Historically, and most generally, the red flag is an international symbol for the "blood of angry workers." Although itself much older than socialism, the flag has mainly been a socialist and communist emblem associated in particular with those ideologies' revolutionary left and Radical Left sections.
A plain red flag has often been raised or carried by socialists, left-wing radicals, and communist groups. Such groups have used both plain red flags and red flags superimposed with the names or emblems of their parties, or social movements. Red flags are often seen at protests, demonstrations and left-wing rallies such as May Day.
The red flag is most strongly associated in public consciousness with communism. It forms the backdrop to the flag of the People's Republic of China and the flag of the Soviet Union. Also, "waving a red flag" is a euphemism for incitement (see bullfighting), and red is the "colour of defiance."
The red flag has also been associated with social democratic and labour traditions, having been a banner used by parties such as Labour in Britain, France's SFIO and similar groups throughout the world. But its use by social democrats declined sharply over much of the 20th Century as many such people moved away from the left.
It is known that from about 1300, Norman ships would fly red streamers to indicate that they would "take no quarter" in battle. This meaning continued into the 17th century, by which time the flag had been adopted by pirates. Pirate ships would initially hoist the Jolly Roger to intimidate their foe. If their victims chose to fight rather than submit to being boarded the pirates would then raise the red flag to indicate that once the ship had been captured no man would be spared.
Later it came to symbolise a less bloodthirsty message and merely indicated readiness for battle. From the early 17th century the red flag became known as the "flag of defiance". It was raised in cities and castles under siege to indicate that there would be "no surrender".
The flag began to take on the revolutionary meaning in the late 18th century. In 1797, when sailors of Britain's Royal Navy mutinied at the Nore on the mouth of the River Thames, they hoisted the red flag on several of the ships.
The red flag became the symbol of the Merthyr riots of 1831, in South Wales, when workers took over the town for five days, until they were massacred by soldiers. Their flag is said to have been a shirt soaked in calf's blood by Dic Penderyn.
Socialists and radical republicans in the 1848 French Revolution adopted the red flag as a symbol of their cause, "the blood of angry workers," while supporters of the more moderate French Second Republic which had been established in the first phase of the revolution rallied to the tricolore. The red flag subsequently became the banner of the Paris Commune in 1871 and became firmly associated with socialism. This tradition was bolstered in the rallies in Chicago in 1886, which resulted in the execution of some of the Haymarket Eight (cf. Haymarket Riot).
In pre-civil war Russia the Red flag was used as a symbol of warning. Villages that were afflicted by disease or plague would fly the Red flag from the highest building in the village or town. The use of the Red flag by the Red army in the civil war confused White army soldiers, who supposedly, upon seeing a Red flag flying from a village or town held by the Bolshevik forces, would believe that place to be diseased and would leave it alone.
After the October Revolution, the red flag with a hammer and sickle was adopted as the official flag of the new soviet government and was used by the Communist movement internationally. Accordingly, a number of Communist and socialist newspapers have used the name The Red Flag (perhaps most famously including Die rote Fahne, the newspaper of the Spartakusbund and subsequently the Communist Party of Germany).
One of the most famous images of the flag is of it being raised over the Reichstag building by the conquering Red Army during the Battle of Berlin.
The red flag, and the colour red generally, was adopted by the Communist Party in China, where it interacted in complex ways with the cultural meanings that the Chinese had traditionally attributed to the colour.
In 1920 in "How I wrote The Red Flag" he wrote:
There are some alternate versions (for example, "The workers' flag" is sometimes sung in place of "the people's flag", or "beneath its folds" instead of "within its shade"). There are a number of satirical alternatives, such as "The People's Flag is Palest Pink". The longest-standing satirical tradition is within the Liberal Democrats who can often be heard singing variants in the bars at their annual conference. The humour derives from mockery of either the absence of socialism from the modern Labour Party or of the Lib Dems' own Social Democrat roots.
In Britain, 'flying the red flag' has been used as a tongue-in-cheek expression for menstruation - and hence, having 'fallen to the communists'.
Flags | Socialism | Communism | Symbols | Political party songs | UK Labour Party
Bandera roja | Bandera roja | Drapeau rouge | Bandiera rossa | הדגל האדום | 赤旗 | Det raude flagget The Red Flag Czerwony sztandar (flaga) | Bandeira vermelha
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