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image by Oskar Myszor
source: "Okrety Wojenne" [p9lxx]
image by Oskar Myszor
source: "Okrety Wojenne" [p9lxx]
image by Oskar Myszor
source: "Okrety Wojenne" [p9lxx]
I made some images for the booklet of Aldo Ziggioto (president of CISV) "Dove l'oriente e' rosso: Viaggio vessillologico in Cina e dintorni" distributed as supplement of the "Rivista Marittima, n. 6 June 1996" and, among the others, I also made one for the civil ensign 1903-1912.
The text on the booklet relative to the civil ensign says (more or less):
Mario Fabretto, 27 April 1997...In the year 1872 the war and civil ensigns were identical, to make some distinction was necessary: it was decided that the merchant ensign should be a red rectangular flag, charged with a yellow disk in the center. This flag was indeed that of the Chinese shipping line. ... omitted ... The merchant ensign remained unchanged until 1903, when on the yellow disk were placed one (for ships of a single shipowner) or two dragons (two or more shipowners).
W. J. Gordon, in the 1915 edition of Flags of the World, stated that the red flag with a yellow disc was that of the China Merchant Steam Navigation Company, and the popular belief that it was the Chinese Merchant Ensign was a mistake. It seems that the addition of one or two dragons onto the disc was an attempt to design a flag which was distinctive yet would not be mistaken by the public. It is doubtful whether the ensign had any official status, and indeed whether it was regularly flown, although it did feature as a decoration on calendars, etc., used in China during that era. Miles Li, 02 February 1999
See also:
This is one of 50 cards series entitled "Countries Arms &
Flags" issued by John Player & Sons [g9b05], a branch of the British Imperial
Tobacco Company, in 1905. Other series issued by this Company are "Flags of
the League of Nations" (1928) and "National Flags and Arms."
(1936).
Antonio Gutierrez, 1 September 2004
See also:
image
by Oskar Myszor
source: "Okrety Wojenne" [p9lxx]
The saltire design shows that this was probably used during 1916, when Yuan
Shih-Kai was Emperor of China.
Miles Li, 18 May 2002