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List of Australian flags
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This is a list of flags of different designs that have been used in Australia. The position of the flag on the official order of precedence is indicated, with other national flags having a precedence of "2".[1] When multiple flags are flown together in a line, flags should be flown in order of precedence from left to right.[2]
Flags under copyright are not displayed here, instead having placeholder images that link to the flags.
National flag
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1908–present | Australian National Flag, naval jack and state ensign[3] | A Blue Ensign defaced with the Commonwealth Star in the lower hoist quarter and the five stars of the Southern Cross in the fly half.
The Centenary Flag, the nation's flag of state used on ceremonial occasions, additionally includes a white headband with a red stripe.[4][5] |
1 |
State and territory flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1876–present | Flag of New South Wales[6][7] | A St George's Cross with four gold stars and a lion in the fly of a British blue ensign. | 3-1 | |
| 1877–present | Flag of Victoria[6] | The Southern Cross surmounted by a crown in the fly of a British blue ensign. | 3-2 | |
| 1876–present[a] | Flag of Queensland[6] | A light blue Maltese cross with a crown on a white background in the fly of a British blue ensign. | 3-3 | |
| 1904–present | Flag of South Australia[6][8] | A piping shrike on a gold background in the fly of a British blue ensign. | 3-4 | |
| 1953–present | Flag of Western Australia[6] | A black swan on a gold background in the fly of a British blue ensign. | 3-5 | |
| 1876–present | Flag of Tasmania[6] | A red lion on a white background in the fly of a British blue ensign. | 3-6 | |
| 1993–present | Flag of the Australian Capital Territory[6] | One third blue with the Southern Cross, the other two thirds are yellow with the coat of arms of Canberra. | 3-7 | |
| 1978–present | Flag of the Northern Territory[6] | One third black with the Southern Cross, the other two thirds are Ochre with Sturt's Desert Rose, the floral emblem of the Territory. | 3-8 | |
| 1980–present | Flag of Norfolk Island[6] | A green field with a white square containing a green Norfolk Island pine. | 3-?[b] |
Unofficial territory flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1986–present | Flag of Christmas Island[6] | The blue and green diagonal panels represent the sea and the island's vegetation, a small map of the island is included in the centre. The main emblem is a golden bosun bird. The flag was selected from a competition held in 1986. | |
| 2004–present | Flag of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands[6] | A green field with symbols such as a palm tree on a gold disc, which represents the islands' tropical flora; a crescent, which represent the Muslim Cocos Malays; and the Southern Cross, which represent Australia and the Southern Hemisphere. The flag mostly uses the national colours of Australia. |
Nationally proclaimed flags of Indigenous peoples
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1971–present | Australian Aboriginal flag[9][10] | A black and red flag with a yellow circle in the middle. The flag was designed in 1971 by Harold Thomas. | 4 | |
| 1992–present | Torres Strait Islander flag[9][10] | A five-pointed star and traditional headdress in white, on a blue, green and black background. It was designed in 1992 by Bernard Namok. |
Proclaimed Australian Defence Force flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000–present | Australian Defence Force Ensign[11] | A tricolour of dark blue (navy); red (army) and light blue (airforce) with the triservice badge. | 4-1 | |
| 1967–present | Australian White Ensign[11] | A version of the national flag with a white field defaced with a blue Commonwealth Star in the lower canton quarter and a blue Southern Cross in the fly. | 4-2 | |
| 1982–present | Royal Australian Air Force Ensign[11][12] | The national flag with an Air Force blue field, the Southern Cross tilted and the RAAF roundel (Kangaroo) placed in the lower fly. | 4-3 |
Other official federal flags prescribed under the Flags Act 1953
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1909–present | Australian Red Ensign[3] | A Red Ensign defaced with the Commonwealth Star in the lower hoist quarter and the five stars of the Southern Cross in the fly half. | 4 |
Royal and viceregal flags
[edit]Sovereign
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1962–2022 | Personal Australian Flag of Queen Elizabeth II[13] | Consists of a banner of the coat of arms of Australia, defaced with a gold seven-pointed federation star with a blue disc containing the letter E below a crown, surrounded by a garland of golden roses. | Where practical, it should be flown alone when flown on or outside a building occupied by the monarch. Also flown on vehicles carrying the monarch | |
| 2024–present | King's Flag for Australia[14][15] | Consists of a banner of the coat of arms of Australia. |
Governor-General
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1909–1936 | Flag of the Governor-General of Australia[13] | A Union Flag defaced with a seven pointed star, crowned, surrounded by ears of corn and a gold circlet. The crown used is the Tudor Crown. | Flown continuously when the governor-general is in residence and on vehicles carrying to the governor-general | |
| 1936–Present[c] | Flag of the Governor-General of Australia[16] | A crowned lion standing on a crown on a blue field. The crown used is the Tudor Crown. |
State governors
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description | Precedence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1981–present | Standard of the governor of New South Wales[13] | The state flag with a crowned badge. | Flown continuously when the governor is in residence, at events the governor attends and on vehicles carrying to the governor | |
| 1984–present | Standard of the governor of Victoria[13] | The state flag with a yellow field and crowned southern cross. | ||
| 1876–present[a] | Standard of the governor of Queensland[13] | The Union Flag defaced with the state badge. | ||
| 1975–present[d] | Standard of the governor of South Australia[13] | The state flag with a crowned badge. St Edward's Crown was replaced with the Tudor Crown in 2024.[17] | ||
| 1988–present | Standard of the governor of Western Australia[13][needs update] | The state flag with a crowned badge. | ||
| 1977–present | Standard of the governor of Tasmania[13] |
Local flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1982–present | Armorial Flag of the City of Adelaide[18] | Blue background divided into four quarters by a Saint George's Cross outlined in gold overlain with the Arms of the City of Adelaide. Flag bordered on three sides by diagonal blue and gold stripes.[19] | |
| Flag of the local government area of Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara[20] | The logo of Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara on a red field. | ||
| 1947–present | Flag of the City of Brisbane[21] | Blue background (representing the Brisbane River) bordered by a golden checker pattern (representing the Sun and Brisbane's warm climate) with the flag divided into six quarters. The upper hoist quarter contains a golden caducei superimposed on wavy white lines, representing the Brisbane River and its ties to the city's commerce. The lower hoist quarter contains two Stafford knots and a white star arranged vertically (all represent the achievements in astronomy of Sir Thomas Brisbane, for whom the city is named). The remaining segments alternate between these two designs. The flag design is based on the shield on the coat of arms of Brisbane.[22][23] | |
| 2009–present | Flag of the City of Darwin[24] | According to council policy, Darwin maintains both the coat of arms flag and a logo flag.[24] | |
| Flag of the City of Hobart[21] | The flag of Hobart City Council, of Tasmania, Australia. Designed in 1951 by Hobart architect and alderman, I.G. Anderson and first flown in 1953.
The star is derived from the arms of Lord Hobart, 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire (1760–1816), Secretary of State for War and the Colonies at the time of colonial settlement (1804), and after whom Hobart is named. The colour used on the arms Lord Hobart was, in fact, sable (black), rather than blue. The red lion is from the Tasmanian flag – and its location at the top of the shield signifies Hobart's position as the Capital City.[25] | ||
| Flag of the City of Melbourne[21] | White background divided into four quarters by a Saint George's Cross outlined by a concise and overlain with St Edward's Crown. Quadrant features represent the main activities of the economy of the City of Melbourne in the mid 19th century and are, in a clockwise direction from top left, a fleece hanging from a red ring (wool), a black bull standing on a hillock (cattle), a three-mast ship in full sail (shipping), and a spouting whale in the sea (whaling). The flag design is identical to the shield on the coat of arms of Melbourne.[26] | ||
| 1949–present | Flag of the City of Perth[21] | Saint George's Cross overlaid with the City of Perth coat of arms in the centre.[27] | |
| 1908–present | Flag of the City of Sydney[21] | The flag is a horizontal triband of three colours – white, gold and blue. The top third features three designs. In the top left the arms belong to Thomas Townshend, Viscount Sydney, after whom the city was named. The English Naval Flag in the centre acknowledges the role Arthur Philip played in Sydney's foundation. The red cross is overlaid with a globe and two stars – the principal features of James Cook's Arms, which were granted as a posthumous honour for his service in mapping Australia. The arms in the top right belong to the first Lord Mayor of Sydney, Thomas Hughes. It was during his term of office that the title of Mayor became Lord Mayor, and the official coat of arms for the city was granted. The remaining field of the flag features a ship under full sail, an allusion to the prominence of Sydney as a maritime port.[28] | |
| circa 1960–2008 | Flag of the City of Toowoomba[29] | The flag of Toowoomba city is a violet coloured ensign which makes reference to the city's floral emblem of the day, the Toowoomba Violet (aka the sweet violet, Lat. 'Viola odorata').[30]
Notable is the city's coat of arms[31] in the centre of the ensign and the city's name on the left of the flag, lettered from top to bottom.[32] | |
| 2008–present | Flag of Toowoomba[29] | A new Toowoomba flag was created in 2007 and became the official flag of the Toowoomba Region on 15 March 2008 with the amalgamation of 8 councils; The councils were Clifton Shire, Crows Nest Shire, Cambooya Shire, Jondaryan Shire, Millmerran Shire, Pittsworth Shire, Rosalie Shire and Toowoomba City.[33]
The predominant colours are white and teal. The three white rings in the flag intersect to create eight spaces from their loops and exterior, symbolising the unity of the eight amalgamated former councils. The colour of teal also represents unity.[34] | |
| 1965–present | Flag of Wagga Wagga[35] | The Wagga Wagga City Flag is square. The upper quarter of the flag contains eight stalks of wheat positioned so as to form two capital letters W on a vert (green) field. The lower quarter of the upper half of the flag contains a wavy blue line on gold (yellow) representing the river winding through the wheat fields. The lower half of the flag contains the head of a ram positioned centrally on a vert (green) field. | |
| 1850–present | Upper Murray River Flag[36] | Flown by vessels on the upper reaches of the Murray River, predominantly in Victoria. The blue bars are said to represent the four major rivers that form the Murray-Darling River system and their dark hue represents the darker colour of the Murray River's darker waters in Victoria and NSW. | |
| 1850–present | Lower Murray River Flag[36] | Flown by vessels on the lower reaches of the Murray River, predominantly in South Australia. The blue bars are said to represent the four major rivers that form the Murray-Darling River system and their light hue represents the lighter colour of the Murray River's lighter waters in South Australia. | |
| 1996–present | Flag of Dangar Island, New South Wales[37] | The black field divided by a white cross represents the Saint Piran's Cross, honouring the Cornish heritage of Henry Cary Dangar, after whom the island is named. The four red eight-pointed stars invoke the New South Wales version of the Southern Cross. In the canton, the yellow tower symbolises the sandstone tower that has stood on the island since 1886, while the mullet serves as a homage to the fact that the island was previously known as Mullet Island. | |
| 1998–present | Flag of Lord Howe Island, New South Wales[38] | The flag is unofficial. It features a blue background, a white cross of St George and the cross of St Andrew, and a yellow circle in the centre with a blue depiction of the island. | |
| 1996–present | Flag of Scotland Island, New South Wales[39] |
Other official federal flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1948–present | Australian Civil Air Ensign[11] | Stars altered to white to improve visibility | |
| 2015–present | Australian Border Force Flag[11] | The Australian national flag defaced with "AUSTRALIAN BORDER FORCE" |
Federal and state police
[edit]
| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1982–present | Flag of the Australian Federal Police[11] | A black-white-black vertical tricolor, with the badge of the Australian Federal Police in the centre of the white stripe. A black-and-white checkerboard borders the flag. | |
| 2006–present | Flag of the Queensland Police Service[40] | A light blue-and-dark blue horizontal bicolor with the badge of the Queensland Police Service in the centre of the flag. | |
| 2005–present | Flag of the Western Australia Police[41] | A white flag with a stylised depiction of a swan and chequerboard in blue, with the Western Australia Police emblem added. Replaced previous flag in use from 1970–2000. |
Sporting flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1983–present | Boxing Kangaroo sporting flag[42] | A golden kangaroo wearing red boxing gloves on a green field. A registered trademark of the Australian Olympic Committee.[42] |
Ethnic group flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021–present | Flag of Taungurung[43] | A rectangle diagonally divided by a yellow wavy line, representing the rise of the Taungurung. The right side is ocher with the 7 stars arranged into the constellation of the Pleiades, the left side is black. | |
| 1998–present | Flag of South Sea Islanders[44][45] | Designed in 1994 and formally adopted by the Australian South Sea Islanders United Council in 1998.[46] |
Historic official flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1901–1903 | Original 1901 Federal Flag Design Competition winner[3] | A Blue Ensign defaced with the six-point Commonwealth Star in the lower hoist quarter and the five stars of the Southern Cross in the fly half (each star had a varying number of points: 9, 8, 7, 6 and 5—with Alpha Crucis being larger than Beta and Gamma and with Delta being smaller than Beta and Gamma[47]). It was first flown in Melbourne on 3 September 1901, that date now recognised as Flag Day. | |
| 1903–1908 | Australian flag as approved by King Edward VII[3] | Flag modified so that all stars of southern cross have seven points, except the smallest star with 5 points | |
| 1901–1903 | Red version of the 1901 Federal Flag Design Competition winner[3] | A Red Ensign defaced with the six-point Commonwealth Star in the lower hoist quarter and the five stars of the Southern Cross in the fly half (each star had a varying number of points: 9, 8, 7, 6 and 5—with Alpha Crucis being larger than Beta and Gamma and with Delta being smaller than Beta and Gamma[48]). | |
| 1903–1909 | Red Ensign, first version approved by King Edward VII[3] | Flag modified so that all stars of southern cross have seven points, except the smallest star with 5 points | |
| 1877 | Flag of Victoria[49][50] | ||
| 1876–1963 | Flag of Queensland[51] | ||
| 1870–1876 | Flag of South Australia[52] | ||
| 1876–1904 | |||
| 1902–1949 | Flag of the Territory of Papua[citation needed] | British blue ensign with a white disk on the fly, filled with the Tudor Crown and the word "PAPUA". | |
| 1914–1949 | Flag of the Territory of New Guinea[53] | British blue ensign with a white disk on the fly, filled with the Tudor Crown and the initialism "T.N.G." | |
| 1971–1975 | Flag of the Territory of Papua and New Guinea[53] | The upper triangle is red with the soaring Raggiana Bird of Paradise and the lower triangle is black with the Southern Cross of four white larger five-pointed stars and the smaller star. | |
| 1935–1948 | Australian Civil Air Ensign[11] | Based on the British Civil Air Ensign, with the addition of the Southern Cross and Commonwealth Star in yellow. | |
| 1770–1801 | Union Flag | The Union Flag of the Kingdom of Great Britain. First raised in Australia by Captain Cook on April 1770 at Botany Bay.[54] | |
| 1801– present | Union Flag | The Union Flag of the United Kingdom and the British Empire. Given priority over what is now known as the Australian National Flag until the passage of the Flags Act 1953. |
Historic unofficial flags
[edit]| Flag | Date | Use | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1823/24–1831 | National Colonial Flag for Australia[55] | A British White Ensign, featuring four white stars on the red cross | |
| 1831–1903 (de facto Flag of Australia); 1903–1920s (still commonly used) | Australian Federation Flag/New South Wales Ensign[55] | A British White Ensign, featuring the Cross in Azure with five Argent Stars often varying between 5–8 Points. It was the de facto flag of Australia from 1 January 1901 to 3 September 1901. It was widely used in New South Wales as a local shipping ensign until 1883 when the Admiralty banned its continued use at sea. The Australian government received approval to fly the Blue Ensign in 1903—but the Australian Federation Flag was still commonly unofficially used by members of the populace as late as the 1920s. | |
| 1854 | Eureka Flag[55] | The battle flag of the Eureka Stockade featured the five stars of the constellation Crux Australis in white on a white cross and blue field. The flag has become an Australian symbol of protests and democracy, commonly used by trade unions, the Republican movement and far-right groups. | |
| 1806 | Bowman flag[56] | A white swallow-tail fly, with a crest featuring the Rose of England, the thistle of Scotland and the shamrock of Northern Ireland supported by an emu and kangaroo. The design was an inspiration for Australia's national coat of arms. | |
| Post 1910–c. 1945 | British Empire flag | An unofficial flag of the British Empire featuring its constituent dominions and India. The Australian coat of arms are featured in the bottom right. It was flown by civilians as a display of patriotism on special occasions such as Empire Day. The flag was flown at the official unveiling of the Dangarsleigh War Memorial in 1921, and again at the centennial in 2021.[57] | |
| 1849–1853 | Australian Anti-Transportation League Flag[55] | British Blue Ensign, with yellow Southern Cross and white border, to which branch names were added |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b The rendition of the crown has changed according to the monarchs' wishes. In 1963 the existing Tudor Crown was replaced with the St Edward's Crown.
- ^ The Norfolk Island flag is not listed in the order of precedence for state and territory flags.
- ^ The crown has been modified according to the monarch's wishes. From 1936–1963 and from 2024 to present, a tudor crown has been used. From 1963–2024 a St Edward's crown was used.
- ^ The rendition of the crown has changed according to the monarchs' wishes. In 2024 the existing St Edward's Crown was replaced with the Tudor Crown.
References
[edit]- ^ "Australian Flags booklet: Order of precedence". Australian Government: Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
- ^ "Australian Flags booklet: Flying the Australian National Flag with state and other flags". Australian Government: Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2022). "How the Australian National flag was chosen". Australian flags (3rd ed.). Australian Government. ISBN 978-0642471345.
- ^ Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2022). "The Centenary Flag". Australian flags (3rd ed.). Australian Government. ISBN 978-0642471345.
- ^ "Centenary Flag Warrant". Trove. Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No S 382. 20 September 2001.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2022). "State and territory flags". Australian flags (3rd ed.). Australian Government. ISBN 978-0642471345.
- ^ "State flag". NSW Government. 11 September 2023.
- ^ "State symbols". Department of Premier and Cabinet. Tasmanian Government. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
- ^ a b Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2022). "Flags of Australia's Indigenous Peoples". Australian flags (3rd ed.). Australian Government. ISBN 978-0642471345.
- ^ a b "Australian flags". Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet. Australian Government. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2022). "Australian ensigns". Australian flags (3rd ed.). Australian Government. ISBN 978-0642471345.
- ^ "Air Force Ensign". Royal Australian Air Force. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2022). "Royal and Vice-Regal flags". Australian flags (3rd ed.). Australian Government. ISBN 978-0642471345.
- ^ "Royal and Vice-Regal flags". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 14 July 2022. Retrieved 11 September 2025.
- ^ "Simon Vigar on X: 'The King's Flag for Australia incorporates the Tudor Crown, different to St Edward's used by his mother … and the Royal Australian Air Force on the plane. Photo @ChrisJack_Getty / X".
- ^ "Notice" (PDF). Commonwealth of Australia Gazette. No. 56. 16 July 1936. p. 1297.
- ^ "Governor's Instruments - DPC24/013CS" (PDF). South Australian Government Gazette (9): 188–189. 22 February 2024. Retrieved 8 November 2025.
- ^ "City of Adelaide Arms and Flag". City of Adelaide. Archived from the original on 30 March 2017.
- ^ "History of Council". Adelaide City Council. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
- ^ "about-us". Anangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Feeney, Katherine (4 April 2012). "The city standard, but do you recognise it?". Brisbane Times.
- ^ "Symbols used by Council". Brisbane City Council. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- ^ Jonathan Dixon; Ian MacDonald. "City of Brisbane (Queensland, Australia)". Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- ^ a b "Council's Symbols" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2009. Retrieved 5 December 2016.
- ^ "Hobart Coat of Arms – City of Hobart, Tasmania Australia". Retrieved 20 September 2018.
- ^ "Melbourne Day - Melbourne Day". Archived from the original on 25 January 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
- ^ "History of the Council". City of Perth. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
- ^ "Sydney's flag and flower". City of Sydney. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
- ^ a b "Toowoomba Flags". www.toowoomba.org. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
- ^ "Arrowhead Voilet". Toowoomba Plants: Natives of the Region suitable for Gardens. 8 September 2011. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
- ^ "Toowoomba". Heraldy of the World. Retrieved 7 January 2019.
- ^ "Toowoomba Flags". toowoomba.org. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "Toowoomba Region Amalgamation". Toowoomba Region. Toowoomba Regional Council. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "Toowoomba Flags". toowoomba.org. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
- ^ "Wagga Wagga City Flag". Retrieved 3 October 2016.
- ^ a b "Murray River Flags - Lower and Upper Murray River". Discover Murray. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
- ^ "Dangar Island". Australiana Flags. Retrieved 4 January 2025.
- ^ "Lord Howe Island 1993". Australiana Flags. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
- ^ "Scotland Island Flag 1996". Australiana Flags. Retrieved 13 December 2024.
- ^ QPS Media (5 July 2017). "Flags raised outside Police Headquarters for NAIDOC celebrations". myPolice Queensland Police News.
- ^ "WA Police Force Logo, Flag and Banner". Western Australia Police. 3 January 2024.
- ^ a b Millar, Lisa (8 February 2010). "Boxing kangaroo here to stay". ABC News (Australia).
- ^ "Taungurung Sovereign Flag - Taungurung Land & Waters Council". 14 May 2021.
- ^ "Australian South Sea Islanders flag - ASSI".
- ^ "Emojis are everywhere, but they can be a painful reminder of exclusion for some". ABC News. 11 May 2019.
- ^ "Australian South Sea Islander flag". Australian Museum. 24 August 2021.
- ^ Thomson, Jeff (10 November 2015). "Construction Details of the Australian Flag". FOTW Flags Of The World website. Jon Radel. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
The 1901 Southern Cross star-points ranged from nine (Alpha) to five (Epsilon) and inner diameter of each was 4/9 of their outer diameters. Beta, Gamma and Epsilon were the same outer diameter as today, Alpha was 1/6 and Delta 1/10 of the fly width. In 1903 Alpha, Beta and Delta were altered to the same design as the Gamma Star (1/7 fly width, seven points) thus making the Southern Cross the same as on the current flag.
- ^ Thomson, Jeff (10 November 2015). "Construction Details of the Australian Flag". FOTW Flags Of The World website. Jon Radel. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
The 1901 Southern Cross star-points ranged from nine (Alpha) to five (Epsilon) and inner diameter of each was 4/9 of their outer diameters. Beta, Gamma and Epsilon were the same outer diameter as today, Alpha was 1/6 and Delta 1/10 of the fly width. In 1903 Alpha, Beta and Delta were altered to the same design as the Gamma Star (1/7 fly width, seven points) thus making the Southern Cross the same as on the current flag.
- ^ "Flag for Government Vessels". Victorian Government Gazette. No. 32. 6 April 1877. p. 629.
- ^ "About the Victorian flag". vic.gov.au. Victorian Government. 26 August 2024.
- ^ "Queensland flag". Queensland Government. 5 July 2017.
- ^ "Flag of South Australia". Britannica. Retrieved 10 September 2024.
- ^ a b "Flags, Symbols & Currency of Papua New Guinea". WorldAtlas. 24 February 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2024.
- ^ "Symbols timeline". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Australian Government. Retrieved 1 July 2025.
- ^ a b c d Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (2022). "Early flags". Australian flags (3rd ed.). Australian Government. ISBN 978-0642471345.
- ^ "The Bowman Flag". State Library of New South Wales. 8 December 2015. Retrieved 11 September 2024.
- ^ Ingall, Jennifer (4 June 2021). "Why the Dangarsleigh war memorial flies the Empire flag and what it means to the community". ABC News. Archived from the original on 13 August 2023. Retrieved 13 August 2023.
List of Australian flags
View on GrokipediaNational Flags
Australian National Flag
The Australian National Flag consists of a dark blue field divided into quarters, with the Union Jack occupying the upper left canton to acknowledge historical ties to British settlement, a white seven-pointed Commonwealth Star positioned below the Union Jack to represent the federation of the six original states plus territories, and five white stars depicting the Southern Cross constellation on the right side—four larger seven-pointed stars and one smaller five-pointed star—symbolizing Australia's location in the southern hemisphere.[4] The flag maintains a 1:2 ratio, with the blue specified as Pantone 280 C and stars in pure white, evolving from the British Blue Ensign used by Australian colonies, which incorporated local badges but standardized post-federation to emphasize maritime traditions and national unity.[4][5] Following the federation of Australia on 1 January 1901, a public competition in 1901 selected designs incorporating these elements, with the flag first flown officially on 3 September 1901 and formally approved by King Edward VII on 11 February 1903, as published in the Commonwealth Gazette on 23 February 1903.[4][6] This design replaced varied colonial ensigns, reflecting Australia's emergence as a federated dominion while retaining British colonial heritage through the ensign base and Union Jack.[4] The Flags Act 1953 designates this blue ensign variant as the Australian National Flag per Schedule 1, prohibiting any design modification except by Act of Parliament and establishing its precedence over all other Australian flags except in cases involving vice-regal salutes or specific protocols.[7][8] The Act also authorizes regulations for proper use, display, and disposal, reinforcing its status as the primary symbol of national sovereignty. Periodic debates have questioned the flag's Union Jack amid evolving national identity, yet empirical public opinion data indicates strong support for retention; a Roy Morgan poll in November 2024 found 61% of Australians favoring the current design over alternatives, while an Institute of Public Affairs survey in June 2025 reported over 70% backing its unifying role.[9][10] These results align with historical patterns where proposed changes, often lacking broad consensus, have not advanced to legislative action under the Act's safeguards.[9]Proclaimed Flags of Indigenous Peoples
The Australian Aboriginal Flag and the Torres Strait Islander Flag are the two flags officially proclaimed for Indigenous peoples under section 5 of the Flags Act 1953, both on 14 July 1995.[11][1] These proclamations recognize them as "Flags of Australia" alongside the Australian National Flag, though the latter retains precedence in official protocols.[1] The Australian Aboriginal Flag was designed by Luritja artist Harold Thomas in 1971 for the National Aboriginal Day observance in Adelaide.[12] Its black upper half symbolizes Aboriginal people, the red lower half represents the earth and ochre, and the central yellow circle depicts the sun.[1] Prior to 2022, copyright held by Thomas restricted commercial reproductions, leading to legal disputes over uses like clothing and branding; the Commonwealth acquired the copyright in January 2022 for over $20 million, enabling fee-free public use thereafter.[13][14] The Torres Strait Islander Flag emerged from a 1992 design competition, with Bernard Namok of Thursday Island as the winner; it features a blue central panel for the sea, green outer panels for land, black stripes for the people, a white dharri (traditional headdress) outline, and five white stars representing the islands.[15][16] Unlike the Aboriginal Flag, it has faced no major copyright constraints, allowing broader unlicensed reproduction.[1] Official flying protocols position the Australian National Flag in the place of honor, with the Indigenous flags on adjacent poles when multiple are available, such as during NAIDOC Week (e.g., 6-13 July 2025), where they are flown on additional masts at government sites to acknowledge First Nations contributions.[17][18] Empirical usage data from federal guidelines shows consistent display in parliamentary chambers and public buildings during reconciliation events, though always subordinate to the national ensign.[19] Controversies include debates over multiple official flags eroding national unity, with Opposition Leader Peter Dutton stating in December 2024 that no other country employs multiple national symbols in this manner, arguing it conveys a "confusing" message that divides rather than unifies Australians under a singular banner.[20] Dutton pledged, if elected prime minister, to display only the Australian National Flag at press events, prioritizing it to foster cohesion over ethnic-specific emblems.[21] Such views highlight tensions between symbolic recognition and the causal risks of balkanizing national identity, evidenced by pre-proclamation eras when a single flag predominated without equivalent division.[20]State and Territory Flags
State Flags
The flags of Australia's six states—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, and Tasmania—share a uniform design derived from the British Blue Ensign: a dark blue field bearing the Union Jack in the upper hoist quarter, defaced with a circular state badge in the fly. This template originated in the colonial era under the British Colonial Naval Defence Act of 1865, which authorized colonies to adapt the Blue Ensign for local naval use with distinctive badges approved by the Admiralty. Post-Federation in 1901, the designs persisted without substantive alterations, symbolizing continuity between colonial governance and state identity within the Commonwealth, as the badges evoke historical emblems tied to settlement, geography, and heraldry rather than national unification.[3]| State | Adoption Date | Badge Description | Symbolic Elements |
|---|---|---|---|
| New South Wales | 15 February 1876 | White disc with the state coat of arms: red Cross of St George charged centrally with a red lion passant guardant, and an eight-pointed star in each canton.[3] | Draws from the colony's 1830s arms, representing British heritage (lion, cross) and federation-era aspirations (stars for ports or unity). |
| Victoria | 1870 (proclaimed for HMVS Nelson; crown added 1877) | White disc with a crown above five white eight-pointed stars forming the Southern Cross constellation.[22] | Stars derive from colonial navigation symbols, adapted post-separation from New South Wales in 1851 to signify southern location and maritime history. |
| Queensland | 20 November 1876 | White disc with a light blue Maltese Cross surmounted by a crown.[3] | Cross, selected after colonial debate, likely nods to gubernatorial preference or Christian symbolism, with crown denoting loyalty to the Crown amid 1870s separation from New South Wales. |
| South Australia | 13 January 1904 | White disc with a black Australian magpie (piping shrike) displayed wings outstretched.[23] | Bird emblem from 1850s colonial seals, chosen over earlier designs like Britannia with an Aboriginal figure to emphasize local fauna post-Federation. |
| Western Australia | 1870 (badge recognition; flag formalized 1875) | White disc with a black swan in upright posture on yellow background.[24] | Swan, noted by Dutch explorer Willem de Vlamingh in 1697 and emblematic of Swan River Colony since 1830s, symbolizes indigenous wildlife and early European exploration. |
| Tasmania | 25 September 1876 | White disc with a red lion passant guardant (from British heraldry).[25] | Lion from Van Diemen's Land colonial arms (post-1856 renaming), evoking British sovereignty; land-use proclamation formalized 3 December 1975 without design change.[26] |
Territory Flags
Australian territories maintain official flags established via local legislative processes, distinct from the federal Flags Act 1953 that governs the national flag, allowing for designs that reflect territorial identities without mandatory inclusion of the Union Jack seen in most state flags. These flags have undergone minimal modifications since their adoption, emphasizing symbols of local geography, heritage, and governance.[3] The Northern Territory flag was adopted on 1 July 1978, marking the territory's self-government. Designed by Robert Ingpen, it features an ochre yellow field overlaid by a black pall in the shape of a Y, with the five stars of the Southern Cross depicted in white within the black sections. The ochre represents the territory's arid landscapes and Indigenous cultural significance, while the absence of the Union Jack distinguishes it from state designs.[27][3] The Australian Capital Territory flag was officially adopted by the Legislative Assembly on 25 March 1993 after a public competition, with the winning design by Ivo Ostyn. It consists of a royal blue field bearing the territory's coat of arms—depicting a black swan, white swan, and rising sun—centered above a yellow horizontal stripe containing the Southern Cross in blue. Blue and gold colors symbolize the national capital's identity and wattle blossom, diverging from state patterns by prioritizing the coat of arms over a defaced blue ensign.[28][3] Among external territories, Norfolk Island's flag was proclaimed on 11 January 1980 under local legislation. The design shows a white field flanked by two vertical green bars, with a central green Norfolk Island pine tree symbolizing the island's endemic flora and economic importance. Christmas Island and the Cocos (Keeling) Islands employ community-designed flags—a green field with rising sun, map, and Southern Cross for Christmas Island (introduced 1986), and a green field with palm, gold disc, crescent, and Southern Cross for Cocos (adopted 6 April 2004, designed by Mohammed Minkom)—but these lack formal legislative adoption and primarily serve unofficial purposes alongside the Australian National Flag.[29][3]Unofficial or Proposed Territory Flags
The flag of Christmas Island, featuring a diagonal division into green (representing vegetation) and blue (symbolizing the ocean), overlaid with the Southern Cross constellation, a golden bosun bird (Phaethon lepturus fulvus, endemic to the island), and a gold disc depicting the island's outline to evoke phosphate mining history, originated from a 1986 local competition with 69 entries won by Sydney resident Tony Couch, a former phosphate mining supervisor.[30] This design was announced on 14 April 1986 and used informally for ceremonial and community purposes for 16 years despite lacking initial formal approval from the Christmas Island Assembly, during which instances of theft as souvenirs were reported due to its popularity.[30] It achieved official status only on 26 January 2002 following administrative review, highlighting how provisional community designs can gain de facto traction without federal or legislative endorsement, potentially overlapping with national symbols like the Southern Cross and complicating unified territorial representation.[30] In the Australian Capital Territory, post-1993 official flag adoption saw multiple proposals for alternatives amid debates over the design's complexity and heraldic elements. In 2003, former Chief Minister Gary Humphries advocated replacing the modified coat of arms with the Royal Bluebell (Wahlenbergia gloriosa), the territory's floral emblem, to emphasize local identity over imported symbolism, though the idea stalled owing to insufficient public engagement and competing priorities.[31] Similarly, vexillologist Ivo Ostyn submitted two Royal Bluebell-centric designs in 1992 (a formal heraldic style) and 2002–2003 (a more fluid arrangement with the Southern Cross in blue, gold, and white), critiqued for perceived design flaws and overshadowed by events like the 2003 Canberra bushfires, with non-adoption attributed to governmental shifts and lack of consensus.[31] Another 2002 suggestion by Nigel Morris incorporated the Australian National Flag in the canton alongside the ACT arms in the fly, rejected due to risks of obsolescence if the national flag changed and minimal community interest.[31] These efforts reflect ongoing local pushes for simplification without parliamentary ratification, risking fragmentation from official precedents. Prior to self-government on 1 July 1978, the Northern Territory solicited public flag submissions as preliminary ideas, which Melbourne artist Robert Ingpen refined into the adopted design incorporating Sturt's desert rose, the Southern Cross, and territory colors, but individual entrant concepts circulated unofficially without formal status.[32] Lacking legislative approval, such pre-1978 variants served limited ceremonial roles in advocacy for autonomy, underscoring how unendorsed designs can influence but not supplant eventual official symbols, with their obscurity tied to the absence of dedicated territorial governance structures at the time.[32] For other territories like Norfolk Island, Cocos (Keeling) Islands, and the Australian Antarctic Territory, unofficial variants remain scarce or unadopted; the Antarctic Territory, without a proclaimed flag and reliant on the Australian National Flag, has seen informal light-blue adaptations mimicking polar ensigns in expedition contexts, but these lack verifiable community uptake or proposals beyond vexillological speculation, preserving national cohesion over localized proliferation.[33] Such limited recognition stems from federal oversight prioritizing uniformity, where unratified designs risk diluting shared sovereignty without empirical benefits to identity or function.Defence and Service Flags
Australian Defence Force Flags
The Australian Defence Force (ADF) employs distinct ensigns for joint operations and individual services, reflecting British naval and air traditions adapted with Australian symbols such as the Southern Cross constellation. These flags symbolize military discipline, operational readiness, and national sovereignty in defence contexts, flown on vessels, aircraft, bases, and during ceremonies to denote command authority and service identity. Unlike civilian flags, which emphasize civic unity, ADF flags incorporate martial elements like roundels and anchors, prioritizing tactical precedence over public display.[34] The Australian Defence Force Ensign, proclaimed on 12 April 2000 under the Flags Act 1953, features vertical stripes of dark blue for the Royal Australian Navy, red for the Australian Army, and light blue for the Royal Australian Air Force, overlaid with a central joint services emblem comprising an anchor, crossed swords, and eagle atop a boomerang and Commonwealth star. This tricolour design unifies the branches under ADF command, used in joint exercises, headquarters, and multi-service deployments, such as operations in the Middle East. It takes precedence over service-specific flags in integrated contexts, underscoring inter-service coordination established post-1976 ADF unification.[34][1] The Royal Australian Navy's Australian White Ensign, proclaimed by Governor-General Lord Casey on 16 February 1967, replaces the British White Ensign with an Australian Blue Ensign in the fly bearing the Southern Cross, retaining the Union Jack in the canton on a white field. Approved by Queen Elizabeth II on 7 November 1966 and effective from 1 March 1967 amid Vietnam War commitments, it signifies naval sovereignty and is flown as the battle ensign on warships, distinguishing RAN vessels from Allied or merchant shipping during patrols and amphibious operations. Its design maintains hydrographic and signalling continuity while asserting national maritime defence identity.[35] The Royal Australian Air Force Ensign, approved by King George VI in 1948 and formally adopted in Australia on 1 January 1949, displays a light blue field with the Union Jack in the upper hoist, a seven-pointed Federation Star below, the Southern Cross in the fly, and a central RAAF roundel incorporating a red kangaroo updated in 1981. Proclaimed under the Flags Act following Queen Elizabeth II's 1981 approval, it serves as the service's battle ensign on aircraft, air bases, and in ceremonial fly-pasts, embodying aerial combat heritage from World War II through modern coalitions. The roundel echoes Allied marking traditions, ensuring visibility in joint air operations.[34][36] The Australian Army lacks a dedicated ensign, instead serving as custodian of the Australian National Flag, which it guards in barracks and deploys in ground operations. Unit-level honourable insignia—standards for mounted units, guidons for light horse, colours for infantry, and banners for commands—derive from British regimental practices, featuring battle honours embroidered on silk or damask, awarded for distinguished service in conflicts like the Boer War and World Wars. These are trooped in parades to honour traditions but do not function as a national service flag, emphasizing regimental loyalty over centralized symbolism.[34][37] In military protocols, the Australian National Flag holds ultimate precedence, followed by the ADF Ensign for joint forces, then service ensigns on respective platforms, ensuring clear hierarchy during salutes, inspections, and combat deployments. These flags have historically rallied troops in theatres from Gallipoli to Afghanistan, embodying causal links between design heritage and operational efficacy in preserving Australia's defence posture.[38]Federal and State Police Flags
The Australian Federal Police (AFP) flag features three equal vertical stripes—black on the hoist and fly sides, with white in the center—superimposed with the AFP ceremonial badge depicting a red chevron over a white disc on black, all centered on the white stripe.[39] Adopted in 1981, two years after the AFP's formation on 19 October 1979 under the Australian Federal Police Act 1979, the flag serves ceremonial purposes on AFP facilities and during official events, though it maintains lower public profile than military ensigns due to restricted operational display protocols.[40][41] State police forces employ distinct flags incorporating service badges on colored fields, often derived from naval or ensign traditions, primarily for parades, station hoisting, and internal ceremonies rather than routine operations. The New South Wales Police Force flag displays the force's Nemesis emblem—a crowned lion holding a sword and scales—centered on a bicolour of light blue over white, sometimes rendered swallow-tailed for banners.[42] Established alongside the force's modern structure in 1862, with the current design formalized post-1990s rebranding, it flies at police buildings and mounted units' events but sees limited broader visibility.[42] Queensland Police Service flag comprises a horizontal bicolour of sky blue over dark blue, with the service badge—a St Edward's Crown over a Queensland eight-pointed star and "POLICE" scroll—centered and outlined.[43] Tied to the service's 1861 origins and updated badge from 1959, it is used ceremonially at stations and commemorations, reflecting operational focus on functionality over symbolic display.[43] South Australia Police flag adapts the blue ensign pattern, substituting the state badge with the force's coat of arms—a pelican in piety surmounted by a mural crown—in the fly, fimbriated white against a dark blue field.[44] Adopted following the force's 1838 establishment, it appears in official protocols but primarily indoors or at low-key events, underscoring police flags' niche role versus national symbols.[44] Western Australia Police Force flag presents a white field with an indigo chequered Sillitoe tartan band at the hoist, overlaid by a defensive black swan silhouette bearing the force logo in white.[45] Linked to the 1853 force founding and 2010 logo update, its usage confines to headquarters, parades, and reconciliation initiatives, with over 480 poles installed statewide by 2020 for occasional flying.[45][46] Tasmania Police flag employs a dark blue field with a hoist-side light blue-and-white Sillitoe tartan band, centering the badge of a gold lion passant over a blue Tasmanian map outline.[47][48] Dating to the 1899 force consolidation, per manual guidelines for station display from opening to closing hours, it supports ceremonial traditions without widespread public prominence.[49][47] Victoria Police lacks a uniquely codified flag in public protocols, relying instead on badge-embellished banners for internal use, aligning with the force's 1853 establishment and emphasis on operational uniformity over vexillological distinction.[50] Across jurisdictions, these flags evoke no documented controversies on militarization, as designs prioritize identification over combat symbolism, with debates limited to protocol precedence in multi-flag arrays.[51]Royal and Viceregal Flags
Sovereign's Personal Flag
The Sovereign's personal flag for Australia, officially the King's Flag for Australia, is reserved for use exclusively in the presence of the monarch during official visits to the country. It is flown on buildings, vehicles, boats, or aircraft occupied by the King, with no other flags displayed alongside it when practicable. This flag symbolizes the personal presence of the head of state in Australia's constitutional monarchy, where the monarch holds a distinct ceremonial role separate from governmental functions.[52] The current design features the six quarters of the Commonwealth Coat of Arms—representing the badges of the six states—surrounded by an ermine border denoting Federation, forming a banner of arms under a royal crown. King Charles III approved this flag on 30 August 2024, continuing the tradition established by Queen Elizabeth II, and it was first flown during his October 2024 royal visit to Australia. Prior to this, Queen Elizabeth II's version, approved on 20 September 1962 and first used in 1963, depicted the Commonwealth Coat of Arms overlaid by a gold seven-pointed Federation Star incorporating her initial 'E', with a stylised St Edward's Crown above on a blue roundel. The flag's usage remains rare, limited to the sovereign's physical presence, distinguishing it as a personal standard rather than a perpetual state emblem like the national flag.[52][52][53] Unlike the Australian national flag, which integrates the Union Jack as a component of state sovereignty, the Sovereign's personal flag centers on Australian heraldic elements without British union symbolism, emphasizing the monarch's localized role as King of Australia. This design reflects the evolution of distinct realm-specific royal standards since the 1960s, aligning with Australia's federated identity while maintaining ties to the Crown's ancient traditions.[52][53]Governor-General's Flag
The Governor-General's flag serves as the personal standard of the Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, denoting the office holder's presence as the monarch's representative. It features a royal blue field with the Commonwealth coat of arms centered and surmounted by St Edward's Crown, maintaining a 1:2 ratio.[52][5] This design was officially adopted on 16 July 1936 via proclamation in the Commonwealth Gazette, superseding the prior version used from 1909 to 1936, which consisted of a Union Jack defaced with a central badge depicting a seven-pointed gold star encircled by a wreath of roses, thistles, and shamrocks on a garter-blue ribbon.[54][52] The 1936 adoption aligned the flag with emerging national symbolism, emphasizing the coat of arms over British ensign elements while retaining the crown to signify monarchical authority.[52] The flag symbolizes the viceregal authority vested in the Governor-General under section 2 of the Australian Constitution, which states that a Governor-General appointed by the monarch "shall be the Queen's representative in the Commonwealth," a provision enacted with federation on 1 January 1901. In practice, it is flown over Government House in Canberra and other official residences during the Governor-General's occupancy, as well as on vehicles and at events where the office holder is present, indicating ceremonial precedence subordinate only to the Australian National Flag in general protocols.[52][55] When multiple flags are displayed, the Governor-General's flag follows service ensigns in the order of precedence but assumes prominence at sites under direct viceregal jurisdiction.[56]State Governors' Flags
The personal standards of Australian state governors represent the monarch's viceregal authority in each state, flown to denote the Governor's presence at official functions, Government Houses, and state ceremonies. These flags distinguish the non-partisan constitutional office from executive symbols associated with premiers or governments, underscoring the federated structure where the Crown operates through separate state representatives alongside the federal Governor-General. Designs evolved from colonial precedents, initially using the Union Jack defaced with the colonial badge, to modern forms emphasizing state identity within the monarchy; most transitioned to crown-augmented state ensigns between 1975 and 1988, reflecting post-federation consolidation while preserving heraldic continuity.[52][57] With the exception of Queensland, state governors' flags conform to a uniform pattern: the state's blue ensign—featuring the Union Jack in the canton and the state badge or emblem in the fly—defaced by superimposing St Edward's Crown directly above the badge. For New South Wales, adopted on 15 January 1981, the standard mirrors the state flag but adds the crown atop the badge of a white disc with red St George's cross and golden lion passant guardant; it replaced the prior Union Jack-centered design used since colonial times. South Australia's standard, changed in 1975, incorporates the crown over the piping shrike emblem on a yellow disc within the blue ensign. Western Australia's, proclaimed in 1988, places the crown above the black swan badge on a yellow disc. Tasmania's, updated in 1977, crowns the red lion badge from its colonial arms. Victoria's follows suit, crowning the five white Southern Cross stars that serve as its flag's distinguishing emblem.[58][57][59][60][61] Queensland's Governor's Standard deviates, retaining the 1876 colonial design: a Union Jack defaced centrally with a white roundel containing the light blue [Maltese cross](/page/Maltese cross) badge surmounted by the crown and encircled by laurel leaves, without adopting the blue ensign base used elsewhere. This persistence highlights variations in state heraldic evolution, as Queensland's flag itself uniquely lacks a disc around its badge. These standards are hoisted during viceregal duties to symbolize the monarch's direct state-level representation, integral to Australia's Westminster-style federation established in 1901.[62][63]Other Official Federal Flags
Flags Prescribed under the Flags Act 1953
The Flags Act 1953 prescribes the Australian Red Ensign as the official flag for use on Australian ships, distinct from the Australian National Flag.[64] This ensign, authorized under section 4 of the Act, serves as the civil ensign for merchant vessels registered in Australia, reflecting maritime traditions inherited from British naval practice.[65] The design consists of a red field with the Union Jack in the upper hoist-side quarter, overlaid by a seven-pointed federation star beneath the jack, and the five stars of the Southern Cross arranged in the fly half, mirroring the national flag's elements but substituting red for blue to denote civil rather than governmental or naval use.[64] The Act's schedule specifies precise proportions and star configurations for the Red Ensign, ensuring uniformity: the flag's dimensions are a 1:2 ratio, with the Union Jack occupying one-quarter of the hoist, the federation star measuring one-sixth of the fly's width, and Southern Cross stars sized between seven and five points to represent magnitude.[66] Enacted on 13 November 1953 and assented to on 17 December 1953, the legislation formalized this ensign's role following earlier colonial and dominion precedents, where red ensigns denoted mercantile shipping to avoid confusion with state or defense colors.[67] Its prescription underscores a continuity with imperial heraldry, prioritizing functional distinction over symbolic innovation.[68] While section 5 empowers the Governor-General to proclaim additional flags or ensigns for specific Commonwealth purposes, such as departmental or ceremonial use, the core prescribed flags under the Act remain limited to the national blue ensign and the red civil variant, with no routine amendments altering these designs post-1953 beyond proclamations for Indigenous symbols in 1995.[64] The Red Ensign's maritime exclusivity prohibits its general land display except in ceremonial contexts tied to shipping or historical commemoration, reinforcing the Act's intent to delineate flag usage by context and authority.[41]Local Government Flags
Local government areas in Australia, encompassing cities, shires, municipalities, and regions, independently adopt flags without prescription under the Flags Act 1953 or uniform state legislation, leading to diverse, self-determined designs that emphasize regional heritage over centralized symbolism. These flags typically evolve from historical seals or coats of arms established in the 19th century, incorporating elements such as colonial patrons, key industries like wool or shipping, and geographic features to encapsulate local identity. The absence of standardization fosters variation, with urban centers often favoring heraldic motifs while rural shires highlight agriculture, mining, or natural landmarks, adopted ad hoc by councils to signify autonomy within the federated system.[69] Their official status remains circumscribed, confined to civic applications like mayoral processions, council chambers, and community events, where protocols mandate precedence for the Australian National Flag and state flags to preserve hierarchical unity. Many date to early municipal incorporations, with designs unchanged for decades despite occasional redesign debates rooted in outdated symbolism or inclusivity concerns, though implementation remains sporadic and locally driven. This parochial approach, while rooted in causal ties to specific locales—such as port economies dictating maritime icons—can underscore regionalism at the expense of broader cohesion, as evidenced by public unfamiliarity and critiques of irrelevance in modern contexts.[69] [55] Notable instances include the City of Sydney flag, adopted in 1908 alongside the grant of arms, comprising a horizontal triband of white, gold, and blue with quartered elements: the arms of Viscount Sydney (namesake), a fleece for wool exports, and a full-rigged ship denoting the harbor's trade centrality.[70] The City of Melbourne flag derives from its 1843 seal, formalized as a white banner charged with a red St George cross dividing quadrants featuring a merino sheep (pastoralism), whale and anchor (maritime), and caduceus (commerce), reflecting Victoria's economic foundations.[71] The City of Perth flag, predating formal arms but incorporating the 1926 grant, displays a white field with red St George cross and centered shield evoking swans, ships, and castles symbolic of early settlement.[72] These exemplify how local flags materialize empirical regional causalities, from trade dependencies to foundational narratives, absent national oversight.Ceremonial and Organizational Flags
Sporting Flags
Australian national sports teams and organizations predominantly employ flags in the green and gold national sporting colours, which were formally proclaimed by Prime Minister Bob Hawke on 19 October 1984 as symbolic of the golden wattle, Australia's floral emblem. These colours distinguish Australian teams from the red, white, and blue of the national flag in international competitions, reflecting a focus on recreational and competitive identity rather than governmental symbolism.[73] The Boxing Kangaroo flag stands as the preeminent symbol for Australian representation in multi-sport events like the Olympics and Commonwealth Games. Depicting a red kangaroo in a boxing pose with green and gold gloves on a black or green field, the design originated in the early 1980s and gained global prominence when flown on the yacht Australia II during its 1983 America's Cup victory on 26 September 1983. The Australian Olympic Committee acquired rights to the image and has used it as an official mascot flag for national teams, with instances including its display at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics despite International Olympic Committee objections over trademark concerns. While official parades use the national flag, the Boxing Kangaroo is routinely deployed by athletes, officials, and supporters to embody Australian sporting resilience.[74][75][76] In cricket, Cricket Australia issues licensed game-day flags featuring the organization's logo—often a stylized ball or crest—against green and gold fields, distributed for supporter use at international matches such as Test series and ICC tournaments. These flags emphasize team motifs like the baggy green cap tradition dating to the 1890s, without statutory prescription under the Flags Act 1953. Rugby Australia's Wallabies employ similar custom designs, including a gold field with the team's leaping wallaby emblem and Southern Cross elements, officially licensed for events like Rugby World Cups since the team's inaugural international in 1899.[77][78] Variants for other sports, such as netball's Diamonds or basketball's Boomers, follow suit with emblematic flags in green and gold, though less formalized than in cricket or rugby; these are primarily organizational merchandise rather than competition standards. In Commonwealth Games, Australian contingents adhere to national flag protocols for ceremonies but incorporate sporting colours in team banners, maintaining distinction from state or defence affiliations. Historical precedents include the 1908 London Olympics, where the combined Australasian team (Australia and New Zealand) marched under a bespoke flag: a blue ensign variant with the Union Jack defaced by white Southern Cross stars, marking early federated sporting representation before national separation in 1912.[79]Ethnic and Community Group Flags
Flags representing ethnic and migrant communities in Australia typically consist of the national flags of ancestral homelands, displayed by diaspora groups during cultural festivals, community gatherings, and private events without any official endorsement or proclamation by federal or state authorities. These uses emphasize voluntary preservation of heritage among second- and third-generation migrants, distinguishing them from proclaimed Indigenous symbols by their lack of statutory recognition and focus on non-Australian national identities. For instance, Italian communities feature the Italian tricolour in performances such as flag-throwing displays at the National Multicultural Festival in Canberra, held annually in February, where participants manipulate the flag to showcase traditional skills.[80] Similarly, Chinese Australian groups fly the People's Republic of China flag alongside the Australian flag at cultural events, symbolizing dual pride and bilateral ties, particularly during Lunar New Year celebrations that draw thousands in cities like Sydney and Melbourne.[81] Greek Orthodox communities in Adelaide deploy the Greek national flag at the Glendi festival, a biennial event since the 1980s attracting over 50,000 attendees with music, dance, and food, underscoring private ethnic affiliation rather than national integration.[82] Such displays occur predominantly in multicultural policy contexts established since the 1970s, enabling over 300 languages spoken in Australia as of the 2021 census, yet they remain unofficial and community-driven, often confined to festivals funded by local councils or state grants without mandating Australian flag precedence.[83] Asian diaspora banners, including those from India and Vietnam, appear at events like Sydney's Vivid Festival multicultural segments or Melbourne's Moomba, where groups number in the tens of thousands, but these are not standardized community designs but imported national emblems. European migrant flags, such as Polish or Croatian variants, feature in suburban club events, with over 120 ethnic clubs registered in Victoria alone as of 2023, promoting heritage without public sector adoption.[84] Public displays of these flags have occasionally fueled debates on integration versus multiculturalism, with empirical evidence of tensions arising when perceived as prioritizing foreign loyalties over Australian civic identity. In citizenship ceremonies, for example, a Liverpool Council councillor in 2025 advocated restricting displays to the Australian flag only, sparking backlash from multicultural advocates but highlighting concerns over divided allegiances amid net migration exceeding 500,000 annually since 2022.[85] Protests involving flags like Hezbollah's—waved by Lebanese diaspora elements at a Melbourne rally on September 29, 2024—prompted federal police investigations under new prohibited symbols laws enacted in January 2024, amid community clashes and 9 reported allegations in Victoria, underscoring causal links between unchecked ethnic symbolism and heightened intergroup friction.[86] [87] Critics, including senators in August 2024 debates, attribute such incidents to multiculturalism's failure to enforce cultural assimilation, citing fractured social cohesion post-2023 Sydney Opera House unrest where foreign flags amplified divisions, as evidenced by rising hate crime reports from 1,800 in 2022 to over 2,500 in 2024 per police data.[88] [89] These tensions reflect broader causal realism: while festivals foster private heritage, public overreach risks enclaves, with polls showing 40% of Australians viewing multiculturalism as divisive by 2024, per independent surveys, contrasting media narratives that often minimize integration challenges due to institutional preferences for pluralist framing.[90]Historical Flags
Official Historical Flags
Prior to Australian Federation on 1 January 1901, the official flag across the colonies was the Union Jack of the United Kingdom, first raised at Sydney Cove on 26 January 1788 to proclaim British sovereignty over New South Wales.[91] This flag symbolized colonial authority under the British Crown, with no distinct Australian national emblem until later developments. For maritime and civil identification, colonies employed defaced versions of the British Blue Ensign, incorporating unique badges such as coats of arms or symbols like the Southern Cross, approved progressively by the British Admiralty from the mid-19th century onward.[92] By 1870, all six colonies—New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia, and Tasmania—had adopted official Blue Ensigns differentiated by their respective badges, serving as de facto colonial flags for government vessels and official occasions. New South Wales, the first colony established in 1788, utilized a Blue Ensign featuring its colonial seal or "NSW" lettering in early forms, transitioning to a standardized badge by the 1870s. Victoria, separated from New South Wales in 1851, initially lacked a unique flag but adopted a Blue Ensign with a crowned Southern Cross badge by 1870, reflecting its distinct identity post-separation. These ensigns represented the primary official visual identifiers for each colonial administration until Federation.[92][93] Following Federation, the Union Jack continued as the Commonwealth's official flag, with colonial Blue Ensigns retained for state-level use. To establish a unified national symbol, the Commonwealth government initiated a public design competition in 1901, receiving over 30,000 entries. The selected design—featuring the Union Jack, Southern Cross, and a federation star—was first publicly flown on 3 September 1901 in Sydney. King Edward VII granted royal approval in 1902, and on 11 February 1903, Governor-General Lord Hopetoun proclaimed it the official national flag via government gazette, marking the transition from colonial and interim arrangements to a dedicated Australian emblem. During this interim period (1901–1903), a defaced Australian Blue Ensign with a six-pointed Commonwealth Star was employed for federal maritime purposes under Admiralty warrants, bridging colonial practices to the new federation.[65][91]Unofficial Historical Flags
The Eureka Flag, featuring a dark blue field with a central white cross and five white eight-pointed stars representing the Southern Cross constellation, was first raised on 30 November 1854 at Bakery Hill in Ballarat, Victoria, by gold miners protesting excessive licensing fees, arbitrary enforcement, and limited political representation under colonial administration.[94][95] Sewn from available fabrics including wool and cotton by three women associated with miners, it symbolized their oath of allegiance amid escalating tensions that culminated in the construction of a stockade and armed confrontation with government troops on 3 December 1854.[96] The ensuing battle resulted in approximately 22 miners killed and 12 wounded, alongside one soldier's death, leading to the rapid suppression of the rebellion by British colonial forces and the arrest of leaders, including Peter Lalor, who escaped initially but later received a pardon.[97] Despite its military defeat, the Eureka episode prompted legislative responses, including the replacement of the hated miner's license with a more affordable miner's right in 1855 and the extension of voting rights to most adult males in Victoria by 1857, though these changes arose through parliamentary processes rather than revolutionary success.[98] The flag's use highlighted localized grievances in the goldfields, where diverse European immigrants outnumbered native-born Australians, but its legacy has been selectively emphasized in some narratives as a proto-democratic icon, often downplaying the stabilizing enforcement of British legal authority that prevented broader anarchy and facilitated incremental reforms.[99] Other unofficial designs appeared in mining and settler contexts pre-federation, such as the Murray River flag flown on 1850s paddle-steamers for trade identification, though details of its precise pattern remain sparsely documented beyond regional use.[98] In the Lambing Flat riots of 1860–1861 near modern Young, New South Wales, anti-Chinese protesters employed a "Roll Up" banner emblazoned with calls to action against immigrant competition for gold claims, which mobilized crowds leading to attacks on Chinese camps and the expulsion of over 1,000 workers; this emblem, while not a conventional flag, functioned as a rallying standard and contributed to the New South Wales Chinese Immigration Restriction Act of 1861, imposing a £10 poll tax and shipboard limits that presaged federal restrictions post-1901.[100][101] Such provisional banners in goldfield camps often drew from Eureka motifs or national symbols but lacked standardization, reflecting ad hoc expressions of discontent amid rapid population influxes that quadrupled Victoria's residents between 1851 and 1861 without official vexillological sanction.[102]References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_Australasian_team_for_Olympic_games.svg
