Spanish fess
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In vexillology, a Spanish fess is a term occasionally used to describe the central horizontal stripe of a tricolour or triband flag that is twice the width of the stripes on either side of it.
The name is based on the most well-known example of this style of flag, the flag of Spain, and in analogy to the equivalent term for vertically striped flags, the Canadian pale.
As with the Canadian pale, a looser definition of Spanish fess also exists, in which the central stripe is considerably larger, but not necessarily twice the width of, the two outer stripes.
Other flags featuring a Spanish fess include the national flags of Lebanon, Cambodia, and Laos, and the flag of French Polynesia.