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Flag of Russia

A national flag · vexillological catalog

Flag of Russia.

The flag of Russia is a horizontal tricolour of white, blue and red — colours often associated with the Pan-Slavic movement, but in fact predating it by over 150 years. The design dates back to 1696, when Tsar Peter the Great commissioned a flag for Russia's first navy ships, drawing on the Dutch tricolour he had studied during his travels in Western Europe and reordering its colours into a distinctive Russian arrangement. The flag flew over Imperial Russia from 1696 (officially as the merchant ensign from 1705) until 1917, when it was replaced after the Russian Revolution by the Soviet Union's red banner with hammer and sickle. Following the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, the white-blue-red tricolour was restored as the flag of the new Russian Federation. The colours are sometimes given a Russian Orthodox reading — white for purity and saints, blue for the Virgin Mary, red for the saving blood of Christ — though this interpretation post-dates Peter's adoption of the design and is not the official one.

Proportion
2:3
Adopted
1991
Designer
Tsar Peter the Great (original 1696–1705 design)
Of
Russia
01 · Symbolism
Traditionally, white represented nobility, blue loyalty, and red love and bravery — though the colours have multiple historical interpretations.
02 · Colour meanings

What each colour represents.

A breakdown of the symbolism behind each colour on the flag of Russia.

White

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Often associated with nobility, purity, and peace. In Russian Orthodox tradition, sometimes linked to the white robes of saints. Has no fixed official meaning.

Blue

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Often associated with loyalty, honesty, and the Virgin Mary in Russian Orthodox tradition. Some readings tie it to faith.

Red

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Often associated with courage, generosity, love, and the blood of Christ in Russian Orthodox tradition. The colour also has deep cultural resonance — the Russian word for "red" (krasnyy) shares a root with the word for "beautiful."

04 · Fun facts

Things to remember.

  1. 01

    Tsar Peter the Great selected the colours during his 1697–1698 European tour, having been impressed by the Dutch tricolour he saw while learning shipbuilding in Holland. He adapted the design with the colours in a different order.

  2. 02

    The Russian tricolour predates the Pan-Slavic movement by over 150 years. The Pan-Slavic colours adopted in 1848 — based on the Russian flag — went on to influence the flags of Slovakia, Slovenia, Serbia, Croatia and others.

  3. 03

    The Soviet Union (1922–1991) used a red flag with a yellow hammer-and-sickle and star — completely replacing the imperial Russian tricolour for nearly 70 years.

  4. 04

    When the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991, the tricolour was hoisted over the Kremlin on 25 December 1991, replacing the Soviet flag and marking the formal end of the USSR.

  5. 05

    The Russian word for the colour red — krasnyy — shares an ancient root with the word for "beautiful." Moscow's famous Red Square (Krasnaya Ploshchad) was named for being beautiful, not for the colour or for communism.

05 · History

How it came to be.

Tsar Peter the Great commissioned the white-blue-red tricolour in 1696 for Russia's newly formed navy, basing it loosely on the Dutch tricolour he had encountered during his travels. The flag was officially adopted as the Russian merchant ensign in 1705 and as the de facto national flag through the 19th century. From 1858 to 1883 the Romanov dynasty's black-yellow-white was the imperial flag, but the white-blue-red was restored as Russia's national flag in 1883 by Tsar Alexander III. After the 1917 revolution it was replaced by the Soviet red banner. Following the August 1991 coup attempt and the dissolution of the USSR, the tricolour was restored on 22 August 1991 — a date now celebrated annually as the Day of the State Flag of the Russian Federation.

03 · About

On the design.

The white-blue-red tricolour dates to Peter the Great's establishment of a navy in the late 1600s. It was readopted in 1991 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

The design

The Flag of Russia is a national emblem rendered in the colours and proportions defined by the country’s flag law. Its official aspect ratio is 2:3, the height-to-length ratio that fixes how the flag should be cut and flown. The colour scheme uses White, Blue, Red, with each shade specified to particular Pantone or RGB values for official reproduction.

Colour palette

Colour Name Common symbolism
White White Commonly represents peace, purity, honesty or snow-capped landscapes.
Blue Blue Frequently symbolises sky, sea, freedom, vigilance or perseverance.
Red Red Often signifies courage, sacrifice, revolution or the blood of those who fought for the nation.
Source Official flag law The country’s own statute or constitutional appendix specifies exact shades and proportions.

Symbolism & heraldry

Traditionally, white represented nobility, blue loyalty, and red love and bravery — though the colours have multiple historical interpretations.

Heraldic elements on the Flag of Russia — bands, charges, emblems or stars — each carry meaning agreed at the moment of the flag’s adoption. Re-readings happen across generations: a colour or a symbol that began with one meaning often picks up further layers as the country’s history unfolds.

Adoption & history

The current flag was adopted in 1991. Earlier banners flown by Russia reflected the politics of their day; each redesign typically marked a moment of independence, regime change or constitutional reform. The current flag was chosen, debated and codified through the country’s official channels and is now protected by flag law.

Etiquette & protocol

The Flag of Russia should be flown with respect: never allowed to touch the ground, never used as drapery for ceremonies it was not made for, and lowered or removed at sundown unless illuminated. When flown alongside other national flags, it takes precedence on home soil and is hoisted first and lowered last. On days of national mourning, the flag is flown at half-mast in line with directives from the head of state. These conventions are common to most nations and are usually written into the flag’s founding statute.

Specifications

Field Value Note
Country Russia
Continent Europe
ISO alpha-2 RU 2-letter code
ISO alpha-3 RUS 3-letter code
Adopted 1991 year of current design
Proportion 2:3 height : length
Colours White, Blue, Red
Designer
Emoji 🇷🇺 Unicode codepoint sequence

Did you know?

During the 1917-1991 Soviet era, the flag was replaced by the hammer-and-sickle red banner; the tricolour returned the day the USSR formally dissolved.

Frequently asked questions

What do the colours of the Russian flag mean?

The Russian flag has no single official colour symbolism. A traditional reading in Russian Orthodox tradition associates white with purity, blue with the Virgin Mary, and red with the blood of Christ. Another reading associates the colours with the regions of Imperial Russia — White Russia (Belarus), Little Russia (Ukraine), and Great Russia. Both readings post-date Peter the Great's original 1696 design, which was modelled on the Dutch tricolour.

When was the Russian flag adopted?

The current Russian flag was first commissioned by Tsar Peter the Great in 1696 and officially adopted as the merchant ensign in 1705. It flew over Russia until 1917, when it was replaced by the Soviet red banner. After the dissolution of the USSR, the tricolour was restored on 22 August 1991 — a date now celebrated as the Day of the State Flag of the Russian Federation.

Who designed the Russian flag?

The flag was designed by Tsar Peter the Great in 1696, who based it on the Dutch tricolour he had studied during his travels in Western Europe. The choice of colours was reordered to give Russia a distinctive flag rather than directly copying the Dutch design.

Why was the Russian flag changed during the Soviet era?

After the 1917 Russian Revolution, the new Bolshevik government rejected all symbols of the Tsarist era — including the white-blue-red tricolour — as emblems of imperial oppression. The Soviet Union adopted a plain red flag with a yellow hammer-and-sickle and star, which flew from 1922 until the dissolution of the USSR in 1991. The tricolour was then immediately restored as the flag of the new Russian Federation.

Which country does the Flag of Russia represent?

The Flag of Russia is the national flag of Russia.

When was the Flag of Russia adopted?

The Flag of Russia was adopted in 1991 — about 35 years old.

What is the proportion of the Flag of Russia?

The Flag of Russia has an official proportion (height-to-width ratio) of 2:3.

Who designed the Flag of Russia?

The Flag of Russia was designed by Tsar Peter the Great (original 1696–1705 design).

04 · Country at a glance

Russia — in brief.

Quick reference data on Russia, the country this flag represents.

Capital
Moscow
Continent
Europe
Sub-region
Eastern Europe
Population
144M
Area
17,098,242 km²
Languages
Russian
Currency
Russian Ruble (RUB)
Government
Federal semi-presidential republic
Flag age
about 35 years old
Dispatch 13 · MAY · 26

A small thing, worth noting.

During the 1917-1991 Soviet era, the flag was replaced by the hammer-and-sickle red banner; the tricolour returned the day the USSR formally dissolved.

— filed from the catalog