Communist symbolism usually incorporates symbols representing the industrial workers and/or the peasants of a country.
Usually these symbols, along with a pentangle representing the five inhabited continents, appear in yellow on a red background representing revolution. The Flag of the Soviet Union incorporated a yellow-outlined red star and a yellow hammer and sickle on red. The flags of Vietnam, China, Angola, and Congo-Brazzaville would all incorporate similar symbolism under communist rule. The hammer and sickle have become the pan-communist symbol, appearing on the flags of most communist parties around the world. However, the flag of the Korean Workers' Party includes a hammer representing industrial workers, a hoe representing agricultural workers, and a brush (traditional writing-implement) representing the intelligentsia.
Communist heraldry, as seen in the official state emblems and provincial emblems of Communist-led countries, tends to use motifs of red stars, rising suns, cogwheels, and electricity transmission towers — and above all semi-circular sheafs of grain enclosing the whole emblem. The state emblem of the Pol Pot regime, Democratic Kampuchea, showed a rigid rectangular grid of rice paddies, with a factory belching smoke from its smokestacks in the background.
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