China
I: BACKGROUND
Part 3: Flag Terminology
Excerpted from The
Dictionary of Vexillology.
Banner
- A flag-like cloth draped or stretched between two anchor points, usually
bearing a slogan.
- A flag with heraldic arms placed on it overall (in other words, not in
a small shield shape). Often called a heraldic banner. The U.S. state of
Maryland is an example.
- Poetically, any flag carried by a military force.
Charge
an emblem, object, device, or design superimposed on the field(s) of a flag.
A coat of arms or simple heraldic device used as a charge is sometimes called
a badge.
Color
in heraldry, any hue which is not a metal.
Defacing
differencing a flag by adding something to it, such as a charge, a badge,
or writing. Used especially on colonial flags. Note that this term does not
have the usual meaning of"vandalizing" when used in vexillology.
Fly
is the free end of a flag, farthest from the staff. The term is also used
for the horizontal length of the flag.
Field
is the background (predominant color) of a flag.
Finial
the ornament on the end of a flagstaff or flagpole.
Ground
is the background of a flag.
Hoist
is the part of the flag closest to the staff. The term is also used for the
vertical width of a flag.
Honor Point
the place on a flag where the color or charge with the greatest or highest
symbolism is placed -- almost always the upper left.
Metal
in heraldry, the colors yellow (or) and white (argent). The rules of heraldry
forbid placing color on color, or metal on metal.
National flag
is a flag of a country.
Ratio
the relationship of a flag's width to its length, e.g. France is 2:3; Germany
is 3:5, Russia is 1:2.
Standard
a flag around which people rally. Today, term usually refers to the personal
flag of a ruler, such as the Royal Standard of a British monarch.
- an identifying flag, equivalent to a color, carried by mounted or similar
units.
- a flag based on a heraldic shield
- a flag representing a military unit;
- the personal flag of a king, president or other high official in the
U.S. military, an obsolete term for the regimental flag used by cavalry
regiments.
Tricolor
a flag of three stripes, usually equal in size, arranged either horizontally
(such as the Netherlands or Lithuania) or vertically (such as France, Italy,
or Belgium). Those arranged vertically are sometimes called tribands. Some
similarly-arranged two-color designs (such as Canada and Peru) are also called
tricolors.
Union
is a design that symbolizes unity. It may appear in the canton, as the stars
do in the U.S. flag. Or it may be the entire flag, as in the Union Flag of
the United Kingdom.
Vexillology
is the study of flag history and symbolism. The name comes from the Latin
word vexillum, which means flag. The word was coined by Dr. Whitney Smith
of the Flag Research Center.
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