Flag of Thailand
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Flag_of_Thailand.png
The Flag of Thailand shows five horizontal stripes in the colors red, white, blue, white and red. The middle blue strip is twice as wide as the other four. The three colors red-white-blue stand for nation-religion-king, an unofficial motto of Thailand. The flag was adopted on September 28 1917. The Thai name for the flag is ธงไตรรงค์ (Thong Trairong), which simply means tricolor flag.
The first flag used for Siam was probably a plain red one, first used under King Narai (1656-1688). According to some sources later different symbols were placed on the red ground - a white chakra (the Buddhist wheel), a white elephant inside the chakra, or a white disc with a sun inside.
Officially the first flag was created in 1855 by King Mongkut (Rama IV), showing a white elephant (a royal symbol) on red ground, as the plain colored flag was not distinct enough for international relations.
Flag_of_Thailand_1916.png
In 1916 the flag was changed to the current design, but with the middle color being the same red as the outer stripe. The story goes that during a flood King Vajiravudh (Rama VI) saw the flag hanging upside-down, and to prevent this from happening again created a new flag which was symmetrical. In 1917 the middle color was changed to blue, the color for Friday, the day king Rama VI was born. According to other sources the blue color was chosen to show solidarity with the Allies of World War I, which also had the colors blue-red-white in their flags.
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et:Tai lipp ko:타이의 국기 it:Bandiera tailandese he:דגל תאילנד ms:Bendera Thai ja:タイの国旗 sv:Thailands flagga