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Last modified: 2013-07-27 by rob raeside
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image by Željko Heimer, 24 September 2007
At this time it is possible that a special different flag was explicitly prescribed for the first time for the non-military (i.e. merchant) ships (possibly like this black-gold bicolour).
However, after Emperor Carl IV there was again decreased interest in the
marine and it even happened that in 1737 it was decided that all the ships were
to be sold since they were too costly and they "provoke the enemies". [Novak,
2004b]
Željko Heimer, 24 September 2007
Bellin's (1756) chart shows a red-white-red ensign with
the letters F II in the middle.
Željko Heimer, 1 December 2001
It is not clear what flag was prescribed for the merchant ensign. The various
versions of the triband defaced with "FII" and "FIII" initials may have been in
use (if they are not inventions of the flag drawers for the period?)
The
story on what was used as state ensign, i.e. as flags used by ships and boats
belonging to various state services on seas, like customs and finance service,
is a complex and interesting one, covered in many details by Baumgartner, 1979
report on the 8th ICV in Vienna [Baumgartner, 1979]. Here follows just a hint...
While the first half of the 19th century was dynamic on the Adriatic, with
the Napoleonic wars, the presence of France and Britain maintaining the maritime
blockade, and the fall of Venice, the naval flags of Austria were not changed a
bit until well unto the end of the century. The ideas to differentiate the naval
ensign from the merchant one were present since the introduction of the
red-white-red flag, but agreement on the design was not reached. Lehnert and
Baumgartner note a number of proposals considered on the highest levels in 1805
and 1819, however no decision was made until 1869 when the joined
Austrian-Hungarian merchant ensign was introduced. The triband was then
prescribed exclusively as the naval ensign. However, the state services
(maritime and finance administration) continued to use the triband ensign
without heed for its exclusivity and it was only around the end of the 19th
century that the use for naval ships only was enforced. [Baumgartner, 1979]
Željko Heimer, 29 September 2007
2:3 by Željko Heimer, 22 September 1996
Red-white-red with shield in the first third of the white stripe golden bounded and crowned in red stripe above.
Adopted as Merchant Ensign: 20th March 1786, effective 20 March 1786,
modified in 1869. Also used as war ensign 1880 until abandoned, 10th October 1915.
Željko Heimer, 22 September 1996, Norman Martin, 2 December 2001
Up to the end of Austria-Hungary there was no concept of the "national flag" as
we know it today. The closest thing to the modern flag was the civil merchant
ensign, used on the ships.
Željko Heimer, 20 September 2007
By the beginning of the 19th century there was already a strong tendency to
differentiate the warships from merchant ships (as it was usual from much
earlier), but the introduction of the Josephine triband flag in 1786 made all
the ensigns of Austrian Empire equal. The first official method of
differentiation was made by 1804 when the merchant ships were forbidden to fly
the masthead pennant (retaining the same ensign as the warships). In 1805 and
1819 proposal designs were considered in the highest offices of the Empire, but
nothing was decided. In fact, it was not until the dualization of the Monarchy
and introduction of the dual Austrian-Hungarian flag that the matter was
resolved. However, the 19th century flag charts and books show a palette of
designs of ensign allegedly used by Austrian merchant ships. How much we can
trust them and how much they are inventions of the flag chart designers, it is
not easy to know - I would not quite dismiss the possibility that some chart
makers would invent a missing design (not an unusual practice; and it is known
to happen even today!) - however, it would not be quite unusual, I think, that
the merchant captains were ordering (and flag manufacturers were making) flags
that more or less differed from the prescribed design. Even more so, since the
differences were apparently, mostly, referring to the ruling Emperor. (I would
not entirely dismiss that there were some regulations in this regard, but I am
not aware of them.)
The merchant ensigns found in the flag charts of 19th
century are as a rule the usual Austrian red-white-red tribands defaced in two
basic patterns:
- the prescribed Austrian coat of arms (crowned triband
shield) - more or less simplified in design - defaced with the initials of the
ruling Emperor
- only the initials of the ruling Emperor set in the middle of
the white stripe (or off-set to hoist), as a rule being golden letters.
The ruling Emperors in the period in questions were:
Joseph II 1765-1790
(whose initials were probably not used in this manner)
Leopold II 1790-1792
initials L.II. might have been in use, although I do not remember seeing them in
flag charts in this manner (the short reign helps to this)
Francis II,
1792-1806, as Francis I of Austria 1804-1835, initials F.I. (although F.II.
might be considered...)
Ferdinand I, 1835-1848, initials, again F.I.
Francis Joseph I, 1848-1916, initials F.J.I. (for the matter in question, until
flag change in 1869)
So, we have mostly to consider initials FI and FII
with or without dots and different arrangement of spacing. The J of FJI might
have been made as the modern J, or might have been straight as the classical I,
making the Franz Joseph's initials also FI and FII... All these variations up to
the captain ordering the flag and the flag maker making it, probably.
I
prepared drawing of four variants from around 1860s, adding the source after the
drawing name here:
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
Deppermann, Ruschke: "Flaggen-Almanach. Gesammelt, lithographirt, gedruckt und herausgegeben im Lithogr. Institut von Deppermann & Ruschke", Hamburg, 1844 pl. 22
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
Steenbergen (ed.): "Vlaggen van alle Natiën / Pavillons de toutes les Nations / Flags of all Nations", Weytingh & Brave, Amsterdam, 1862 pl. 8
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
Steenbergen (ed.): "Vlaggen van alle Natiën / Pavillons de toutes les Nations / Flags of all Nations", Weytingh & Brave, Amsterdam, 1862 pl. 8
image by Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
"Maritime Flags of All Nations" flag chart, around 1870's?
There are, no doubt more variations that might be reported.
Željko Heimer, 12 October 2007
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