List of Estonian flags
The national flag of Estonia is a tricolour featuring three equal horizontal bands of blue (top), black, and white. The proportion of the flag is 7:11, with a nominal size of 105 × 165 cm. In Estonian it is called the "sinimustvalge" (literally "blue-black-white"), after the colours of the bands. The flag became associated with Estonian nationalism in the beginning of the 20th century and was used as the national flag (riigilipp) when the Estonian Declaration of Independence was issued on 24 February 1918. The flag was formally adopted on 21 November 1918. On 12 December 1918 the flag was raised for the first time as the national symbol atop of the Pikk Hermann tower in Tallinn.[1]
The following is a list of flags associated with Estonia.
National flag
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1918–1940 1944 Since 1988/1990 |
Flag of Estonia (state and civil flag and ensign) | A horizontal tricolour of blue, black, and white. | |
| 1918–1940 1944 Since 1988/1990 |
Flag of Estonia (vertical) | When displayed vertically, the blue band should appear on the left when viewed by an observer. |
Standards
Head of state
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since 1993[2] | Flag of the President of the Republic | National tricolour with the greater coat of arms in the centre | |
| 1922[3]–1940 | Flag of the State Elder |
Ministers
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since 2005[4][5] | Flag of the Minister of Defence | National tricolour with the lesser coat of arms offset to hoist | |
| 1927–1940[6]: 170 | Flag of the Minister of War |
Military flags
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since 2003[6]: 227 | Flag of the Estonian Defense Forces | Coat of arms of Estonia in banner form | |
| Since 1994[6]: 235 1927–1940[6]: 170 |
Flag of the Commander of the Defence Forces | Blue and white swallowtail with the lesser coat of arms offset to hoist, and yellow horizontal bands at the top and bottom | |
| 1927–1940[6]: 170 | Flag of the Lieutenant General | Similar to the flag of the Commander of the Defence Forces, but with yellow band only along the top | |
| 1927–1940[6]: 170 | Flag of the Major General | Similar to the flag of the Commander of the Defence Forces, but with yellow band only along the bottom | |
| Since 2012[6]: 366 | Flag of the Estonian Special Operations Force | A black field with a white rhombus, fly side corner open, and a horizontal white sword |
Army
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since 2005[6]: 340 | Flag of the Estonian Land Forces | A black field with a vertical silver sword, in front of it a crenellated golden beam with three blue lions |
Navy
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since 1994[6]: 282 1927–1940[6]: 170 |
Naval ensign of the Estonian Navy | Swallow-tailed national tricolour with the lesser coat of arms in the centre | |
| Since 2008[6]: 283 1927–1940[6]: 170 |
Naval jack | White field with a black saltire and blue cross | |
| ? | Rear admiral’s flag | Similar to the flag of the Commander of the Defence Forces but without any yellow edges | |
| ? | Chief of Naval Forces | White triangular swallow tailed pennant (broad pennant) with blue "chevron" emerging from the hoist and with a yellow anchor near the hoist | |
| ? | Chief of division | The same flag as Chief of Naval Forces, but without the anchor | |
| ? | Senior Officer Afloat | White triangular pennant with horizontal blue stripe through the middle | |
| ? | General Agent of the Navy | National flag with a white square with two crossed anchors in the top canton | |
| ? 1923–1940 |
Presidential pennant | ||
| ? | Masthead pennant | White pennant with the national tricolour at hoist, tapering after three-quarters of the total length |
Air Force
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since 1996[6]: 304 | Flag of the Estonian Air Force | Emblem of the Air Force on a white field, with the word "ÕHUVÄGI" above it |
Defence League
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| ? | Flag of the Defence League (obverse) | ||
| ? | Flag of the Defence League (reverse) |
Government flags
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| ? | Minister of Internal Affairs pennant | ||
| ? | Border Guard pennant | ||
| ? | Police and Border Guard flag | Coat of arms of Police and Border Guard Board in banner form | |
| Since 1993 | Flag of the Estonian Internal Security Service | Dark blue field with its coat of arms in the middle, "VIRTUTE ET CONSTANTIA" at the top, and "KAITSEPOLITSEIAMET" (historical), "1993" at the bottom.[7][8] | |
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Since 1923[9] | Border Guard | The letters PV are visible on the national flag which is defaced with green and yellow markings |
| Since 2004 | Customs flag | ||
| 1923[10]–2004 | Customs flag | National flag with red square bearing caduceus and letter T in the top canton |
Sporting flags
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flag of Estonian Olympic Committee | A white flag with the logo of Estonian Olympic Committee in the middle. |
Postal flag
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1994–2009[11] | Postal flag | Flag of Estonia defaced with a post horn |
County flags
Each county of Estonia has adopted a flag, each of them conforming to a pattern: a white half at the top bearing the county's coat of arms in the middle, and a green half at the bottom.
| Flag | Administrative division | Adopted | Description | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harju | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Hiiu | Since 1996 | |||
| Ida-Viru | Since 1997 | |||
| Jõgeva | Since 1996 | |||
| Järva | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Lääne | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Lääne-Viru | Since 1996 | |||
| Põlva | Since 1996 | |||
| Pärnu | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Rapla | Since 1996 | |||
| Saare | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Tartu | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Valga | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Viljandi | Since 1939[12] | |||
| Võru | Since 1939[12] | |||
History
-
Petseri County (1939[12]–1940)
Municipal flags
Political flags
| Flag | Date | Party |
|---|---|---|
| Since 2022 | Parempoolsed | |
| Since 2018 | Estonia 200
Eesti 200 | |
| Since 2006 | Isamaa | |
| Since 1994 | Estonian Reform Party
Eesti Reformierakond | |
| Since 1991 | Estonian Centre Party
Eesti Keskerakond | |
| Since 1990 | Social Democratic Party
Sotsiaaldemokraatlik Erakond |
Flags of ethnic groups
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Since 2003[13] | Flag of Setos | Baltic pick-up pattern arranged in a Nordic cross on a white field | |
| Since 2003 | Flag of Votians | ||
| Since 2013[14][15] | Flag of Võros | White regular octagram on a dark green field | |
| ? | Flag of Mulks (Mulgimaa) | ||
| Since 1996 | Flag of Noarootsi Parish | [16] |
Historical flags
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1953–1990 | Flag of Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic | Red flag with a golden hammer and sickle and outlined star above them in the top-left corner. A band of blue and white water waves in the lower half. | |
| 1944–1953 1940–1941 |
Flag of Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic | Red flag with a golden hammer and sickle in the top-left corner and "ENSV" (Eesti Nõukogude Sotsialistlik Vabariik) written above the hammer and sickle. | |
| 1941–1944 | Flag of German Reich | Red field with a white disc with a black swastika at a 45-degree angle. The swastika disk is slightly off-centre. | |
| 1918–1919
(50 days) |
Flag of the Estonian Workers' Commune | A red flag with a golden canton. Inside the canton, the texts meaning "Estonian Workers' Commune", separated by a red line: Estonian: "Eesti Töörahva Kommuun"; Russian: "Эстляндская трудовая коммуна" ("Estlyandskaya Trudovaya Kommuna"). On the red field there are also white Russian inspections "НА БАРИКАДЫ ЭСТОНСКИЙ ПРОЛЕТАРИАТ" "ЗА СОВЕТСКУЮ ЭСТЛЯНДИЮ, ВЕЛИКУЮ ВОЛГУ, УРАЛ, СИБИРЬ ВО ИМЯ III КОММУНИСТИЧЕСКАГО ИНТЕРНАЦИОНАЛА", which means "On the barricades is the Estonian proletariat. For Soviet Estonia, greater Volga, Ural and Siberia, in the name of the third Communist International".[17][18] | |
| 1918 | Flag of German Empire | Horizontal black-white-red tricolour. | |
| 1896–1917 | Flag of Russian Empire | Horizontal white-blue-red tricolour. | |
| 1858–1896 | Flag of Russian Empire | Horizontal black-yellow-white tricolour. | |
| 1650–1721 | Flag of the Duchy of Estonia under Sweden | ||
| 1561–1650 | Flag of the Duchy of Estonia under Sweden | ||
| 1570–1579 | Flag of the Kingdom of Livonia | ||
| 1587–1629 | Flag of The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth | Version with additional arms of the House of Wasa. | |
| 1569–1587 | Flag of The Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania | Tailed red-white-red triband with the coat of arms in the middle. | |
| 1559–1645 | Flag of the Duchy of Estonia under Denmark–Norway | ||
| 1237–1561 | Flag of the State of the Teutonic Order | White flag with a black cross. | |
| 1300–1346 | Flag of the Duchy of Estonia under The Kingdom of Denmark |
Proposed flags
| Flag | Date | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1919 |
See also
References
- ^ "Estonia's Blue-Black-White Tricolour Flag". Archived from the original on 17 December 2007.
- ^ "Riigilipu seadus". Riigi Teataja (in Estonian). 23 March 1993. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ "Riigi Teataja 6 juuli 1922 — DIGAR Eesti artiklid". 6 July 1922. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ "Kaitseministri lipu ja Eesti mereväe lipu kirjeldus" [Description of the flag of the Defence Minister and the flag of the Estonian Navy] (in Estonian). Riigi Teataja. 17 October 2005. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ "Kaitseminister saab taas oma lipu" (in Estonian). Postimees. 13 October 2005. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Konso, Kalev (2018). Eesti kaitsevägi 100 : Eesti kaitseväe ja väeosade sümbolid 1918-2018 (in Estonian). Kaitsevägi. ISBN 9789949414109.
- ^ "Eesti". De Rode Leeuw. Retrieved September 29, 2022.
- ^ "Symbols and traditions". Kaitsepolitseiamet. Retrieved September 29, 2022.
- ^ "VAU - Sisene". www.ra.ee.
- ^ "VAU - Sisene". www.ra.ee.
- ^ Postilipu kasutamise korra kinnitamine
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Riigi Teataja 15 august 1939 — DIGAR Eesti artiklid". dea.digar.ee.
- ^ "Setomaa valla sümbolid" [Symbols of the Setomaa Parish]. Riigi Teataja (in Estonian). 30 January 2020. Retrieved 11 February 2026.
- ^ "Võrokõisi lipp". Võro Selts (in Võro). Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ "Võro People Wave New Flag". ERR. 15 February 2013. Retrieved 16 February 2026.
- ^ most of the remaining Estonian Swedes in Estonia live in this parish and this flag reflects the Swedish heritage of the region.
- ^ "Estonia in the Soviet Union (early flags)". Flag of the World. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
- ^ "Эстония в 1917 – 1919 годах". Vexillographia. Russian Centre of Vexillology and Heraldry. Retrieved May 19, 2024.
