Last modified: 2020-07-26 by pete loeser
Keywords: third reich | nationalsocialist | president | pilot | postal | disc (white) | swastika | cross: swastika (black) | hakenkreuz | iron cross | cross: formy (black) | bordure (white) | bugle |
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3:5 Image by António Martins |
3:5 Image by Mark Sensen and António Martins |
The Nazis reinstated the schwarz-weiss-rot flag when they came to power in 1933 the black-red-gold of the Weimar Republic (and modern-day Germany) being associated by the right-wingers with Germany's defeat in 1918. However the Swastika Party Flag was flown alongside it, including on merchant ships where it flew from the starboard yard-arm. In 1935 anti-Nazi activists boarded a German ship in New York harbour and tore down the Swastika flag. The American authorities refused to take any action on the grounds that only a political flag had been tampered with, not the national colours. The Reichstag subsequently unanimously declared the swastika flag the [sole] national flag of Germany in September 1935.
Roy Stilling, 9 April 1996
The national flag and the merchant ensign were both the black-white-red tricolour at first (1933-1935), then the red flag with the white disk containing the Hakenkreuz which from 1935 to 1945 fulfilled these functions.
Pascal Vagnat, 4 September 1996
I believe the ratio of all Imperial German flags and ensigns, except the war ensign (Kaiserliche Kriegsflagge) was 2:3 not 3:5. However, when the 1871-1918 flag was readopted in 1933 as co-national flag (together with the swastika flag), did it keep the 2:3 ratio (and the swastika a 3:5 one), or was it enlarged to 3:5?
Santiago Dotor, 29 March 2001
Actually the new flags were not introduced officially until 14 March 1933, although this usage may have formally started earlier.
Norman Martin, 17 November 2001
3:5 Image by Mark Sensen and António Martins | 3:5 Image by Mark Sensen and António Martins |
Hitherto the party flag of the Nazi Party, the swastika flag was declared to be jointly the national flag with the black-white-red and was to be flown jointly with it. On merchant ships the black-white-red flew from the stern. The colours were those of the Second Reich, and before that the Prussian-dominated North German Confederation. They combined the black over white of Prussia and the red and white of the Hanseatic League (see also the red and white flags of the modern states of Bremen and Hamburg).
Norman Martin, 1998
It is clear that only the centered version was used on land 1933-35. The only version used or authorized at sea at any time 1933-45 was the off-centered version.
Norman Martin, 14 September 1999
Image by Jaume Ollé
Flag adopted 1933, abolished 1935
The black-white-red tricolour with a double-bordered Iron Cross in the black stripe at the hoist, thus the Weimar merchant flag with the Iron Cross (which it replaced) with the black-red-gold canton (but not the Iron Cross) removed. It was in use 1933 to 1935.
Norman Martin, 1998
2:3 Image by Santiago Dotor
Flag adopted 4th July 1867, abolished 1922, readopted 1933, abolished 1935
Like the previous pilot flag, but with the plain black-white-red flag instead of the former merchant flag in the center, thus a reversion to the Imperial pilot flag. This flag remained in use until 1935.
Norman Martin, 1998
The black-white-red tricolour with the national eagle in the center of the white stripe. Except for the form of the eagle, this is the same as the flag of the Governors of German East Africa and Kiaochao of the Imperial era. This flag was official for vessels of the armed forces not entitled to fly the ensign from 11th March to 22nd April 1933, when it was superseded by the Government Authorities flag [state flag and ensign]. Considering the short period of time involved, it is dubious as to whether and how often it was actually flown.
Norman Martin, 1998
The "military authorities flag" was established by the Verordnung über die Hoheitszeichen der deutschen Wehrmacht of 14 March 1933: nr.10 - Die Dienstflagge der Reichsbehörden zur See, soweit sie von Behörden der Wehrmacht geführt wird, wie die Reichskriegsflagge, jedoch im weißen Streifen der Reichsadler an stelle des Eisernen Kreuzes.
The same ordinance changed the design of the war flag by eliminating the black-red-gold canton. It appears to have been superceded by the new Reichsdienstflagge established by the Zweite Verordnung über die vorläufige Regelung der Flaggenführung of 22 April 1933, although it is not explicitly mentioned.
Even though I do not have a copy of the ordinance of 31 October 1935, I am pretty sure the "military authorities flag" did not last that long, firstly, because my notes say so (although they do not mention an authority), but also because the flag publication of the interior ministry of 1934 [Reichsministerium des Innern 1934] does not illustrate it. If that is nevertheless not so, the "military authorities flag" certainly did not survive the 1935 change.
Norman Martin, 13 December 2001