Name | State flag (Dienstflagge) |
---|---|
Use | State flag and ensign |
Proportion | 3:5 |
Variant flag of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern | |
Name | Civil flag (Landesflagge) |
Use | Civil flag and ensign |
Proportion | 3:5 |
The flag of Mecklenburg–Vorpommern is the flag used by the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (also known as Mecklenburg-West Pomerania).
Five official proposed flags were put forward in 1990, but all were rejected. In the end, a design by Norbert Buske, then a member of the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern parliament, was adopted. It was not preferred by German vexillologists.[1] For a short time in 1990, an unofficial flag (the tricolor of Mecklenburg, defaced with its arms) was used.[2]
The civil flag (Landesflagge) shows five horizontal stripes, blue-white-yellow-white-red, shown in a range of proportions, most commonly 4:3:1:3:4. The blue stripe, defined as "ultramarinblau" (ultramarine), is topmost. The central stripe is yellow, the lowermost red ("zinnoberrot").[3] It reflects the state colors of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (blue, white, yellow and red), which are defined under Article 1 of the state's constitution.[4] Both flags are flown with the proportions 3:5. It was created by merging the flags of Mecklenburg (a horizontal tricolor of blue-white-red) and the Prussian Province of Pomerania (a bicolor of blue-white), in use since 1882.[3][5]
Color | CMYK | HKS | RAL |
---|---|---|---|
Blue (Ultramarinblau) | 100/70/0/0 | 43 | 5002 |
Yellow (Gelb) | 0/0/100/0 | 3 | 1021 |
Red (Zinnoberrot) | 0/100/100/0 | 13 | 3020 |
The state flag (Dienstflagge) is the civil flag, defaced with a bull's head and a griffin (two symbols from the coat of arms of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern). The central yellow stripe is unterrupted for this purpose. It is flown as a jack by state police boats,[3] and by official state bodies. It is also flown on official occasions. The bull's head is shown on the hoist, and the griffin on the fly.[3][5]
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