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flag of Myanmar

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Flag of Myanmar

flag of Myanmar

national flag consisting of three equal horizontal stripes of yellow, green, and red, with a central white star overlapping the three stripes. The flag has a width-to-length ratio of 1 to 2.

In many Asian countries the earliest flag representing the ruler had a plain background with a distinctive national animal in the centre. In Myanmar the peacock was that central emblem, introduced in 1757 by King Alaungpaya. The peacock, symbolic of the sun and of Buddhism, was also said to stand for happiness and unity. Under the colonial rule of the British (1886–1948), when the country became known as Burma, there was a special Blue Ensign with a gold disk bearing the peacock, although for most of the years of British rule the Union Jack alone was displayed. Burmese who were resisting British rule at the end of the 19th century used the symbol of the peacock on a white flag.

In August 1943 a Japanese-sponsored puppet regime established a horizontal tricolour of yellow-green-red bearing a white disk with a gold central peacock. Burmese resistance forces collaborating with the British against Japan used a red flag with a single white star in the upper hoist corner.

In 1948 Britain recognized the independence of Burma. The national flag adopted then, based on the banner of the resistance forces, was red with a dark blue canton bearing one large white star and five smaller ones—the latter stars symbolizing the union of the country’s Burman, Karen, Shan, Kachin, and Chin ethnic groups. In 1974 a new governing regime replaced that flag with a modified version. The stars for the ethnic groups were replaced by 14 stars for the country’s political subdivisions, and instead of the large star there was a cogwheel representing industrial workers, framing two ears (and four leaves) of rice, a symbol of the peasantry.

In 1988, following the establishment of a new military government, the name of the country was changed from Burma to Myanmar; the 1974 flag was retained. Myanmar ratified a new constitution in 2008 (in effect January 2011), and one of its provisions was the adoption of a new national flag. The new design harkened back to the 1943 yellow-green-red tricolour, but, instead of the peacock used on the earlier standard, a white star was set in the centre of the flag. The flag was first hoisted on October 21, 2010.

Whitney Smith