Pan-Slavic colours
|
The Pan-Slavic colours, red, blue and white, are colours used on the flags of most Slavic states and peoples. Their use symbolizes the common origin of the Slavic peoples.
![]() Flag of Croatia |
![]() Flag of the Czech Republic |
![]() Flag of Russia |
![]() Flag of Serbia |
![]() Flag of Serbia and Montenegro |
![]() Flag of Slovakia |
![]() Flag of Slovenia |
![]() Flag of Sorbs |
The origin of these colors is in the Pan-Slavic movement of the 19th century Europe.
The flag of Bulgaria also originated from the same Pan-Slavic colours, but the blue was replaced with green, because Bulgaria was developed as an agricultural country after its independence in 1878. The flag of Eastern Rumelia, a former Turkish province now part of Bulgaria, also consisted of the same colours.
Powstanie_Styczniowe_Flaga.jpg
The flag of Montenegro also used to consist of the same colours (in the same order as in the flag of Serbia, but with a brighter hue of blue) until it was changed in 2004.
These three colours are, without the same symbolism, also used on the flags of many non-Slavic nations, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and France.