Last modified: 2012-10-27 by ivan sache
Keywords: state ensign | lion (black) | crown: royal |
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Belgian State ensign - Image by José Carlos Alegria, 17 January 1998
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The Belgian black-yellow-red flag charged with a black crown and a black lion with red tongue and nails was the Naval service ensign from 1936 until 1940 when the Belgian Navy was abolished. The Navy was re-established in 1949 and a year later a new Naval ensign was adopted. Since then the ensign with the lion and crown has been used as the state ensign.
Mark Sensen, 17 January 1998
Michel Lupant, in his monography on Belgian flags and arms
[lup98], says:
"The flag of the State's Navy uses the Belgian lion armed and langued
red surmounted by a black crown."
Album des Pavillons
[pay00] shows this flag with the following
caption:
"On some really hoisted ensigns, the lion is fully black (in
contradiction with the prescribed description)."
Léon Nyssen, in Vexillacta
[vxl] #3 (March 1999), says:
"The State's Navy ensign was regulated by Royal Order of 28 October
1936, but its real use was postponed until winter 1937/1938. The
crews then tinkered with ensigns by using cardboard stencils of the
crown and the lion, and in several cases the lion was fully black.
Ivan Sache, 9 August 2000