Thursday, March 29, 2007

Tricolor Format of the Italian Banner

For people who are keen in memorizing all the banners in the world, the Italian flag is among the national symbols that are not too difficult to remember. Its figure was known to originate in the midst of the Napoleonic Wars in the northern area of Italy. The French Republics established it after the professed French tricolor of red, white, and green. The figure was set from the uniform colors of Milan's Civic Militia, which was mostly gilded with green and white patterns. The red color, furthermore, was appended in 1976, the year when the Militia was turned into National Guard.

In addition, the first national banner who applied the tricolor design in a horizontal pattern was the Cispadane Republic flag. When the Transpadene Republics and the Cisalpine Republic were united to form the Cisalpine State on 1797, it reportedly affirmed the tricolor format that was regarded today as the Italian banner. With such reason, it was then claimed that the initial version of Italy's banner was patterned after the French tricolor. Starting June 19, 1946, the official banner symbol of the Italian Republic was the plain tricolor format of green, red, and white. Two distinct coat of arms were then included on the nation banner on November 1946 to avoid similarities with the Mexican flag.

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