Last modified: 2011-06-10 by jarig bakker
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Eight striped: blue-white-red-blue-white-red-blue-white. Illustrated
in Wilson 1986 p. 68.
Norman Martin, Mar 1998
According to Muir's Historical Atlas, Heligoland was not Danish
until 1714. Perhaps the red, white and blue striped flags relate to a pre-1714
Frisian period? (...) The date given for the chart on which the "Holygoland"
flag appears in Wilson 1986 p. 68 is 1685-6.
The dates 1737 and 1862 seem to have come from somewhere else.
David Prothero, 27 Sep 2000
Seven striped: blue-white-red-blue-white-red-blue. Illustrated in National
Geographic 1917 p. 371, no. 1155 and Wilson
1986 p. 69.
Norman Martin, Mar 1998
Seven striped: blue-white-red-blue-white-red-white.
Norman Martin, Mar 1998
Horizontal tricolor green-red-white. In use as local flag until the
present.
Norman Martin, Mar 1998
Regarding Helgoland: it is not clear to me where do the red-green-white
colours come from. Before the British invasion 1807 and later takeover
1814, the only Helgoland flags appear to have been multi-striped
flags in blue, white and red. So where did the green originate and
when was the current flag established? It was already being used by 1848,
when it appeared on a flag chart.
Santiago Dotor, 27 Sep 2000
In his letter of 11th May 1888, quoted here,
the Governor also referred to, "an old Frisian motto:- Green is the
grass, red the cliff and white the sand, these three make the colours of
Heligoland".
David Prothero, 27 Sep 2000
Westermann Lexicon der Geographie 1969 has: "Settled by Frisians;
it belonged to the Duchy of Schleswig from 1402 till 1714; from that date
till 1807 it was Danish, and from 1807-1890 British.
It was exchanged for Zanzibar and the Caprivi strip.".
Jarig Bakker, 28 Sep 2000
The German editors of Norie and Hobbs 1971
added two charts (which were not originally in Norie
and Hobbs 1848) with German flags that were important over time. One
of them is no. 2, Helgoland ab 1696 (vorher ohne Wappen), i.e. Heligoland
from 1696 (before without arms): as the above image, with the arms from
no. 107 mirrored.
Peter Hans van der Muijzenberg, 12 Nov 2001
Heligoland was British for some decades
in the 19th Century but was given to Germany, in exchange for which the
Germans gave up their claim on Uganda. Actually in exchange in exchange
for commercial rights in Zanzibar (Zanzibar Treaty, 1890).
It was also occupied for some years more than the rest of West Germany,
but unlike Saar I think it was considered a part of the Federal Republic
from the foundation. It belongs to the state of Lower Saxony (Niedersachsen)
I used to think it belonged to Schleswig-Holstein. At least it was
Schleswig's up to 1814, but also has a flag of
its own.
Santiago Dotor, 1 Oct 2003
Hel(i)goland does indeed belong to Schleswig-Holstein (part of Landkreis
Pinneberg).
Helgoland was under British occupation from 1945 to 1952. The islanders
were evicted, and the island was used as a bombing target. In 1947, the
British tried (unsuccessfully) to blow up the island entirely. After many
protests, bombing stopped in 1952, and the islanders were allowed to return.
Stefan Schwoon, 2 Oct 2003
In the "Vlaggenalbum", edited by Droste's Chocolatefactory in
Haarlem, Mar 1914, is a curious flag of Helgoland: three horizontal stripes
green - red- white, with a square red canton, charged with a white castle
of three towers.
I'm not sure whether the canton refers to Hamburg, but I can't imagine
what else it could be...
Jarig Bakker, 18 Jun 2005