many cities built by Alexander the
Great", in present-day Afghanistan and Tajikistan,
which are represented by two cities only [2]. Unlike
other Mongol flags in the map, this one is always
shown with the sinister hoist (in the attached images
as well). The design might be a combination of those
of two flags from "Libro del conoscimiento de los
reinos": the flag of Persia (see above) and a silver
flag with a gold vertical stripe, which was attributed
to the "Empire of Almalik" ("Imperio de Armalec"),
named after a city, nowadays ruined, in Xinjiang,
China, but said to have held northeastern parts of
India as well; that flag was also attributed to
several Indian states, most notably Sultanate of Delhi
("Reinado de Delini") [7, 8].
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 April 2007
This flag has
engrailed fly and two red charges on silver field
(which was almost blackened by age until present
time). One of the charges is a crescent and the other
looks like a simplified form of the tamga from the
flag of Idel Ural. On different copies of the flag, the crescent has
different size; it is often smaller than shown here,
sometimes even reduced into a simple oblique stroke
and conjoined with the other charge into a sigle
symmetrical object; the other charge also sometimes
lacks the oblique part [2, 3]. It was obviously
difficult to draw the charges always the same way. The
cities with this flag which are easy to identify are
[2, 7, 8]: Sarai, the capital (spelled Sarra) - there
is also a depiction of the ruler, "Jani Beg Lord of
Sarai" ("Jambech senyor de Sarra"); Tana, present-day
Azov, Russia; and Urgench, Uzbekistan (spelled
Organci, with a cedilla under the c; nowadays ruined).
This flag is a variant of the flag of "Emperor of
Sarai" ("Emperador de Sara") from "Libro del
conoscimiento de los reinos" [7] and might be the one
that had really existed, considering the similarity of
its charges with those from the flag of Idel Ural.
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 April 2007