Last modified: 2002-04-12 by elias granqvist
Keywords: finland proper | varsinais-suomi | egentliga finland | helmet | flags |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
The flag is a banner of the arms;
arms granted in 1560.
See also:
About the flag
It can be noted, that the arms (and flag) of Finland Proper contain one of the earliest known images of the Swedish flag, blue with a yellow cross. In the arms the flags are in the form of lance pennants. There is an image in colour of these arms in a handwritten book from 1562, which is kept in Paris (Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, latin 18410 – described extensively by Carl Nordenfalk in the article "En svensk vapenbok från år 1562" (with a summary in French) in "Meddelanden från Riksheraldikerämbetet IX", 1940 [mdd]; the image is in black and white on p. 101, the description of the arms is on p. 99). In those days, Finland Proper was called Southern Finland (and Satakunta was called Northern Finland).
The arms of Finland Proper were one of the fields in the arms given to King Gustav I's son John (later to become King John III), when he was given a duchy in Finland [in 1556]. It is probable, that the use of blue flags with yellow crosses had been used even earlier, because in 1569, King John decided that all Swedish flags used at the peace negociations with the Danes in Knäred should be blue with a yellow cross, becasue they had been like that "as of old". However, this is the first official decision known to state this.
Elias Granqvist, 14 March 2001
|