Associated with Revolutionary and later Imperial France. The three colours in
vertical stripes were first used as a canton on Naval flags in 1790, and extended
to the whole field in 1794. One of the flags in the naval signalling alphabet
is still a red-white-blue vertically striped flag - ie like the modern French
flag, but with the colours reversed. The French National Convention adopted the
modern blue-white-red flag as the national flag on 15 February 1794 (or 27 pluviôse
an II in the revolutionary calendar). The relevant part of the decree says, in
translation:

II. The national flag shall be formed of the three national colours,
set in three equal bands, vertically arranged so that the blue is nearest to the
staff, the white in the middle, and the red flying.

The
Tricolore went out of use with Napoléon's defeat at Waterloo. It was replaced
by a white flag (c/f the old royal flag) from 1814 to 1830. During the July revolution
of that year the Tricolore was re-established by the Marquis de Lafayette under
the relatively liberal regime of Louis-Philippe. It has remained in use ever since.
The present Constitution of the French Republic (1958) declares: L'emblème
national est le drapeau tricolore, bleu, blanc, rouge (The national emblem
is the tricolor, blue, white, red, flag). When hoisted vertically, the French
national flag is often forked.



The
three vertical coloured bands were not always of equal width, and on the French
naval jack they are still not of equal width. The idea is that unequal bands can
look more equal that genuinely equal ones when the flag is flying. Whether or
not it works in real life, is difficult to tell - it certainly does not work well
for flat rectangles on the page (see the flag on the left).




The
flag features on an official
French logo shown on the left, along with Marianne
and French
national motto. It is sometimes represented as a coat of arms as on the right,
most people not knowing and not recognising the (semi-official) coat
of arms of France.
The French tricolore has provided a model for the
flags of other Republics - for example Italy and Ireland among many others. But
it is not restricted to republics. Belgium for example, a monarchy, uses a tricolore.
The French national flag is one of the sybols of sovereignty mentioned in article 2 of the French Constitution of 1958: "L'emblème national est le drapeau tricolore, bleu, blanc, rouge."
High French officials use personal banners based on the French tricolore. Presidents since de Gaule deface the banner with their own personal device. Banners of other officials are standardised like the examples below: |
|
|
Prime Minister | Minister
of National Defence | Joint
Chief of Staff | Naval
Chief of Staff | | |
| | | | | |
Admirals
also use defaced banners:
Fleet Admiral | Fleet
Vice Admiral | Vice
Admiral | Rear Admiral | certain
Captains | |
| | | | | |
Here
are some other examples:
Minister of Overseas
Departments & Territories | Maréchal
de France | Army
Chief of Staff | Air
Force Chief of Staff | General
Delegate for Armament | |
| | | | | |

Military
flags use the same colours but a different design with a white lozenge in the
middle. On the left is the flag of one of Napolean's regiments.

On
the right is the flag of the Free French Navy with the cross of Lorraine (Croix
de Lorraine) in a white lozenge. This jack is still hoisted today on warships
of the French Navy named after Free French Naval units.
French
Yacht Club Flags







You
will notice that almost no private individual in the Languedoc flies the French
Tricolore flag, though many fly the flag of the old
Counts of Toulouse, with the famous
Cross of Toulouse. Many mairies will fly this flag along with the tricolore
and the flag of the European Community.

A
minor footnote: The annual `rent' paid by The Duke of Marlborough to the English
Crown for the royal manor of Woodstock and Blenheim Palace is a Royal French flag,
"Argent three fleurs-de-lys Or" as shown on the right. It dates from the victory
of John Churchill at Blenheim in 1704, well before the French Revolution, when
this was the French national flag.

The
Duke of Wellington pays a similar rent for his property, also granted in recognition
of military victory. His victory, at Waterloo, occurred just over a century later,
in 1805, after the French Revolution. Each year he presents as rent a tricolore, the
national French flag in 1805.