Flag of Morocco

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Kingdom of Morocco
Flag of Morocco.svg
UseNational flag and state ensign
Proportion2:3
AdoptedNovember 17, 1915; 105 years ago (1915-11-17)
DesignA red field with the green pentagram, a five-pointed linear star.
Designed byMulay Yusef
Civil Ensign of Morocco.svg
Variant flag of Kingdom of Morocco
UseCivil ensign
Proportion2:3
DesignWith a yellow one-starred crown in the canton.
Naval Ensign of Morocco.svg
Variant flag of Kingdom of Morocco
UseNaval ensign
Proportion2:3
DesignWith a yellow one-starred crown in each corner.

The flag of Morocco (Arabic: علم المغرب‎; Berber languages: ⴰⵛⵏⵢⴰⵍ ⵏ ⴰⵎⵔⵔⵓⴽ) is a red field with a green emerald pentagram.

Red has considerable historic significance in Morocco, proclaiming the descent from royal Alaouite dynasty. This ruling house was associated with the Islamic prophet Muhammad via Fatimah, the wife of Ali, the fourth Muslim Caliph. Red is also the color that was used by the sharifs of Mecca and the imams of Yemen. From the 17th century on, when Morocco was ruled by the Alaouite dynasty, the flags of the country were plain red.

On November 17, 1915, Resident General Hubert Lyautey had Sultan Yusef sign a dhahir that made Morocco's flag red with a green interlaced pentangle.[1] The five points of the star stand for Love, Truth, Peace, Freedom, and Justice. While Morocco was under French and Spanish control, the red flag with the seal in the center remained in use, but only inland. Its use at sea was prohibited. When independence was restored in 1956, it once again became the national flag.

The red background on the Moroccan flag represents hardiness, bravery, strength and valour, while the green represents love, joy, wisdom, peace and hope;[2][3] it also represents the color of Islam and the pentagram represents the seal of Solomon.[4] The five branches also represent the pillars of Islam.[citation needed]

Colors[]

The colors approximation is listed below:

Flag of Morocco.svg
Colours scheme
Red Green
RGB 193-39-45 0-98-51
Hexadecimal #c1272d #006233
CMYK 0, 80, 77, 24 100, 0, 48, 62
Pantone 7620 C 3425 C

History[]

To be known from this book, may God uphold its value and to be around the centre of grace and joy its orbit, that due to the promotion of our Cherifian kingdom affairs, the spread of its glory and its pride, the need to assign a flag that distinct it from the rest of the kingdoms as that our sacred ancestors flag use to be very similar to some other flags especially the ones used in the marine signs, our noble vision decided to distinct our joyful flag by making the five pointed seal of Solomon in the middle in green, asking the almighty god to keep it waving with the winds of fortune and ambition for this time and the becoming, Amen and peace.

— Yusef of Morocco, [2], 17 November 1915

In accordance with the seventh article of the constitution, the emblem of the Kingdom shall be a red flag with a five-pointed green star in the center.

The flag shall be made with fabric of canna red, opaque and rectangular in shape. The star shall be open, green like the leaf of palm trees, made of five continuous branches and woven in the same fabric where it must be visible on both sides of the flag. One of its points must point upwards. The hoist [vertical dimension of a flag] of the flag equals two thirds (23) of its fly [horizontal length of a flag]. The star is inscribed in an invisible circle whose radius equals one sixth (16) of the flag's fly [horizontal length of a flag] and whose centre is the intersection point of the invisible diagonal lines of the flag's rectangular.

The width of each one of the branches of the star shall be 120 of its length.

.

Wide and vertical presentations

On May 8, 2010, a Moroccan flag with a size of 60,409.78 square metres (650,000 sq ft; 14.9 acres), weighing 20,000 kilograms (22 short tons), was set in Dakhla, a city in the disputed territory of Western Sahara. It was certified by the Guinness Book of World Records as the largest flag ever draped.[5]

Historical national flags[]

Other historical flags[]

Other national flags[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "La fabuleuse histoire des drapeaux marocains". Le Desk. Retrieved 2019-07-22.
  2. ^ "Flag of Morocco". Famouswonders.com. 1915-11-17. Retrieved 2016-07-03.
  3. ^ "Moroccan Flag". M.vexillologymatters.org. Retrieved 2016-07-03.
  4. ^ page 838 [1]
  5. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved July 24, 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)[failed verification]
  6. ^ Flags of the world: International Zone of Tangiers

http://www.moroccotomorrow.org/the-moroccan-flag-moorish-americans-an-historical-perspective-frost/

External links[]

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