List of Ecuadorian flags

This is a list of flags used in or otherwise associated with Ecuador.

National flag edit

Flag Date Use Description
  1860–present   Flag of Ecuador A horizontal tricolor of yellow (double width), blue and red with the National Coat of Arms superimposed at the center.[1]
  1860-present   Civil flag of Ecuador A horizontal tricolor of yellow (double width), blue and red.

President flags edit

Flag Date Use Description
  Presidential standard

Military flags edit

Flag Date Use Description
  Flag of Ecuadorian Army
  Naval jack [2]

Municipal flags edit

Flag Date Use Description
  Flag used by municipal buildings

Organization flags edit

Flag Date Use Description
Flag of the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador
  Flag of the National Assembly of Ecuador

Political flags edit

Flag Date Use Description
  1993-present Flag of the Communist Party of Ecuador – Red Sun
  1964-present Flag of the Marxist–Leninist Communist Party of Ecuador
  1951-present Flag of the Social Christian Party
  1926-present Flag of the Communist Party of Ecuador
  1982-2014 Flag of the Ecuadorian Roldosist Party
  1980-1995 Flag of the People, change and democracyes
  1949-1983 Flag of the Concentration of People's Forces
  1942-1979 Flag of the Ecuadorian Nationalist Revolutionary Actiones

Provincial flags edit

Flag Province Adopted Description
    Azuay
    Bolívar
    Cañar
    Carchi
  Chimborazo
    Cotopaxi
    El Oro
    Esmeraldas
    Galápagos
    Guayas
    Imbabura
    Loja
    Los Ríos
    Manabí
    Morona-Santiago
    Napo
    Orellana
    Pastaza
    Pichincha
    Santo Domingo de los Tsáchilas
  Santa Elena
    Sucumbíos
    Tungurahua
    Zamora-Chinchipe

Canton flags edit

Historical flags edit

Flag Date Description
  1534–1820 The Cross of Burgundy flag of the Spanish colonial empire flew over Ecuador for many years.
  1809–1812 The leaders of a rebellion against the Spanish authorities raised a reversed Cross of Burgundy flag in Quito on 10 August 1809. The uprising was defeated in 1812.
  1820–1822 A flag with five horizontal stripes and three stars in the middle stripe. This flag subsequently became that of the Guayas Province, and was first raised by the patriots in the liberation of 9 October 1820.
  1822 The previous flag was changed by decree of 2 June 1822: "The flag of the free province of Guayaquil shall be white and its first quarter blue with a centered star."
  1822–1830 Ecuador was subsumed into Gran Colombia, during which time the Colombian horizontal tricolour became definitive. Although Ecuador seceded from that union in 1830, the flag was retained until 1845.
  1830–1835 Provisional flag of the State of Ecuador, decreed on 19 November 1830.
  1835–1845 First flag used officially by Ecuador after its separation from Gran Colombia.
  1845 During the 1845 Marcist Revolution the pale blue and white colours return, but as a vertical tricolour of white, blue, white, with three white stars in the central stripe.
  1845–1860 The Cuenca Convention ratified, by decree of 6 November 1845, a change to a deeper blue, and the increase in the number of stars to seven "as symbols of the seven provinces which make up the Republic".
  1860–1900 Gabriel García Moreno, upon assuming power two days after the Battle of Guayaquil, reinstated the tricolor flag of Greater Colombia on 26 September 1860. In 1900, the flag was made the definitive national standard, and the coat of arms was added for official state use. The plain flag was established as the merchant ensign in 1900.
  1900–2009 The flag from 31 October 1900. In 1900, the flag was made the definitive national standard, and the coat of arms was added for official state use. The plain flag was established as the merchant ensign in 1900 a modification in November 2009.

Burgees edit

Flag Club
  Salinas Yacht Club

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Minahan, James. (2010). The complete guide to national symbols and emblems. Santa Barbara, Calif.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-34496-1. OCLC 436221284.
  2. ^ "Ecuador – Naval Flags". www.fotw.info. Retrieved 2022-11-02.