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Last modified: 2018-12-15 by rob raeside
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The state flag of Poland is with the arms. Earlier we discussed the
communist nations with the least and most communist symbols on them, Poland's
flag's only change during the communist period was the removal of the crown
from the head of the eagle on its arms. The current version returns the
crown. I think this vesion is still the state flag, but it may now be an
alternate useable by anyone. The presence of the crown on the eagle is
interesting since the Polish monarchy ended compleatly in 1795, and was
constitutionally limited for many centuries before that, yet each Polish
flag since has included the crown, with the above mentioned exception.
Nathan Augustine, 24 February 1996
The removal of the crown from the head of the eagle on its arms was
*not* the only change. They also shortened the claws of the eagle since
long claws represent imperialistic thinking. They have to my knowledge
not been extended since after the fall of the comunist era. Interesting
to note that the crown chosen to crown the eagle is that of King Mieszko
I, and not the one used before the comunistic era.
Dawid Rojek-Szumanski, 14 Nov 1999
Can someone confirm this? It sounds suspiciously like an "urban legend",
IMHO, but I'm hardly an expert there.
Could someone show images of the two different crowns (if they really
are - I though the same crown was restored)
Željko Heimer, 17 Nov 1999
I just perused an article in a back issue of the Flag Bulletin entitled
"The White Eagle of Poland" by Alfred Znamierowski (Vol. XIII, No.
4, July-August 1974) and it shows the eagle as bearing a crown since it
was first introduced in the 10th Century continuously except when
the communist government established in 1955 the uncrowned arms that were
used until 1990.
Dave Martucci, 6 August 1997
The most important: in the Polish State flag (pl-st.gif) the claws of
the eagle are gold (from 1991) - as is the crown (on Mr. Martines flag
it looks like a gold star...) But the most important: Polish eagle *never*
had red stars on its both wings! In 1926 (or even earlier) the Masonry
installed white (and therefore almost invisible) 5-arm Star on its wings.
So it was of course inherited by the socialist regime in 1946. In 1991
there was a fierce debate in the Polish Parliament: the Left was maintaining
(1) that the symbols are not important, therefore there is no reason to
crown the Eagle and change its wing and claws; (2) that it is very important,
that the 5-arm Star was present on its wing. In the end the compromise
was reached. Two arms of the Star had been shortened!! And it is still
white!
Janusz Korwin-Mikke, 3 Feb 1999
A month ago or so I'd sent some remarks on the Polish flag You use in
FOTW. I'd even explained the changes after 1989 - yet I see that after
last corrections You are still using a strange (in fact never existing)
image with a Red Star on the wings of the Eagle. Please: explain me: WHY???
Janusz Korwin-Mikke, 19 Apr 1999
It is definitely an artefact gotten from resizing of the Coat of Arms. The Coat of Arms
indeed have five-pointed star like feature on the wings, but it is not
red, not star in it own. As far as I know there were no changes in this
part of Coat of Arms in 1989, nor there was ever a red star there. I made the "improvement"
needed.
Željko Heimer, 26 Apr 1999
Janusz Korwin-Mikke is a well known Polish politician. His comments relate to the Polish Coat of Arms. The centre of each wing of the eagle had a decorative element in the form of a star - it was the way of linking the feathers together. Of course the paranoid will notice that the star is a symbol of communism, and so "the eagle must be changed".
BUT, now that I've looked at the state flag, I see he's right. There
are two stars on the eagle, and they are brown. They were never meant to
be brown, nor were they really ever meant to be stars at all. So, if someone
has the skill, could you recolour the brown "stars" on the eagle's wings
to the same colour as the eagle ? This applies to the State Flag and to
the Air Force ensign.
Robert M J Czernkowski, 20 Apr 1999
In Barraclough's FOTW (1971) and FTAAATW (1975) and in Pedersen (1980)
I see in the armpits of the eagle a starfish in the same (white) color
as the eagle has. Whether that is a Western interpretation or some Eastern
rendering - I don't know. In http://www.wp.mil.pl/znaki.html
[since
defunct --ed.] I found this Coat of Arms, which I send along.
In the armpits of the eagle are leavelike things.
Jarig Bakker, 20 Apr 1999
No, those elements on the Eagle's wings were meant to be Stars! But
in 1989, after we had shaken off the Soviet domination (and exchanged it
for the euro-socialism...) Polish Parliament decided for a compromise:
two arms of the Stars were shortened. So NOW they are not Stars. And they
NEVER were neither brown nor red! They were made of feathers, as the rest
of the Eagle's wings.
Janusz Korwin-Mikke, 16 May 1999
Interested in your comments. The white and red flag bearing the crowned
eagle on a red shield in the centre of the upper white band is still indeed
the state flag - flown normally by the President and by government buildings.
I fly it myself on my consulate.
The crown was maintained on the form of eagle adopted by the Second
Republic, with the rebirth of Polish independence, to symbolise that Poland
was its own master and subject to no-one else. The Communist decision to
dispense with the crown after World War II was universally unpopular in
Poland.
With the birth of the Third Republic, after the fall of Communism,
the crown was restored again as a symbol of full Polish sovereignty.
Mike Oborski, 16 Jul 1999
Primary Polish flag is white over red and was this since 1918. This
one is without coat of arms. This flag was unchanged even during communist
regime. Version with coat of arms is used by President of Poland. Is almost
the same as used on Polish merchant ships. During communist regime Poland
had no President but only State Board. They used flag with coat of arms
but eagle had no crown. After 1989 Polish parliament reestablished crown.
There was some minor changes with eagle's pattern, because right-wing politicians
wanted to remove anything what could be connected with communist regime.
They maximized because Polish eagle was unchanged since 1918.
Peter 'Mikolaj' Mikolajski, 18 Sept 2000
During my recent trip to Italy (October 2008) I discovered quite unusual
gonfalon-like shape of the Polish state flag flying on the building of
the Polish Consulate in Naples. Here I am enclosing a picture I took (beneath
the flag to the left there is a plaque of the Polish Consulate reading
in Polish and in Italian: "Consolato della Repubblica di Polonia".
I have never seen such shape of the Polish state flag and since it
is used by a Polish diplomatic mission it musty be kind of officially recognized.
Mariusz Pazdziora, 21 Nov 2008
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