
Last modified: 2007-05-05 by joe mcmillan
Keywords: shahada | wahhabi | sword | swords: 2 | nejd |
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The "base flag" of Saudi Arabia, the shahada or Islamic profession of faith ("There is no god but God and Muhammad is the Prophet of God") on solid green was an old flag, connected to the Wahhabi reformist movement of the late 18th century, with whose religious drive the Al Saud family first rose to power. The sword was added in 1902, when Abdul Aziz ibn Abdul Rahman Al Saud ("Ibn Saud" to the British) established himself as Sultan of the Nejd.
In 1925, Abdulaziz established himself as King of the Nejd and Hejaz, with unknown flag alterations. (The King of Hejaz, Hussein, had used the Arab Revolt Flag).
When the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was established in 1932, the
earlier Nejdi flag continued, though variants are shown with two
swords, with a white stripe toward the hoist, etc.
Ed Haynes, 14 March 1996
In The International Flag Book [], Christian Fogd Pedersen gives
the date 1946 for the adoption of the national flag (with the older pattern of sword).
Christopher Southworth, 14 April 2003
I have found a picture of a flag of Saudi Arabia. On it, under the
shahada, are two swords crossed, both pointing downwards. On
today's flag of Saudi Arabia, there is only one sword, horizontal,
and pointing upwards.
Goren M. Shaked, 25 April 1996
The September 1934 National Geographic [geo34] includes a black and white photo of the Saudi Arabian flag with one sword. The caption under the picture reads:
King Ibn Saud's army carried this flag in its desert conquests...When the powerful King of Saudi Arabia visited Germany two years ago [i.e., 1932], this flag was [used] in his honor by the officials of Tempelhof, Berlin's huge airport."There are several possible explanations for the one and two sword flags. The caption under the picture makes it sound like Ibn Saud's Army carried the flag during their conquests, therefore it may be that this is a military flag, not a national one. This would also account for its apparent use before 1932.
Unfortunately the new kingdom was proclaimed after the plates for this issue went to press, so there is no color plate or explanation about the dates of adoption, etc. There is a note in the text that also mentions that the flag was supposedly designed by Ibn Saud's grandfather, a century earlier.
Carr [car61] shows the two sword
version, but the text notes that there is also a one-sword version.
Crampton [cra90] says that the sword
was added to the traditional Wahhabite green banner in 1902, but that
there have been many variants. I suspect that the flag was never
rigidly defined in the past, and whether to use one sword or two was
left to the taste of the king at the time. Interestingly, Saudi
Arabia's national emblem remains two swords crossed under a palm
tree.
Roy Stilling, 25 April 1996
Having a look at Gresham Carr's 1961 Flags of the World [car61], I learnt about the existence of a 1937 piece of legislation regulating Saudi Arabian flags, including at least the national flag, royal standard, war ensign and civil ensign, all of which were described (maybe also illustrated) with two crossed swords. Carr gives the Islamic calendar date 18/1/1356 A.H., i.e. 18th Muharram 1356 A.H., which is about 31 March 1937 A.D. Carr's text says:
The National Flag is green and bears the great Arabic inscription, La illaha illa Allah wa Muhammad ur-rusul Ullah,—"There is no god but God, and Mohammed is the Prophet of God." The inscription, in accordance with the Arab custom, reads from the observer's right towards the left. In order that it shall appear correctly on the reverse side of the flag, it is necessary for the manufacturer to print it in duplicate and sew the two back to back before fixing the canvas "heading". Under the inscription, which is in white, there are two white swords in saltire. In accordance with decree 18/1/1356 A.H., the National Flag is 150 by 100 centimetres (see Plate XXXI, 4)&elips; In passing, it should perhaps be recorded that Saudi Arabian flags sometimes have one white sword instead of two in saltire.The swords illustrated on Carr's plate appear to be Western sabers (slightly curved and with guard) rather than Arab scimitars (very curved, no guard, as in the former Yemeni flag) or the elaborate version of the Abd al Aziz sword (no guard, decorated hilt and pommel) shown in early Saudi flags.
As noted above, National Geographic 1934 [geo34] does not include the Saudi Arabian flag in its plates but it does show an excellent photograph of the flag being hoisted at Tempelhof airport when the Saudi king visited Germany in 1932. The flag in the picture looks exactly the same as that in Flaggenbuch 1939 [neu39]—which is not especially relevant since it was probably German manufactured, very possibly under Neubecker's specifications.
Several questions remain unclear:
The change was gradual and never quite official due to the fact
that the flag was not officially described until recently (if
recently is the right word for 1973). However, 15 March 1973 is the
date of adoption of the one-sworded flag.
Željko Heimer, 26 September 1996
The history of the 1945 Saudi flag needs more research. It seems certain
that a flag very similar to the current one was adopted on 30 March 1938. In this
flag, the shahada was larger than at present. On 15 March 1973, the size of
the shahada was changed to occupy one-eighth of the total area of the
flag. Another small modification was made on 19 November 1980, changing the sword
slightly. But there's this question with the 1945 flag: circa 1950, several charts
show two crossed swords on Saudi flags. Neubecker
[neu39] reported this pattern in use in 1939, but other vexillologists believe
that it was used from 1945, after Saudi Arabia's declaration of war against the Axis,
and disappeared in 1956. Smith says that the two-sword pattern was only a misunderstanding:
a plate issued in 1950 by the Saudi embassies in London and Washington mislabelled
the royal standard as the national flag. A original document from Neubecker shows the
two flags (national and royal) with writing in Neubecker's own hand stating that
the English version had the captions of both flags reversed while the
original Arabic version was correct.
Jaume Ollé 14 April 2003
Are sure about the 1938 date? It looks very similar, but not the same, as the
one given in Carr (discussed above. As I said before, Carr
gives "18/1/1356 A.H." which is 31st March 1937—almost exactly a year before your date.
(It could even be exactly a year, since most Hijri-Gregorian converters give the possibility
of a one-day error.)
Santiago Dotor, 15 April 2003
There was a variant with two swords. It was the royal flag. I own a photocopy of a flag plate which shows both flags crossed, the captions above the two-sword flag read "National flag", and the caption above the other flag reads "Royal flag". The plate was published in 1948 by the Royal Saudi embassy in London. In 1961 the same plate was published by the Royal Saudi embassy in New York. Dr. Neubecker had sent me the London photocopy years ago with the explanation: "the English captions were interchanged, the original Arab captions below the English words tell it vice versa, and that is correct." The plate published in New York had the correct captions. So the flag was not described for the first time in 1973 but much earlier.
By the way: King Saud had received the sword from his father [King Abdul Aziz, also known as
Ibn Saud—Ed.].
It is the family sword, and Saud decided to put it on his
flag. The whole story is written in Dagobert von Mikusch, Ibn Saud,
(Leipzig: List-Verlag), 1942. Maybe there is a reason for changing the
design of the sword in the flag: King Abdul Aziz's sword was curved...but that is
only speculation.
Ralf Stelter, 21 December 2003
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