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The Flag Print E-mail

The maroon-white-maroon flag of Latvia is one of the oldest in the world and dates back to a battle against Estonian tribes near the Latvian town of Cēsis in the 13th century. According to one legend, it originated from a white sheet used to carry a mortally wounded Latvian tribal chief from the battlefield. Soaked with his blood on two sides, his soldiers hoisted the warrior’s sheet as a banner as it led them to victory.

The Flag
   

In the 1860’s Latvian student Jēkabs Lautenbahs-Jūsmiņš discovered a written reference to this flag in a collection of 13th century rhyming verse chronicles popular among the knights of the Livonian Order. These ‘songs’ glorified the feats of the Germanic Crusaders that sought to Christianize the pagan Latvian tribes.
A half century later, in May 1917, artist Ansis Cīrulis used this historical description to design the flag as we know it today. On June 15, 1921 this design was adopted as the Latvian national flag by parliamentary decree.

Size

The flag’s colour proportions are 2:1:2 (the upper and lower maroon bands are twice as wide as the white band in the middle), and the correlation of the width and length of the flag is fixed as 1:2. The distinctive maroon colour of the Latvian flag is officially known as “Latvian red” in the rest of the world.

Colour

Colour proportions of the white colour of the flag:
Pantone "White"

Colour proportions of the red colour of the flag:
Pantone "1807C";

Pantone "Latvian red" CMYK:

  • version 1 - C: 0%; M: 100%; Y: 65%; K: 47%;
  • version 2 - C: 27%; M: 97%; Y: 81%; K: 27%

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Further information

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© The Latvian Institute
This fact sheet can be freely printed from homepage of the Latvian Institute, distributed and cited, on condition that the Latvian Institute is acknowledged as the source. The Latvian Institute promotes knowledge about Latvia abroad. It produces publications, in several languages, on many aspects of Latvia.