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Most of the Austrian-Hungarian naval fleet stationed in Pula was surrendered to the National Council of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (the state proclaimed by the parts of Austria-Hungary settled by Southern Slavic peoples, later united with Serbia and Montenegro to form what shall be called Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes [SHS] and afterwards Yugoslavia) on 31 October 1918 after the order by the Emperor Carl I. The replacement of ensigns in Pula was performed in the afternoon of 31 October, and in other Adriatic ports on 1 November 1918. The ensign of a red-white-blue Croatian tricolour was hoisted. Some ships hoisted also Slovene tricolour and other Serb tricolour (all probably without any defacements - the remaining reports are mainly "ignorant" to the difference in the "Slavic colours" and name them all the same). Several ships were reported hoisting a Montenegrin ensign, as their captains reasoned that this was the only internationally recognized at the time. Some ships hoisted a fourth flag, beside Croat, Serb and Slovene - namely the Czechoslovak one, since part of the crews were also Czechs or Slovaks. Non-Slavic crew (Germans/Austrians, Hungarians) was removed from ships. Occasionally, such ships would fly the French flag (e.g. ships returning from Corfu), to avoid being seized by Italians. Of course, the Italians soon took their hands on the most of the Adriatic fleet, some ships were taken by the French and so on, while a few of the oldest and least useful ships were eventually left to SHS. [Isaić]
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
The ships carrying the non-Slavic sailors and officers (and state servants
and their families) from Southern Dalmatia to Pula were using the white ensign
(i.e. the parley flag, the sign of negotiations), as is documented in a number
of photographs. [Isaić, Baumgartner]
The river flotilla on the Danube was
surrendered to the Royal Hungarian Government in Budapest only on 6 September
1918, and before that the red-white-red naval flag of Austria-Hungary with the
Hungarian red-white-green tricolour were hoisted side by side. Afterward the
hand-over the Hungarian tricolour was used solely. [Baumgartner]
This was
the end of the official use of the Austrian naval Kriegsflagge. However, yet at
one time it was to be briefly and rarely raised in an official capacity -
it was introduced on 1 August 1940 in the Nazi German Navy, as a special flag to
be hoisted on the main mast of the heavy cruiser "Prinz Eugen" on 31 May every
year, instead of the German Imperial flag that was used on that date on the
other naval ships of the Third Reich. [Neubecker]
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
However, while the
negotiations regarding the division of the Austrohungarian naval fleet were
ongoing, in the international waters the Inter-Allied flag of four white and
blue stripes was to be used as an ensign [Vasiljević] with the ensign of the
country that requisitioned the ship hoisted on the mainmast [Pomorska
enciklopedija]. Other sources mentioned triband flags for Inter-Allied ships
(blue-white-blue and white-blue-white) of the Allied Maritime Transport Council
[Pregel; cf. Prothero on our page on Ensigns for Merchant Ships Transferred to the Allies 1918].
It doesn't seem
clear if there was any difference in the flags for former German and former Austrian-Hungarian ships (in spite
of the reports above), or how much this regulation was followed at all. Also,
it does not seem clear whether this was meant for naval or merchant ships, or
for both.
Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
- Lothar Baumgartner: Die Entwicklung der österreichischen Marineflagge,
Militaria Austriaca, Gesellschaft für Österreichische
Heereskunde, Wien, 1977
p. 34
- Vladimir Isaić: "Pomorski običaji i tradicije", Adamić, Rijeka, 2001.
p. 37
- Ottfried Neubecker: "Flaggenbuch (Flg.B.). Bearbeitet und
herausgegeben vom Oberkommando der Kriegsmarine. Abgeschlossen am 1. Dezember
1939", reprint Mauritius Buch Verlag, Zwickau, 1992. add. p. 8a, IXa
- Jovan
Vasiljević: "Stvaranje ratne mornarice Kraljevine Jugoslavije (Oktobar 1918 -
Septembar 1923)", Istorija XX veka - Zbornik XI, Beograd, 1970, pp. 137-213
-
"Zastava", Pomorska enciklopedija VII, Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod,
Zagreb, 1964
- Georg Pregel: "Die SHS Kriegsmarine in den Jahren 1919-1923",
"Marine - Gestern, Heute" (MGH), 1/1987, Mistelbacj-Wien, pp. 1 ff.