Jack of the Soviet Navy, 1932-1992 (original) (raw)

This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website
Last modified: 2024-01-13 by rob raeside
Keywords: jack | [star: 5 points (fimbriated)](keywords.html#star: 5 points %28fimbriated%29) | [star: 5 points (red and white)](keywords.html#star: 5 points %28red and white%29) | [star with hammer and sickle](keywords.html#star with hammer and sickle) | [hammer and sickle (white)](keywordh.html#hammer and sickle %28white%29) |
Links: FOTW homepage |search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors
image by Jorge Candeias, 23 March 2006
- Description
- Incorrect depictions See also:
- Jack and fortress flag (1924-1932)
- Soviet Navy, 1935-1950 (initial flags of the second pattern)
- Soviet Navy, 1950-1992 (second flag pattern)
- Soviet Navy
- Soviet Union See also:
- Photo of a soviet jack, at Glen &38; Tanya’s Soviet Banner Collection
reported by Dov Gutterman, April 1999
Description
The Soviet jack was (since 1932) red with white-bordered star and a hammer and sickle at the centre of star.
Nikolay Khimenkov, 13 March 1999
The Jack was red with a white hammer and sickle inside a red star inside a white star.
Marcus Wendel, 15 September 1999, quoting from [ped73]
Navy jack (red with white star, hammer, sickle) was adopted on 8 july 1935. It was second jack, the first was adopted 29 august 1924.
Victor Lomantsov, 18 March 2000
The size of the red star itself is the same as that on the 1923-1935 Ensign. As such, the 1932 Jack actually belonged to the “first generation” variety of naval flags (and indeed the only one of them to survive beyond 1935).
Miles Li, 21 December 1999
Incorrect depictions
As shown in [c2b81]
image by Nikolay Khimenkov, 13 March 1999
The book [c2b81] shows it like this.
Santiago Dotor, 15 Dec 1999