Last modified: 2015-05-15 by pete loeser
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Image by Santiago Dotor
Flag adopted 1805, abolished 1806
Both... "France and the Holy Roman Empire wanted to create a flag in 1805 for the common customs administration of the river Rhine, which would consist of both imperial colors. There was a diagonal stripe in the basic colors of the German and French eagle[-bearing]-coats-of-arms: yellow and blue. The eight stripes were diagonal from the hoist top to the fly bottom; the left bottom stripe was blue and the right top stripe was yellow." (My translation)
Sources: O. Neubecker, Fahnen und Flaggen, Leipzig 1939 and Jaume Ollé from Flaggenmitteilung
Jarig Bakker, 8 Dec 1999
The field (rather than "basic") colour (Grundfarben) of the French imperial coat-of-arms was blue. So the flag is quite simply bendy of eight Or and Azure.
Santiago Dotor, 13 Dec 1999
The description and the flag appear on pp. 85-86 of Neubecker 1939a (the description is only the first part quoted above, up to "...Gelb und Blau"). The flag is labelled Rheinoktroi 1805-1806 and appears to be almost exactly a ratio of 2:3. I believe the flag was no longer used after the Holy Roman Empire disappeared in 1806.
Santiago Dotor, 27 Mar 2001
Oktroi is an old German term for customs. The word came from the French octroyer meaning "(customs) imposed or forced upon." Therefore Rheinoktroi means Rhine Customs.
Jens Pattke, 28 Mar 2001
In French, octroi specifically refers to a city toll, and is translated in English, in this sense, as octroi, according to Robert-Collins dictionary. A tax had to be paid on several goods, especially foodstuffs, when entering a city (this tax was suppressed in 1948). Octroi was also used to design the administration in charge of the tax and the offices where it was paid. The word comes from the popular Latin auctioridare, with the same root as author, authorize etc.
Ivan Sache, 31 Mar 2001
The book "150 Jahre Rheinstromflagge" (150 years of Rhine river flag) reports on all transnational Rhine flags since about 1800. The first should have been introduced in 1804 with the Art. 88 of the convention: the ships shall "hoist a divided flag with the colours of the two empires. However, the article suggests the flag was adopted in 1801, not 1805. How this flag really looked is unknown. (A diagonally striped one is a later variant, according to [dum51] and different from [1939a] in use until 1815.)
Speculative image by Pete Loeser, 19 May 2011
It also states that later the word "Rhenus" (Latin for Rhine) was added to the civil ensigns of the Rhine states. After 1913, the river police began using a specific recognition flag, made of triangles in the national colours black-white-red and similar in design to the red-white-blue flag used by Dutch River Police boats.
Image by Marcus E.V. Schmöger, 15 Dec 2002
Design used 1913-1924 and 1933-1949
In 1924 this was replaced by black-red-gold triangles, switching back to black-white-red in 1933. A temporary police flag was introduced in 1949, showing on a white field two black diagonal stripes, and a "P" at the hoist. In 1951 the 1924-1933 flag was reintroduced.
Image by Marcus E.V. Schmöger, 15 Dec 2002The "Règlement de police pour la navigation du Rhin", dated 1 January 1955 and issued by the Commission Centrale pour la navigation du Rhin has further recognition flags for Switzerland (upper and lower triangles red, left and right triangles white) and France (upper and lower
triangles white, left triangle blue, right triangle red). With Germany and the Netherlands, they can be found under Art. 105.1 Contrôle (daylight use) of Annexe 6, Tableau des signaux, p. 76. This booklet has other interesting flags, for traffic purposes mainly, but I have no idea if they are still in use. I have it from my father who was a civil servant responsible for inland shipping.
Jan Mertens, 16 Dec 2002