The '
flag of
Switzerland' consists of a red square with a bold, equilateral white cross in the center. It is one of only two square
sovereign-state flags, the other being the
flag of the Vatican City. (The
civil and state ensign, used by Swiss ships and boats, has more traditional proportions of 2:3.)
Only the dimensions of the cross are formally established since 1889: "The coat of arms of the federation is, within a red field, an upright white cross, whose [four] arms of equal length are a sixth longer than their width."
[1]. The size of the cross in relation to the field is not formally established except on the naval ensign. A relation of 2:3 or 7:10 to the span of the flag is usual.
Origin
Legends and history
The ultimate origin of the white cross is attributed by three competing legends: To the
Theban Legion, to the ''
Reichssturmfahne'' attested from the
12th century, and to the ''
Arma Christi'' that were especially venerated in the
three forest cantons, and which they were allegedly allowed to display on the formerly uniformly red battle flag from
1289 by king
Rudolph I of Habsburg at the occasion of a campaign to
Besançon.
The oldest surviving specimen of a flag of Schwyz dates to the
Burgundy wars (
1474–77). The
illustrated chronicles show an asymmetrical white cross, drawn in greater detail, including the body of
Christ, and the equilateral cross became predominant only in the later
17th century.
Use of a white cross as a mark of identification of the combined troops of the
Old Swiss Confederacy is first attested in the
Battle of Laupen (
1339), where it was sewn on combatants' clothing as two stripes of textile, contrasting with the red
St. George's cross of Habsburg Austria, and with the
St. Andrew's cross used by Burgundy and Maximilian I.
Civilian use of the white cross as a symbol of the confederacy is attested from the 16th century. From the 17th century, the white cross was carried on the banners of all cantonal troops, on the background of the cantonal colours.
General
Niklaus Franz von Bachmann used the white cross in a red field in
1800 and
1815, and following this use, the symbol was adopted as national symbol in the federal contract of
1815 (see also
Switzerland in the Napoleonic era).
Modern Switzerland
General
Guillaume-Henri Dufour proposed use of the flag for the federal forces in
1840, and in
1889 the
Federal Council defined the 1/6th proportion of the cross's members, while the ratio of the cross to the square field, or the shield in the case of the coat of arms, remained unspecified.
Colour
The exact hue of red in the Swiss flag is not defined by law, and various authorities have used various colours over time. In 2007, the
corporate design guide of the federal authorities designated
Pantone's ''PMS 485'' (consisting of 100 percent
magenta and
yellow each) as the shade of red to be used in print, and the colour described with the hexadecimal value of ''#FF0000'' for use on the web.
[2]
Red Cross
The
Red Cross symbol used by the
International Committee of the Red Cross is based on the Swiss flag. The Red Cross on white background was the original protection symbol declared at the
1864 Geneva Convention. It is, in terms of its color, a reversal of the Swiss national flag, a meaning which was adopted to honor Swiss native and Red Cross founder
Henry Dunant.
See also
★
Flags of Swiss cantons
★
List of flags
★
Coat of Arms of Switzerland
External links
★
★
Swiss Historic Lexicon in German
References
1. Federal decision of 12 December 1889 on the bearings of the coat of arms
2. Wenn nicht nur der Firn sich rötet: Vor dem ersten Bundesfeiertag mit definiertem Wappenrot