Last modified: 2017-11-11 by klaus-michael schneider
Keywords: hamburg | castle(white) | star(6-point) | anchor(blue) | admiralty | admiralitaet | masoned |
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The Admiralitätsflagge (admiralty flag). Several versions of this are already among the historical flags. It shows on a red field a blue anchor with a yellow horizontal bar behind the castle. Since 1642 the admiralty (the office responsible for all harbour and shipping matters) had its own arms: the blue anchor with the white castle. It is not clear to me from my sources since when has the flag been used. In the newer regulations (1949 and 1951) the use of this flag is decreed: the admiralty flag is used as state flag on state buildings serving shipping, and as a jack on Hamburg state vessels. Sources: Smith 1975, Schurdel 1995, Laitenberger and Bassier 2000 and Gaedechens 1855.
The use of the admiralty flag is described in Hertenstein 1985 (Jörg Hertenstein, Die Flaggen des Bundeslandes Hamburg, in Hamburgische Geschichts- und Heimatblätter no. 11, pp. 153-158, 1985). There are three main places in Hamburg, where this flag is (or has been) hoisted:
Ensign of Hamburg State Vessels - model 1837:
The ratio was 2:3. It is the same castle as given in the merchant version - a white castle with blue tower windows, a partially open white portcullis flanked by two red spyholes and masoned at the bottom - but smaller and superimposing a black anchor with yellow bar, i.e. an admiralty flag.
Source:Gaedechens 1855, p.42ff
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 13 Sep 2012
Hanging pennant of the state vessels - model 1837
It is a swallow tail pennant, split up 1/3 at the flyend. The castle with anchor is shifted to the hoist and rotated anticlockwise 90°, thus it appears upright, when hanging down from the mast.
Source:Gaedechens 1855, p.42ff
Klaus-Michael Schneider, 13 Sep 2012
Reported 1842, 1848, 1858, 1900 and 1928
Flag of State Vessels. Like the 18th-19th centuries flag, but with a blue anchor behind gate and gate is offset towards hoist.
Source: Illustrated in Wilson 1986, p. 71, Smith 1975, p. 117 and Crampton 1990, p. 44.
Norman Martin, Jan 1998
reported 1905
Used by Senate members and high functionaries at sea.
Jaume Ollé, 8 Jun 1996
also reported 1905
Admiralty and sea flag. In use ca. 1905 to present.
Jaume Ollé, 8 Jun 1996
Used in the 19th century, (editor: probably related to admiralty).
Jaume Ollé, 8 Jun 1996
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