The Madagascar flag is a tribar. The used colors in the flag are red, white, green. The proportion of the Madagascar flag is 2:3. The Flag of Madagascar was adopted in 1958.
The flag of Madagascar (Malagasy: sainan’i Madagasikara; French: drapeau de Madagascar) was adopted on 14 October 1958, two years before the independence of that nation, as Madagascar prepared for a referendum on its status in the French Community.
The colors of the flag represent Madagascar’s history and traditional peasant classes. Red and white were the colors of the Merina kingdom, which was conquered by France in 1896. They were used in the flag of the last Merina monarch, Queen Ranavalona III. Green was the color of the Hova, the largest class of peasant commoners, who played a significant role in anti-French agitation and the independence movement.
Current flags
Ethnic
-
2:3 Flag of the Merina people (since 1997)[3]
Military
-
1:20 Masthead pennant
Historical flags
-
2:3
Flag of the Antankarana Kingdom
-
2:3
Flag of the Antongil Kingdom
-
2:3
Flag of the Boina Kingdom, similar to the Peruvian flag
-
2:3
Flag of the Menabe Kingdom, similar to the Austrian flag
-
2:3
First flag of the Tamatave Kingdom, 1750–1819
-
2:3
Second flag of the Tamatave Kingdom, 1819-1822
-
2:3
Third flag of the Tamatave Kingdom, 1822-1826
-
2:3
Fourth and final flag of the Tamatave Kingdom, 1826-1828
-
2:3
Flag of the Tanibe Kingdom, 1822-1828
-
2:3
Standard of the Merina Kingdom, c. 1787–1885[citation needed]
-
2:3
Flag of the Merina Kingdom, c. 1810–1885, similar to the Polish flag
-
2:3
Flag of the Malagasy Protectorate, 1885–1896
-
2:3
The French tricolour of the colonial period, 1896–1958
Presidential Standards
Malagasy Republic
-
2:3
Philibert Tsiranana, 1959
-
2:3
Gabriel Ramanantsoa, 1972–1975, obverse side
Democratic Republic of Madagascar
-
2:3
Didier Ratsiraka, 1976–1993, obverse side
Third Republic of Madagascar[edit]
-
2:3
Albert Zafy, 1993–1996, obverse side
-
2:3
Didier Ratsiraka, 1998–2002, obverse side