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Poland - Historical flags
Last modified: 2002-11-23 by jarig bakker
Keywords: poland | eagle | crown |
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Banner of 1517
by Adam Kromer, from his
website
XVI century banner
by Adam Kromer, from his
website
Italian origin of the Polish flag?
I am writing from Bari, Apulia, Italy. I have read in a local paper that
the colors of the Polish flag were derived from the colors of the city
of Bari in 1517, when Bona Sforza duchess of Bari got married to King Zygmunt
of Poland, who adopted the colors of Bari in honor of his bride. Could
anybody confirm this?
Giovanni Scillitani, 17 Nov 2002
Well, the banner is indeed similar to this
one. So it's possible that the vertical layout was influenced by the
colors of Bari. However, the white/red colours of Poland are much older,
probably since 1295, see eg. this
webpage.
Mariusz Borkowski, 18 Nov 2002
The origins of the white eagle of Poland
I asked my family priest about how the White Eagle became the emblem for
Poland today to see if he knew anything about it. He told me: "There
were 3 guys, one of whom was named Lech. Lech ran upon a wild forest, which
was in the shape of a White-Eagle. He thought to himself, this would be
a good sign for my nation. From that, he created what was called Lechechi,
which later became Poland." He also told me that it was a very long
story dealing with the birth of Poland as a Nation, but that was all he
told me. And then he said he's never seen a white-eagle. "Perhaps in a
special kind of zoo..."
Timothy Boronczyk, 17 May 1998
The legend is that Lech, Czech and Rus were three brothers, each of
whom set off in a different direction. Czech founded the Czech nation,
Rus the Rus' (i.e. East Slavs) and Lech the Poles. He camped in a spot
where he saw a white eagle nesting at dusk in a nest in a tree against
the red sunset. Thus, the Polish white eagle on a red field, and thus also
the name of the first Polish capital, Gniezno (perhaps an old form of gniazdo,
the current word for nest).
Of course, this is but a legend. I have a Polish book on the Polish
symbols at home, and it says that in the 13th century, Polish knights were
going into battle with a black eagle on a white or yellow field. In fact,
prior to the 1 or 2 Czech kings Poland had, there is no evidence of the
white eagle. So, in some likelihood, it may well be an adopted symbol.
Robert Czernkowski, 19 May 1998