Last modified: 2020-07-31 by ian macdonald
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image by
Miles Li, 09 May 2015
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A red flag with a black nine-pointed star and yellow disks was used during
the conquest of Wuhan on 10 October 1911. It was later considered a
"historical" flag and was used as the war flag by the army. It was
never used for civil purposes.
Mario Fabretto, 20 October 1997
Officially the 18-star flag ("War Flag") was designed in late
September 1911 by Chen Lei and the Zhao brothers, three technical college
students in Wuhan at the time. Twenty flags of this design were then made in
secret by a local tailor shop owned by the Zhao family (whether this Zhao
family was related to the Zhao brothers is not clear).
The 18 stars represented the 18 provinces of China at the time.
Miles Li, 16, 18 March, 2005
image by
Miles Li, 09 May 2015
The Iron Blood 18-Star Flag (or simply the 18-Star Flag) was originally
designed in August 1907 by a group of Chinese revolutionaries in exile in
Japan, as the flag of the Progressive Association. The black and red of the
flag symbolized iron and blood respectively; the nine points represented the
nine ancient provinces of China, while the eighteen yellow discs ('stars' in
traditional Chinese depictions) represented the eighteen provinces of China
Proper at the time (the homeland of the majority Han ethnicity, thereby
excluding Manchuria, Mongolia, Xinjiang and Tibet).
On 10 October 1911 the 18-Star Flag was used during the Wuchang Uprising (in
modern day Wuhan, Hubei Province), and on 11 October it became the flag of
the Hubei Military Government.
On 10 January 1912 the Provisional Senate of the newly established Republic
of China passed the first of several resolutions which adopted the 18-Star Flag
as the Army Flag, along with the Five-Striped Flag as the National Flag, and the
'Blue Sky, White Sun, All Field Red' flag as the Naval Ensign.
The
Provisional President, Sun Yat-Sen, refused to rectify the resolution,
partly because he preferred the 'Blue Sky White Sun' design, partly because
regarded the 18-Star Flag as not representative of the entire 22 provinces
and 2 regions of China at the time, and partly because he wanted the issue
to be resolved through a popular referendum. Nonetheless the 18-Star Flag
was quickly adopted by the Army as its flag.
Miles Li, 09 May 2015
image by
Miles Li, 09 May 2015
On 13 February Sun resigned his Presidency; the Provisional Senate elected
Yuan Shikai to the office two days later. Meanwhile the debate on flags
dragged on for months: among other things, Senators from Manchuria
felt the 18-Star Flag excluded the three Manchurian provinces; to alleviate
their concern a proposal was made to amend the 18-Star Flag by adding a
nineteenth, large, yellow disc, representing the Central Government, onto
the centre of the flag. Then came a counter-proposal to reduce the size of
the central disc to the same as the other 18 stars, to avoid any connotation
of Central dominance over the provinces.
Eventually a compromise was reached between the Provisional Senate and
Provisional President Yuan, who on 8 June proclaimed the 19-Star Flag as the
Army Flag, alongside the Five-Striped Flag as the National Flag and
the Blue Sky White Sun Flag [sic] as the Naval Ensign.
On 17 December 1928 the 19-Star Flag was abolished along with the
Five-Striped Flag, in favour of the 'Blue Sky, White Sun, All Field Red'
Flag.
Miles Li, 09 May 2015
image by Miles Li, 09 May 2015
Being provisional in nature, the 18-Star Flag had no official
specifications. Some specimens had narrow, stalk-like points; some had discs at
the inner ring which were smaller than those at the outer ring. Two renditions
are illustrated here, one based on an enneagram/nonagram, the other based on the
official specifications of the later 19-Star Flag.
As for the 19-Star Flag, the official specification of the Army Flag showed one
point pointing towards the fly; however the official specification of the
Regimental Colours had one point pointing upwards. In both cases the distance
between the central disc and each disc at the inner ring should be the same as
that between each disc at the inner ring and the disc on the same point at the
outer ring; some had the inner discs sequenced between the outer discs rather
than aligned with them.
Miles Li, 09 May 2015
The official specification was given in
Yingzaochi, or 'Architect's Feet', in which one chi ('foot') equals 32cm. For
ease of understanding the following specification is stated in centimetres.
Dimension of the flag: 80cm x 96cm, plus 12.8cm black fringe. A white vertical
strip, 57.6cm x 11.2cm, was placed at the hoist, 11.2cm from the top and the
bottom of the flag, on which the name of the regiment was written in black
letters. The distance from the centre of the central disc to the centre of each
disc at the outer ring was 29.44cm; the distance from the centre of the central
disc to the centre of each disc at the inner ring was 14.72cm; the radius of
each disc was 2.944cm. The flag pole was red, 240cm long x 8cm circumference,
with the sleeve of the flag in yellow; at the top of the flag pole was a bronze
spearhead, 22.4cm long, with a red tassel underneath, 22.4cm long; at the base
of the flag pole was a bronze pike, 16cm long.
Miles Li, 10 May 2015
Version in the Former Headquarter of the Wuchang Uprising
image by Ivan Sarajcic, 30 November 2005
Source: Photograph by J. Patrick Fischer
The Provisional Republican Government was set up on 10 October 1911 by Sun
Yatsen and Li Yuanhong, a military commander in Wuchang (today is Wuchang a
quarter of Wuhan).
I visited the "Former Headquarter of the Wuchang Uprising" in
2003. In front of the brick building are two war flags at the gate. The stars
are looking not so thin, like on Rob Raeside's image (I will post a photo
tomorrow).
A small original flag is shown inside. It looks like the war flag with two
faded yellow (?, now dirty white) stripes above and below. Inscription says,
that this is the army flag of the Wuchang uprising, created by Sun Wu.
More information about the war flag can be found at sun.yatsen.gov.tw
in Chinese. There is one more other variant of the flag (dated 1906?).
J. Patrick Fischer, 30 November 2005
image contributed by gefeng, 16 January 2008
image contributed by gefeng, 16 January 2008
click on image for a larger image