
Last modified: 2019-05-10 by rob raeside
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The ICV is now well under way. After a brief chance to meet people at the 
registration desk and the opening get-together last night, the congress started 
this morning with the formal opening ceremony on the Queen’s Lawn at Imperial 
College. Malcolm Farrow of the Flag Institute welcomed us to London, assuring 
those who were seeing the sights that they might tire out, but would not tire of 
things to see. He (and a few others of the FI) impressed us with his knowledge 
of verse 2 of God Save the Queen – most of us did not know it had more verses! 
Michel Lupant, president of FIAV then formally welcomed us, but dodgy 
microphones and competition from aircraft overhead and trolleys closer by made 
it tough to catch all he said. However we did clearly hear the hammer hit the 
desk to declare the congress in session. The flags of the UK and the FI were 
first marched in to the national anthem, then the flags of FIAV and the Congress 
to the FIAV anthem. By then it was time for the first coffee break.
Our first 
speaker was Annie Platoff, who so far had spent most of her time trying to 
unload hundreds of flag badges she brought (would you like Soviet or non-Soviet; 
baby Lenin or older Lenin?) who presented on aspects of civil religion – looking 
at how flag culture is introduced to children, in the case of the USSR through 
the Young Octobrists, and the Young Pioneers. Of special importance to the 
children was the red neckerchief, equated to a piece of the national flag. 
However, many other symbols are also used – the red star, Red Square, poppies. 
In the Q&A she added more details about the use of Soviet era flags by both 
sides in the modern strife in Ukraine and in Transnistria.
Next was Tiago 
José Berg, who introduced a vexillological component to his high school 
geography course, making large paper versions of national and Brazilian state 
flags. Even complex items up to the level of the Austrian eagle were being 
prepared as cut-out appliqués and glued on. Following the conclusion of the 
exercise, inspired in part by the Rio Olympics, a vexillological club has 
continued to run.
Ted Kaye then discussed US city attempts to introduce or 
replace flags. In a very comprehensive report, he noted that following the 
American City Flags publication and survey, cities showed only minimal interest 
in improving their flags. Following the publication of Good Flag, Bad Flag, a 
little more interest was engendered, but not until the TED talk by Roman Mars in 
2015 was there wholesale uptake in interest in flag change. He recognized four 
levels of interest – the Idea stage, Under way, Stalled, and Adopted, giving 
many examples of each. He showed 19 successful changes which we need to check 
for FOTW (Sunnyvale TX, Aberdeen WA, Liberty TX, Albany OR, Harrison OH, 
Janesville WI, Brandon SD, Bellingham WA, Elk Ridge UT, Bath ME, South Bend IN, 
Redding CA, Golden CO, Columbia MO, Orlando FL, Republic MO, West Hollywood CA, 
Provo UT, and Peoria AZ) and concluded with a substantial list of lessons 
learned, chief among which is that the political process is key. With over 100 
slides(!) he gave a very polished presentation that kept everyone wide awake!
Our final morning speaker was Kevin Harrington, who discussed the various 
anniversaries being celebrated this year (50th, 60th, 70th, 80th, 100th, 125, 
150, etc.) although was curiously careful to limit his comments on the current 
celebrations of the 150th anniversary of Canada. His presentation was definitely 
eclectic, although he did suffer from losing his speaking notes, and having to 
wing it.
After a sandwich lunch, when Annie unloaded a few more pins, 
Christopher Maddish introduced us to his fanciful world of colour coding of 
flags. Take the 7 colours of the rainbow, add white, black and pink, and you 
have 10 colours – assign each one a number, then look for a numbered quantity 
and apply the digits to find the colours. Places could be identified by their 
latitude and longitude, their zip code or postal code, and once you have 
exhausted places, you can assign flags by this method to stars of 
constellations, mountains (use height), time zones, even the elements of the 
Periodic Table. Well over 100 slides again, and probably closer to 1000 proposed 
flags resulted, which left us all wondering what else he stores in his mind!
We were brought back to reality by Pierre-Jean Guionin, from SHOM, France (they 
who publish the Album des Pavillons). First the history of the Album, which has 
been published since 1819, and is now in its 10th edition (but printed only upon 
demand from a pdf file). SHOM needs to recoup costs of its products, so you too 
can acquire the Album for €60 from diffusion.shom.fr, which includes updates for 
a year following. 
Victor Lomantsov (FOTW editor for central Asian republics 
and Mongolia and chair of the Russian Centre of Vexillology and Heraldry) then 
introduced us to the almost unknown world of trade union sport societies in the 
USSR. Although we show a few of these on FOTW 
(http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/su@.html), Victor has uncovered up to 150, 
many of which were disbanded as early as the 1950s. Using historical photographs 
(many only black and white), diplomas, posters, postcards and pins, he has 
documented and reconstructed about 90% of these society flags – a truly amazing 
collection!
Our penultimate talk was by Sekhar Chakrabarti who discussed the 
transition from a political party flag to the national flag, a common theme in 
several African countries, but looking mostly at India, whose flag uses the 
colour scheme of later versions of the Indian National Congress flag, and the 
chakra (wheel) inspired by the charkha (spinning wheel) so beloved by Gandhi. 
Similarly, in Pakistan, the national flag derives from the flag of the All India 
Muslim League, by the addition of the white stripe. He wondered what happens 
when the popularity of the party wanes, but noted in India the flag has gone on 
to represent the nation and is no longer tied to the INC, even though the two 
flags are so similar. In questions he revealed that apart from Jammu and 
Kashmir, no Indian state has been permitted to adopt a state flag, although 
current efforts in Karnataka and Nagaland are heading in that direction.
Finally, John Cartledge gave a presentation full of the driest of British humour 
on the theme of Red for Danger, noting that 77% of national flags employ red, 
but that red in a flag (or sign, berry, insect) usually means Danger! He gave 
many examples of the use of red from military to meteorological, through sports 
events and red light districts. I’ll leave the rest up to your imagination!
So ended the talks for the day, and we retired to the rooftop plaza of the Baden 
Powell Building, which is only on the second floor of a 6-story building (much 
confusion in a very small elevator!) to enjoy a champagne toast to the FIAV flag 
on its 50th anniversary, barbecued hamburgers or ribs, delicious salads and 
desserts only just rescued from dissolving in a shower of heavy rain. A good 
start to the congress! The event is running very well, suitably under the firm 
control of Graham Bartram, Ian Sumner, John Hall, Stan Zamyatin (who has put in 
a good few miles running up and down the hall with the microphone!) and Maggie 
Sumner who took the accompanying members on an interesting tour of Kenwood House 
on Hampstead Heath today.
Rob Raeside, 7 August 2017
It’s a cool and breezy morning in London. At the ICV we have one of those 
	“heavy days” – lots of talks, lots of discussion, challenging to keep on 
	schedule.
First up today was Ralph Bartlett from Melbourne – “Flags by 
	King for Country”. That title had me puzzled until Ralph revealed that 
	“King” was Bob King Crawford, a creator of community flags for many events 
	over a long period in Melbourne, and later across Australia. Beginning with 
	the Corroboree flag, but expanding out to many community festival flags in 
	the 1980s and onward, then a proposal for a national flag, Bob has been a 
	major contributor to the Melbourne scene for decades. Many of the flags are 
	eye-catchingly amateur, but define a distinct style reflecting community 
	involvement and fun. He also has designed street banners in Sydney, and a 
	kangaroo proposal.
The second paper was by Rachel Phelan, a flag 
	conservator at the national museum in Dublin, Ireland. In particular she 
	described the painstaking work she has undertaken on the Irish Republic 
	flag, where the paint is turning to dust. Using a gelatin consolidant, the 
	team has been able to halt deterioration and restore some of the flag, and 
	in the process had the opportunity to examine under the microscope holes 
	(now firmly known to be bullet holes) and slashes (which she considers 
	results from bayonet attempts to cut the flag down). In questions about flag 
	display, Rachel was loudly cheered by the response, “I would have the whole 
	National Museum full of flags!”
Roberto Breschi then related his search 
	for a set of Italian municipal flags that he found listed in an 
	un-illustrated catalogue from the 1860s that he acquired in a flea market. 
	These flags were displayed in Florence during the celebrations of Dante’s 
	birth in 1865. A painting is known showing some of them. The museum knows 
	nothing about the listed flags, so a hunt for them began. They were known to 
	be moved to the town hall in 1878 and transferred to a museum in 1908, but 
	that museum was dismantled in 1938 and its collections dispersed. A few 
	appeared later in a monastery, but most were thought lost in the great flood 
	of the Arno in 1966. Subsequently around 100 flags were found with inventory 
	numbers, but in an advanced state of decay – but the numbers correspond to 
	the catalogue Roberto had acquired! Finally, a CISV member found a 
	manuscript in the national library with beautiful colour reproductions of 
	the flags (even with catalogue numbers!) These illustrations could now be 
	identified by means of the catalogue and provide a fine snapshot of mid-19th 
	Century Italian city flags before the trend to gonfalone.
After coffee 
	break, Manuela Schmöger introduced us to a Wiki she has been compiling about 
	municipal flags, mostly of Bavaria, so far, but intending to broaden. See it 
	at kommunalflaggen.eu. She noted that kommunalflaggen.de began this effort, 
	but is moribund. FOTW of course hosts thousands of German community flags 
	(our largest single section), but is deemed awkward to work with. Wikipedia 
	rejects this sort of contribution as it is “original research” and has no 
	published source. Manuela emphasized that flags often vary from the 
	idealized (FOTW-like) drawings – in the case of Bavarian flags, the arms 
	usually remain intact but the flag colours may vary each time they are 
	manufactured, so she has emphasized the collection of photographs of flags 
	as well as drawings. Manuela is keen to invite participants to assist – 
	Bruce Berry offered “boxes” of South African municipal flags – an 
	underexplored area on FOTW also! Contact her to join (manuela.s@smev.de).
	Scot Guenter provided a more theoretical look at historical shifts and 
	emergent paradigms in vexillology, exploring how the subject has evolved. He 
	reflected on the influence of heraldry, and the importance of Whitney Smith 
	and William Crampton who pioneered the subject. He also noted the increasing 
	importance of graphic design in our society and the effect that has had on 
	vexillography and vexillology. His talk inspired lots of questions, taking 
	us well into overtime.
That left Alan Hardy as the only speaker left 
	between us and lunch, but he did a fine job of proposing standard colours 
	and ratios for flags. Being a car designer, he fits in well with the graphic 
	designers, and provided a colour scheme emphasizing contrast to be applied 
	to flags, concluding with an eye-popping 1000 squares on white for Finland.
	Following lunch, Ralph Kelly described the Empire flag, having encountered 
	one in a museum in South Australia which he attempted to date based on the 
	style of the arms of Canada, Australia and South Africa included on it. 
	Subsequently he encountered other examples, which he thinks date from 1919 
	to 1945. Why were these flags made? Was it for celebrations of special 
	events like the British Empire Exhibition, the royal silver jubilee, the 
	coronation of the king? Or were they simply used for public celebrations on 
	Empire Day, begun in Canada in 1902, subsequently celebrated elsewhere?
	Cédric de Fougerolle then gave a presentation on ex-libris bookplates, many 
	of which feature flags also. He is an antiquarian dealer in France, and has 
	collected a wide range of such plates, featuring patriotic, military, 
	maritime or heraldic themes. Speaking in French he displayed many examples 
	of such plates.
Next Ladislav Hnát from Czechia reviewed the many 
	varieties of party flags used in the Eighth European Parliament, grouped by 
	colour in this case. He focused on the 20 major parties that received at 
	least 1% of the vote, but alluded to another 150 parties.
Pluethipol 
	Prachumphol then presented a short review of the Thai flag, starting with 
	the royal chakra symbol, adding the white elephant, then removing the chakra 
	to make it a flag of the people. When the king saw a flag flying upside 
	down, he decreed a simpler r-w-r-w-r flag be used by the people, and the 
	white elephant flag be restricted to government purposes. Finally, and now 
	100 years ago, the blue stripe was added to match the flag of the allied 
	nations following Thailand’s entrance in WW1. The presentation concluded 
	with a videoclip of the raising of the largest flag – a giant Thai flag as 
	big as 6 basketball courts and weighing 560 kg.
The final presentation 
	was by the Slovenian Heraldic Society promoting their bid to host the ICV 29 
	in Ljubljana in 2021, with lots of promises of Slovenian hospitality.
	Following the presentations, the General Assembly of FIAV convened. Although 
	a bit stormy at times, the motions were approved as needed, and the assembly 
	concluded with the threat to meet again San Antonio (2019) and Ljubljana 
	(2021). A bid was placed by Chinese vexillologists to host the conference in 
	2023, but it is not yet at the voting stage.
Tomorrow we have an 
	excursion to Royal Greenwich (of Prime Meridian fame), the Royal 
	Observatory, and the Old Royal Naval College in the morning, and then the 
	National Maritime Museum in the afternoon. More to come!
Rob Raeside, 
	8 August 2017
The third day at the ICV is usually given over to a trip of some sort, and 
today we all journeyed to Greenwich, where we visited the Greenwich Observatory 
(of 0° fame). As we waited in the rain for entry, our attention was immediately 
caught by the flag flying above the complex, which we 
assumed must be the flag of the observatory.
After a good examination of the 
telescopes, clocks and living quarters and admiring views across to the north 
taking in the city of London, impressive even in the rain, we proceeded down the 
hill to the National Maritime Museum, which currently is showing a display on 
Horatio Nelson, culminating of course in the Battle of Trafalgar. We were 
treated to viewing a flag from the battle along with many mementos of Nelson, 
many from his funeral. I was privileged to be in a group with conservator Rachel 
Phelan (who spoke yesterday on the Irish Republic flag), who was able to 
analyses every stitch for us, and show us the tricks used by the museum to make 
as presentable as possible!
Our third stop took us back out into the rain, 
and on to the river to visit the Cutty Sark, a famous tea clipper, now restored 
and housed so that we could walk over it, through it and under it. All three 
museums are in easy walking distance and make a nice day out. 
Following a 
scenic walking tour through Greenwich, a nice lunch in Davy’s Wine Vaults, and a 
hike back through the rain to the NMM again, we were treated to a lecture by 
Barbara Tomlinson, Curator Emerita of the flags of the museum, whose knowledge 
about maritime flags seems to know no limits. The day concluded with a stroll 
down some alleys, through the Greenwich Market, to the riverside pier to catch 
the Thames Clipper river boat back to Westminster, and then the tube to Imperial 
College. For those of us unfamiliar with London, that gave us a good chance to 
put many of the famous locations in perspective – Canary Wharf and the Isle of 
Dogs, Tower Bridge, the Tower of London, the Shard, the Gherkin, the Houses of 
Parliament and Big Ben’s Queen Elizabeth Tower. Regretfully steady rain limited 
the photography, but the memories will remain.
Tomorrow we are back to the 
college for day 4, the next day of talks, and after the talks our FOTW meeting. 
Any FOTWers in London, feel free to join us at 5 p.m. in Beit Hall!
Rob Raeside, 9 
August 2017
A big day today - lots of papers! We started by being informed we set two 
records yesterday - 2 months' rain in one day in Greenwich, and 3 years' worth 
of vexillologists attending the National Maritime Museum!
First paper by 
Marcel van Westerhoven took us into the world of Polderboard flags in the 
Netherlands, one of the earliest democratic units in the country. Up to 3500 of 
these boards existed in the mid 19th century, although flags were not adopted 
with profusion until the mid 20th century. However, amalgamation of boards has 
resulted in reduction to 1000 by 1970, and now only 22. Many had arms, some had 
flags. New boards tend to adopt LOBs, which resulted in much groaning from those 
assembled.
Next up was Bruce Berry who reviewed flags of Southern Rhodesia 
from 19th century through the period of UDI into the transition to Zimbabwe. 
Rhodesia was an interesting case where the union jack was often the legitimate 
flag, with others used along with it - the BSAC flag, the blue ensign with 
badge, then the light blue ensign with badge. Although no change occurred at UDI 
in 1965, as sanctions took hold anti-British sentiment grew and the UJ became 
less and less appreciated. In January 1967 the Committee on Honours and Awards 
proposed the well known green-white-green flag, possibly reflecting the green 
sporting uniforms. Although there was much criticism (too similar to Nigeria, 
too Islamic, arms too British), the flag was raised on the third anniversary of 
UDI. The flag became more symbolic of white Rhodesians, and largely through 
pressure of usage at Olympics, a transition was made to the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia 
red-white-green flag with black bar in 1979/80. The UJ was finally lowered in 
1980 when the Zimbabwean flag was raised, but the flag still continues in use by 
white separatists.
Stoyan Antonov then took us into the world of Bulgarian 
municipal flags. Bulgaria has little tradition of local self-government, so the 
1991 law that local municipalities "shall define their symbols" resulted in an 
explosion of such flags, sometimes with duplication of design, but with 
different arms. A large majority of these flags are green and white, and red is 
quite rarely used, even where it would be expected ("Red Bank" uses a flag 
officially defined as terra cotta).
Following coffee, Hervé Calvarin 
presented on "Doubts and Certainties in Vexillology". He first distinguished 
primary sources (the laws, archives, photographs, stamps) from secondary sources 
(books, testimonials, dictionaries, that require verification). Then he reviewed 
several widely reported "False!" flags - many of the reported early flags of 
French Sudan, Senegal, Togo, and Gabon, including several that Hervé drew 
himself from media sources when he was a teenager. Similar issues exist with 
flags from Cochin China, West Indies Federation and French Polynesia.
Jos 
Poels reviewed the evolution of the Gambian flag. For many years, Gambia (or the 
West African Settlements) used the famous blue ensign with the scene of an 
elephant trumpeting before a palm tree and range of hills. The problem here is 
that Gambia did not have elephants or hills. At autonomy and independence, a 
call for proposals was issued and 504 received (unfortunately not available), 
and the winning design was registered in the College of Arms on 18 October 1964. 
The meaning of the colours was revealed at independence the following 18 
February - red for sun, blue for rive, green for agricultural resources, and 
white for unity and peace.
We were running later and later, but David 
Chkheidze gave a fascinating review of modern Georgian municipal flags, many of 
which have truly ancient links. He outline six rules used for the derivation of 
municipal flags as used by the Heraldic Council: (1) vexillological heritage (if 
a flag was used centuries ago, it should be reused), (2) the geographic 
component (e.g. the central location of a place, or 5 ethnic groups are 
represented by suitable designs), (3) cultural heritage (especially using 
ancient engravings), (4) using legends and myths local to an area, (5) 
reflecting the local economy, and (6) the toponymy (as in canting flags).
After lunch, Aleš Brožek reviewed flags of rowing clubs in Czechia. These date 
back at least to the 19th century, as used on rowboats, buildings, and were 
exchanged among clubs. Initially flags were simple striped flags with cantons, 
although flags in German areas avoided the use of Slavic blue-white-red 
combinations and preferred black-red-yellow.
The next talk was to have been 
given by Avelino Couceiro Rodriquez, from Cuba, but he was unable to attend, so 
it was delivered by Ian Sumner on the flags of Cuba and Puerto Rico. Why are 
these flags so similar? Reviewing the complex and little known history of these 
islands, we learned that following the 1869 uprising in Cuba, republican 
sentiment grew in Puerto Rico and among Puerto Ricans in New York, culminating 
with the four Vélez Alverado brothers who fomented an uprising from New York and 
introduced the colour-inverted Puerto Rican flag, supposedly after António Vélez 
stared at the Cuban flag and saw the Puerto Rican colours as an after-image when 
he looked away. Roberto Todd, some time mayor of San Juan, downplayed the PR 
flag in opposition to António Vélez, and in the end was responsible for 
lightening the blue and darkening the red.
Patrice de la Condamine gave a 
very animated talk (in French) about Flags and Women – women as inspiration for 
flags (the Virgin Mary for the Virgin of Guadeloupe, Mexico; the Marian 
interpretation of the EU flag; al-Minya, Egypt; the peasant woman of Luče, 
Slovenia); women allegorically on flags (Volgograd, Virginia, Alabama 1861); 
women who sewed flags (Brazil, USA, Haiti, Philippines), women who designed 
flags (Liberia, Algeria, Ghana, India 1904); women as activists (Greece 1821, 
India 1857). Let’s not forget women as heroes (Joan of Arc, Jeanne Hachette of 
ancient times; Maria Pineda in 19th century Spain and the “flag of the heroine 
of liberty”, and the Suffragette Movement in the USA and UK. Even today, many 
flags deal with women’s issues – Equal Rights, Women’s Day flags, End Violence 
against Women. Plus there are flags for queens, princesses, women’s corps in 
armies, and flags about mythical women as on the Irish harp, the Warsaw mermaid, 
and goddesses.
After our final coffee break, Uroš Žižmund reviewed national 
flags of Slovenia, so often confused with Russia and Slovakia. Although the 
white-blue-red dates from 1848, and is widely used as a national symbol, he 
feels change is needed. Proposals for change in 2003 led to no action. He 
presented two sets of flags – vertical white-blue-red and horizontal 
white-blue-yellow combinations, for CSW/CSW usages and rank flags. No promises 
were made, but he hoped for change in the future.
Finally our microphone man, 
Stan Zamyatin had his turn to stand up front (stand still is not possible for 
Stan!) to describe the county flag colours of Ireland. Rooted in the colours of 
teams in the Gaelic Athletic Association, dating back to 1884, the colours are 
an unofficial livery, but widely adopted for sporting flag purposes and borrowed 
for other purposes. He concluded that the designs are less important that the 
colours, which reflect basic tribal support.
That concluded our formal 
proceedings for the day. The organizers made an hour available for those 
interested in FOTW to meet to discuss issues and directions. A substantial 
number of people stayed behind to learn more about us, including many who are 
not generally active on FOTW. Discussion involved the nature of the FOTW editing 
process, the linkage (or not!) with FOTW-Facebook (we need help there!), the 
potential for contribution municipal flag information to kommunalflaggen.eu, and 
many offers of material from several contributors. If all offers come to 
fruition, FOTW is going to be busy for the next few months!
Following the 
FOTW session, a memorial service was held in an adjacent church for Whitney 
Smith, one of the founding fathers of vexillology, who died last year. John Hall 
led the service and Kin Spain eloquently reflected on “Why are we here?” Several 
members reflected on personal interactions with Whitney, describing him as a 
giant, a mentor, a letter writer, and a friend. Following a reading of some of 
his writings, a moment of silence, and the playing of “Raining in my Heart” by 
Buddy Holly, we dismissed after a long and informative day. 
Rob Raeside, 10 August 
2017
Day 5 – the home stretch is in sight! First up this morning was Željko Heimer 
who reviewed the use of municipal flags in Croatia. Municipal symbols go back 
several centuries in Croatia, but 1992 legislation for the adoption of coats of 
arms and flags has accelerated the process, pending somewhat limiting approval. 
He identified 7 periods of flag adoption (with an example of each given here): 
13-16th century (Šibenik); maritime ensign designs of 14-17 century (the 
hippoglyph of Cres); 17-18th century military colours (Koprivnica), 19th century 
civic associations (Osijek), the national revival in Dalmatia (Split), the 
inter-war period as part of other countries (Zadar), and post WW2 modern 
graphical designs (Krapina). He also noted that Rijeka is trying to revert to 
the tricolor used in the 1990s, subsequent disapproved by the flag authority.
Tony Burton from Australia then reminded us of the incident caused by nine 
young men who rejoiced in Speedos adorned with the Malaysian flag after the 
Formula 1 race in Kuala Lumpur won by Australian Daniel Ricardo. This incident 
shocked Malaysians, and the nine were arrested, but subsequently released. Tony 
noted that the offences included offending Islam, as well as local custom, 
insulting civic pride, ignorance of that the Malaysian flag means, and failure 
to ask. He continued that the incident highlighted ways flags are used – in 
athletic celebrations (“wearing the colours”), misused (“caped crusaders”), and 
abused (“budgie smugglers”). He likened some of these uses to the display of 
multiple flags and huge flag fixtures as a form on one-upmanship. 
Alain 
Raullet (Brittany) then showed us with his usual highly animated PowerPoint 
slides a new way to display a flag. We all know about carrying a flag upright 
from a pole, and using a central pole with a vertical flag or banner fully 
spread out, but in Breton celebrations flags are also carried horizontally over 
the shoulder (or in some cases both shoulders), and some flags are now being 
designed to take advantage of this method. In part this results from the heavy 
richly embroidered banners. This technique is also used in Trooping the Colours 
in the UK.
Roman Klimeš next reviewed attempts to fly Bohemian colours at 
early Olympic Games. Bohemia did not have a team in Athens (1896), and in Paris 
and St. Louis (1900, 1904), only an official attended. In London 1908 the 
white/red flag of Bohemia was used. Most of his talk focused on the Stockholm 
1912 games, where the Austrohungarian emperor permitted the use of the Bohemian 
arms as provincial arms, with the Bohemian team marching behind the Austrian 
team using an Austrohungarian (red-white-red split with red-white-green) flag. 
In fact, small Bohemian flags using the silver two-tailed lion on a red shield 
were used on flags and uniforms.
Carlos Alberto Morales-Ramirez then reviewed 
the use of endemic animals on North and Central American flags. Reviewing some 
4804 flags on FOTW, he discovered 28% show animals, some as part of national 
symbolism, some in scenes, some heraldic. He focused on rare, endangered or 
extinct animals – the Puerto Rico parrot on Rio Grande, the prairie chicken on 
Jasper County, Illinois, the Cuban crocodile on Cienaga de Zapata, the spirit 
bear on Terrace, BC, and the California grizzly bear. He noted that using 
animals on flags promotes conservation activities and awareness.
Last talk 
before lunch was Nicolas Hugot, who has researched flags in national 
constitutions. Beginning with the observation that the Australian Aboriginal 
flag is copyrighted, he asked “who owns it?” He examined the constitutions of 
several countries, beginning with the 15 countries in the UN Security Council. 
Some constitutions are very vague about the flags, some only refer to the usage, 
some have no mention of it. Many constitutions clearly presume that there was 
widespread understanding of design when the constitution was written.
After 
lunch Xinfeng Zhao regaled us with the flags of Genghis Khan – flag usage dates 
back to the 11th Century BCE in China, although the flags we saw (in 
reproduction) were not simple cloths, but rather bundles of horse-manes. The 
main “flag”, the Qagaan Sulde used the manes of 81 white horses, others the 
manes of black horses, or mixed bundles. We learned that the Qagaan Sulde was 
acquired in legend by Genghis Khan when he captured a lightning bolt in his 
hand, although Xingeng felt that it was more likely that it derived from 
pitchforks.
Next. Peter Hans van der Muijzenberg told us of his 
investigations of the Olympic flags, beginning with the earliest flags as 
regimental designs, in 1908. De Coubertin, as we know, devised the Olympic 
symbol in 1913, which was first used at the Olympics in Antwerp in 1920. That 
“original” flag is a fringed flag. Tracing the handing over of the flag from one 
Olympic host to the next proved complicated – slightly different flags appeared 
at different times, with varying shades on the rings, and different sizes of 
rings. Recalling the boycotted years of 1980 (Moscow) and 1984 (Los Angeles), 
Peter Hans asked how did they manage to get the flag transferred from Moscow to 
Los Angeles. And then there are the winter Olympic games!
Next up was Attila 
István Szekeres, who related some of the recent controversies surrounding the 
Szekeler flag, which is at least strongly discouraged in Romania. The modern 
flag is a relatively recent invention, but the 8-pointed or (preferably) 
multi-pointed star and crescent go back 400 years, along with an arm and sword 
with boar’s head, boar’s heart or boar’s fangs symbols. Some counties in 
Szekelerland re-use these symbols legitimately.
Our final session started off 
with a call to San Antonio, for ICV 28 on 15-19 July 2019. Several venues were 
featured for this Hemisflag – Flags at the Confluence of Civilizations of the 
Americas conference, including the opening flag raising in Travis Park and the 
closing banquet in the Spanish Governor’s Palace.
The next talk was by me, 
looking at the use of flags for municipalities in Canada, starting with dates of 
introduction, moving on to elements of the flag, and the transition from 
heraldic-based flags to flags with logos, to flags designed as part of a 
branding campaign. My forecast for the future is to brace yourself for lots more 
swoops and swirls.
Aleksander Hribovšek then introduced the new flags of flag 
officers of Heraldica Slovenica. Derived from the coat of arms of Carniola (blue 
eagle on a shield), a range of designs were posted with a white saltire design 
using blue above and below and red to hoist and fly. Rank flags are based on the 
Austro-Hungarian system of rank flags from the 1880s.
Last speaker was Theun 
Okkerse, who spoke about the obverse and reverse paradox – how do we display 
flags on paper when they have different reverses? He suggested that double-sided 
flags be displayed with the pole diagrammatically shown between the reverse (on 
the left) and obverse (on the right).
That concluded the formal 
presentations, and we retired to prepare for the closing banquet in the 
spectacularly elegant surrounds of the Horseguards Hotel in central London. 
Awards were made to NvVV for hosting ICV 25 and successfully concluding the 
final publication. The new Whitney Smith Award for the best paper at the 
conference was awarded to Rachel Phelan who spoke on the first day on the 
conservation of the Irish Republic flag. The Vexillon for the most important 
contribution to vexillology was awarded by Michel Lupant to Pierre-Jean Guionin 
from SHOM, France, for his work on the Album des Pavillons, Fellowships of the 
FIAV were awarded to Roger Baert, SVB (Belgium), Kath Kearney (Flag Institute), 
Ken Reynolds (Ottawa), Maggie Sumner (Flag Institute) and Leigh Wetherall. 
Finally, Željko Heimer was awarded a Laureate of FIAV for his doctoral 
dissertation, a copy of which were privileged to obtain with registration for 
the conference. Following a chance to revel in the opulence of the Horseguards, 
we retired for our final night in London, before dispersing around the world 
again after a first-rate congress, apparently seamlessly organized by the FI 
members, and many good memories. Now I am on the train to Scotland, and will 
return to Canada after a week’s visit there.
Rob Raeside, 12 August 2017
 image by Rob Raeside, 9 
August 2017
The flag reported by Rob is the Prime Meridian flag. This Prime Meridian flag 
is a design proposal by Chris Maddish, which was included in his presentation 
the day before. The Flag Institute arranged for the flag to be flown on the 
Greenwich Observatory for our visit. It is not the flag of the Observatory. It 
was a nice gesture for the ICV, but let's not assume it has any status. Shortly 
after we passed through the entrance, the flag was lowered and replaced by the 
Union Jack. 
Ralph Kelly, 20 August 2017
"The flag (described at Chris Maddish's personal blog:
http://zebratigerfish.blogspot.com.co/2013/09/flag-for-prime-meridian.html) 
of the Prime Meridian uses the colours blue, white, yellow, black, and orange. 
The central blue checker pattern represents the center zero point of Prime 
Meridian. The black and yellow horizontal stripes symbolize that when it is high 
noon at the Prime Meridian the day has officially begun at midnight on the other 
side of the world.
Countries that can fly this flag on their prime 
meridian include Ghana, Togo,
Burkina-Faso, Algeria,
Mali, Spain, 
France, and U.K. as well as Antarctica."
Source: 
http://zebratigerfish.blogspot.com.co/2013/09/flag-for-prime-meridian.html
Esteban Rivera, 9 August 2017