Some of the
colonies, protectorates and mandates of the
'French' Colonial Empire used distinctive 'colonial flags'. These most commonly had a
French Tricolour in the
canton.
As well as the flags of individual colonies, the governors-general of French colonies flew a square flag with a blue field and the
French ensign in the canton. This flag was flown beneath the national ensign. Colonial governors used a rectangular swallow-tailed version of this flag.
Colonial flags with a tricolour canton
The flags with the French flag in the canton, which on many occasions were already existing flags without the tricolour, resembled the British colonial flags, which originated as
defacements of the
British ensigns, which have the British
Union Jack in the canton, and a red, white or blue fly. Naval sources show flags such as those used in the French
Mandate of
Syria as having the tricolour with unequal stripes, as in the French ensign, but it is likely that these version of the flags were used at sea, and on land the tricolour had the standard equal stripes.
While for the sake of simplicity french colonial ensign are on this page classified by appearance, this should not be taken to imply common origins or the existence of undefaced ensigns used by the french government unless otherwise noted.
Red field

Colonial Laos flag
★
Laos: Laos was part of
French Indochina from
1893. The tricolour was added to the flag of the Luang Prabang kingdom, which was red with a white image of a three headed
elephant on a stand with a
parasol.
★
Morocco: The
Protectorate of Morocco from
1919 to
1953, used the
national flag with a tricolour in the canton as a civil ensign.
★
Tunisia: From
1881–
1956, Tunisia was a French protectorate. It has been reported that the tricolour was added to the
Tunisian flag for use as a civil ensign, as in Morocco, but it seems that such a flag was never official.
★
Wallis and Futuna: The unofficial, but commonly used
flag of Wallis and Futuna is red with four white triangles arranged in a square and the tricolour in the canton with a white fimbriation.
Blue field
★
Damascus: This part of the French Mandate of Syria from
1922–
25 used a blue flag with a white disk in the centre and the tricolour in the canton.
★
Syria (
1920): The French Mandate of Syria may have originally used a sky blue flag with a white crescent and star and French tricolour in the canton.
★ In
1939, the
governor-general's flag, was a square blue flag with a French ensign in the canton. With a swallow-tail, this flag was the colonial governors' flag.
White field

Flag of the Alawite State / Sanjak of Latakia
★
Aleppo: This part of the French Mandate of Syria from
1920–
25 used a white flag with tricolour in the canton and three yellow five-pointed stars in a triangle in the fly.
★
Latakia: This part of the French Mandate of Syria used a white flag, ratio 2:3, with the tricolour in the canton taking up 1/9 of the area of the flag, red triangles in the other three corners, and a golden sunburst in the centre of the flag.
★ The first banner of the
French Revolution had a white field with a tricolour in the canton, although the order of the colours has since been reversed.
Green field
★
Togo: The flag used in
1957–
8 had two white five-pointed stars in the green field, one at the lower left-hand corner, the other in the upper right-hand corner.
Yellow field

Flag of Annam Protectorate.
★
Annam: The Province of
Annam, part of the Union of
French Indochina from
1886 until
1954, used a flag with a plain yellow background, in two shapes one with the ratio 2:3 and the other 1:1 (square).
Multicolour field
★
Jebel Druze. From
1924 until
1936, this part of the French Mandate of Syria had a flag with a white vertical strip beneath the tricolour in the canton, with the rest of the flag made up of green, red, yellow, blue and white horizontal stripes.
★
Syria: In
1922, the French Mandate was made a federation, with a federal flag made up of green-white-green horizontal stripes and the tricolour in the canton. This flag was also used when Aleppo and Damascus merged.
Colonial flags with other designs
Modified Tricolours
★
Lebanon: The
French Mandate of
Greater Lebanon (1920-43) used as a flag the
French tricolour with a green
cedar in the middle stripe. See picture in "
Flag of Lebanon - History"
Other designs
★
French Polynesia: The
flag of French Polynesia has the horizontal stripes, red-white-red. The white stripe is twice the height of each red stripe, and contains an emblem consisting of a boat, the sun, and waves.
See also
★
French colonial empires
★
List of flags
References
★ F.E. Hulme, ''The Flags of the World: Their History, Blazonry, and Associations, From the Banner of the Crusader to the Burgee of the Yachtsman; Flags National, Colonial, Personal; The Ensigns of Mighty Empires; the Symbols of Lost Causes (Colonial Edition)'', Frederick Wayne and Co., London, pp.152, (1895).
★ W.J. Gordon, ''Flags of the World Past and Present: Their Story and Associations'', Frederick Wayne and Co., Ltd., London, pp. 265, (1929).
★ B. McCandless, and G. Grosvenor, ''"Our Flag Number", The National Geographic Magazine'', National Geographic Society, Washington, D.C., Vol. XXXII, No. 4, pp. 420, October, (1917).
★ G. Grosvenor, and W.J. Showalter, ''"Flags of the World", The National Geographic Magazine'', National Geographic Society, Washington, D.C., Vol. LXVI, No. 3, pp. 338-396, September, (1934).
★ ''Flags of All Nations Volume I. National Flags and Ensigns (B.R.20(1) 1955)'', Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, (1955).
★ ''Flags of All Nations Volume II. Standards of Rulers, Sovereigns and Heads of State; Flags of Heads of Ministries, and of Naval, Military, and Air Force Officers (B.R.20(2) 1958)'', Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, (1958).
★ ''Flags of All Nations Change Five (BR20)'', Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, (1989), Revision (1999).
★ W. Smith, ''Flags Through the Ages and Across the World'', McGraw-Hill Book Co., Ltd., Maidenhead, England, pp. 361, (1975).
★ J.W. Norie, and J.S. Hobbs, ''Three Hundred and Six Illustrations of the Maritime Flags of All Nations; Arranged Geographically, with Enlarged Standards: Together with Regulations and Instructions Relating to British Flags &c.'', Printed for, and Published by C. Wilson, At the Navigation Warehouse and Naval Academy, No. 157, Leadenhall Street, Near Cornhill,(Facsimile reprint of 1848 original), (1987).
★ Ottfried Neubecker, ''Flaggenbuch (Flg.B.). Bearbeitet und herausgegeben vom Oberkommando der Kriegsmarine. Abgesclossen am 1. December 1939'', (Historical Facsimile edition containing all national and international flags 1939-1945), pp. 193, (1992).