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Tajikistan

Todzhikiston

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"Flags of Tajikistan', article from "Enclycopaedia Iranica" (by Habib Borjian)

Article by Habib Borjian. Originally Published: December 15, 1999. Last Updated: January 31, 2012. This article is available in print "Enclycopaedia Iranica" Vol. X, Fasc. 1, pp. 32-35 Cite this entry: Habib Borjian, "FLAGS ii. Of Tajikistan," Encyclop?dia Iranica, X/1, pp. 32-35, available online at http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/flags-iii (accessed on 31 January 2012).

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Before the establishment of Tajikistan. The royal standard labeled “drapeau nationale Boukhare” in a frontispiece of La voix de la Boukharie opprimée by Said Alim Khan (Amir Sayyed ʿĀlem Khan, Paris, 1929) is considered to be the state flag of the Bukharan emirate (see https://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/bukhara-iv). The field and the cloth attaching the flag to the staff were light green. The phrase al-solṭān ẓell Allāh “the sultan is the shadow of God” and the words of the Islamic confession of faith (šahāda) as well as an open hand and the star and crescent symbol appeared in gold (https://www.iranicaonline.org...). The border was orange with black ornamentation (The Flag Bulletin 1/1, 1962, pp. 16-17; Trembicky et al., p. 121).

Between the Russian revolutions of 1917 and the final establishment of Soviet power, a number of governments were formed in various parts of Central Asia, including the present territory of Tajikistan. The short-lived, anti-communist Ḵoqand (or Turkestan) Autonomous State (December 1917-February 1918) in Farḡāna headed by Moṣṭafā Čokaev (Pipes, pp. 88, 175-76) used the first flag in modern Transoxiana. It had red (top) and dark blue (bottom) horizontal stripes and a white star-and-crescent symbol at center (Trembicky et al., pp. 120-21). Afterwards, the Basmachi movement which fought Bolshevik rule, particularly in the Farḡāna valley in the early 1920s, used a green flag bearing a crescent and an eight-pointed star and the words of the šahāda, followed by the phrase enna’l-laḏīna ʿend’Allāha al-Eslām (for an illustration, see Solokov). Moreover, the Union of Central Asian Islamic National Insurgent Organizations instituted a flag for Turkestan at Samarkand in September 1921. It was composed of nine alternating stripes, five red and four white, with an orange rectangle placed at the left half, between the two upper and two lower stripes (flags_plate_11.jpg). This field bore a white star and crescent. The nine horizontal stripes of the flag, according to one interpretation, presented the nationalities of Turkestan: five for Turkic and two for Iranian peoples, namely, Tajiks and the Pamiris (Trembicky et al., pp. 122-24). The Central Asian nationalists used this flag extensively in the early 1920s and occasionally in the post-Soviet years.

When the Red Army finally seized Bukhara in September 1921, the amir fled and the independent Bukharan (Soviet/Social/Conciliar) People’s Republic was announced. The constitution, ratified a year later (23 September 1921), adopted a state flag consisting of two horizontal stripes, green on top and red on bottom, with a gold star and crescent at center and, on the upper left corner, the Russian initials BNSR, for Bukharskaya Narodnaya Sovetskaya Respublika. The fourth congress of the Bukhara Soviets, held in October 1923, changed the color of the upper stripe from green to red (Butler and Smith, pp. 89-90; cf. Trembicky et al., p. 122, where a red flag with a crescent at the center and the Russian characters BNSR as the initials is depicted for the same republic; cf. Allworth, p. 183, where a photographic illustration, dated August 1921, demonstrates a similar flag, but the initials are the Arabic letters B?SJ). It appears that the initials alternated between Turkish and Russian languages. The Bukharan People’s Republic was abolished in October 1924.

Tajik Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. The Tajik ASSR (14 October 1924-16 December 1929) was formed as the eastern part of the Uzbek SSR. The 1927 Uzbek constitution made a provision for the Tajik Persian language to appear besides the Uzbek and Russian messages on its coat of arms: Hama-ye prolētārhā-ye donyā yak-šavēd! “All proletarians of the world, unite!” and the state initials J. Š. E. Ūz. (Jomhūrīyat-e Šūrāhā-ye Ejtemāʿī-e Ūzbakestān; Allworth, pp. 302-3; Romashkin et al., VII, p. 138). On 5 May 1929, the same initials, this time in the newly adopted Roman script (“Ç. Ş. b. Θz.” [J. Š. I. Oz.]) were also added on the upper left corner of the red-field flag of Uzbekistan below the Uzbek (“z. b. Ş. Ç.”) and Russian (Uz.S.S.R.) initials. It was omitted in 1931 (Romashkin et al., VII, p. 202) because Tajikistan had already become a union republic independent of Uzbekistan.

Meanwhile, on 28 April 1929, the constitution of the Tajik ASSR adopted a state arms and flag. The arms (flags_plate_12.jpg) consisted of a hammer (bālḡa) and local sickle (dās) symbol against a star, which depicts a blue sky brightened by golden rays of sun rising above snowy mountains. The star is encircled on each side by wreaths of wheat and cotton. The inscriptions appear in both Russian and Tajik Persian. The latter, in both Roman and Perso-Arabic scripts, reads: “proletorhoi hamaji çihon jak şaved” Prolētārhā-ye hama-ye jehān yak-šavēd and “çumhūrijati suµsiolistiji şuµraviji muxtori toçikston” Jomhūrīyat-e ejtemāʿī-e šūrawī-e moḵtār-e Tājīkestān. The flag was a red (or scarlet) cloth with a width to length ratio of 1:2, depicting on the upper left corner the state arms (Romashkin et al., VII, p. 363). It is conjectured that these arms were influenced by the arms adopted in 1928 by the goverment of Afghanistan (W. Smith, “National Flags of Modern Afghanistan,” The Flag Bulletin 19/6, 1980, pp. 337-59, n. 9)

Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic. The Tajik SSR (1929-91) used the former flag until February 1931, when the fourth congress of the republican soviets adopted a simple, red-field flag with the Russian inscription in gold letters Tadzhikskaya SSR (Nikolaeva, p. 28). The Tajik constitution of 16 January 1935 mentions a similar flag with the inscription abbreviated to Tadzh. SSR (Romashkin et al., VII, p. 714) apparently in Tajik, Uzbek, and Russian languages, just as stated on the state arms (see below). A few months later, a decree of the Presidium of the Tajik Central Committee dated 4 July 1935 called for a red flag with a gold sickle and hammer in the upper left corner, below which was the inscription “Ç. Ş. S. Toçikiston” in Roman Tajik and Tadzhikskaya SSR in Russian (Nikolaeva, p. 28; (flags_plate_13a.jpg). The Tajik legend was changed to “RSS Tocikiston” (for illustration, see Ivanov, p. 30), perhaps in the late 1930s, when political terms were being Russified (lags_plate_13b.jpg). The Tajik inscription was further transformed to the newly adopted Cyrillic alphabet in 28 September 1940 (Butler and Smith, p. 180; Ivanov, p. 33).

The final version of the flag of the Tajik SSR, adopted on 20 March 1953, was a new modification of the flag of the Soviet Union. To the Soviet flag of red with its gold hammer and sickle and gold-bordered red star there were added two horizontal stripes of white and green, proportioning one-tenth and one-fifth of the total width, respectively (flags_plate_14.jpg); for the exact dimensions, see Sbornik, pp. 261-62; “Bayraqi davlatī” [Beyraq-e dawlatī], Īntsiklopediai I, p. 353). The white is said to have symbolized the cotton production for which Tajikistan was renowned, and the green represented the orchards of the republic (Butler and Smith, p. 22; The Flag Bulletin 31, 1992, no. 149, p. 234).

The first state arms of the Tajik SSR as described in the 1935 constitution consisted of a large five-pointed star, in the upper part of which was depicted a hammer and a sickle in the rays of the sun; in the lower part drawings symbolized the socialist construction of the republic. The frame consisted of a wreath composed, on the right, the ears of grain and, on the left, the stems of cotton, and below, a vine tree. The inscriptions “Proletarians of all countries, unite!” and “Tadzh. SSR” appeared on the ribbons in three languages: Tajik, Uzbek, and Russian (Butler and Smith, p. 178; Romashkin et al., VII, p. 714). No illustration of this arms is available. The final form of the state arms (flags_plate_15.jpg), designed by A. S. Yakovlev (“Gerbi davlatii Tojikiston” (Gērb-e dawlatī-e Tājīkestān), Īntsiklopediyai II, p. 75), was adopted by the Tajik constitution of 1937 (Butler and Smith, p. 179). Compared with the former arms it lacks the industrialization symbols, the vine tree, and the Uzbek version of the inscription.

Independent Tajikistan. Tajikistan was the last of the ex-Soviet republics to adopt a new flag (24 November 1992). The flag has red, white, and green horizontal stripes from top to bottom, in a ratio of 2:3:2. At the center stands a figure in gold of a crown surmounted by seven stars (flags_plate_16.jpg). The symbol is said to have referred to the state sovereignty, friendship, and brotherhood among all nationalities and the unbreakable union of workers, peasants, and intellectual classes residing in the republic (The Flag Bulletin 32/2, 1993, no. 151, p. 97). The first coat of arms of the independent republic adopted a turquoise background, in which a yellow, winged lion stands before a scene of a mountain from which rays extended to the edge of the disk (lags_fig_22.jpg). An ear of wheat bound with red-white-green ribbons encircled the emblem. At the top were the same crown-and-stars figure found in the national flag (ibid.). The more recent coat lacks the lion figure, showing a tendency towards the revival of the Soviet symbols.

Bibliography:
E. A. Allworth, The Modern Uzbeks: From the Fourteenth Century to the Present: A Cultural History, Stanford, 1990.
W. E. Butler and W. Smith, eds., Soviet State Symbolism: Flags and Arms of the USSR and Its Constituent Parts, 1917-1971, joint issue of The Soviet Statues and Decisions and The Flag Bulletin 11/1, New York, 1972.
Intsiklopediyai sovetii tojik, ed. M. Osimi, 8 vols. Dushanbe, 1978-88.
K. A. Ivanov, Flagi gosudarstv mira, 2nd ed., Moscow, 1971.
M. Nikolaeva, Gosudarstvemmye emblemy sovetskogo Tadzhikistana, Dushanbe, 1969.
R. Pipes, The Formation of the Soviet Union: Communism and Nationalism, 1917-1923, Cambridge, Mass., 1964.
P. S. Romashkin et al., eds., S’’ezdy soveto soyuza SSR, soyuznykh i avtonomnykh sovetkikh sotsialisticheskikh respublik; sbornik dokumentakh v semi tomakh, 1917-1937 gg (Congress of Soviets of the USSR, Union and Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republics; Collection of Documents in Seven Volumes, 1917-37), Moscow, 1958-65. Sbornik zakonov Tadzhikskoi SSR i ukazov prezidiuma verkhovnogo soveta Tadzhiksko SSR: 1938-1968, Dushanbe, 1970.
V. A. Sokolov, “Kurshermat,” The Flag Bulletin 21, 1982, no. 95, pp. 136-37.
W. Trembicky et al., Flags of Non-Russian Peoples under Soviet Rule (special issue of The Flag Bulletin 8/3), Lexington, Mass., 1969.

reported by William Garrison. 25 November 2023