The Cochinchinese flag that shown is a late XIXth century flag. As you know, the Indochinese Union was made of 5 entities: 1 colony (Cochinchina) and 4 protectorates (Tonkin, Annam and Paracel Islands, Cambodia, Laos). Is this flag the official flag of the Colony of Cochinchina? Does anyone know something about a Tonkinese flag during French rule? Pierre Gay, 13 December 1998
The Cochinchina flag was in fact an ensign. Seems that was an older ensign of the Annam Emperors: yellow (as China) with serrated ribbon. The serrated ribbon seems to be wrong interpreted from far observation or descriptions, and converted in many triangles (they are reported somewhat as grey-blue, green, maroon, and black; and now in blue). But after the establishment of the protectorate the ensign was little (or never) used in Cochinchina, and disappeared also in Annam before c. 1885. Afterwards, there was no flag for Cochinchina colony (like no flag for French colonies). Tonkin was a vice-kingdom of Annam. Perhaps the viceroy used his own standard but that is not know for me. I believe that no specific flag for Tonkin was never reported. Jaume Ollé, 13 December 1998
Cochinchina originally appears to have referred to the area between India and China, not to a specific location. A flag similar to the Cochinchina flag (it appears to have a dragon in the center) is depicted in a black and white picture engraving on a University of Richmond website dealing with Vietnam in particular about the Trung sisters who led a rebellion against the Chinese between 39-40 AD. However given the fact that the script on the image is the current script and not the Chinese-style script, it is unlikely to verify the flag would have been used during the Trung rebellion, rather a depiction using a more modern symbol - and the Trung sisters would be used as inspiration in the battles for independence against the French and the fight against the Americans. Unfortunately no date is given for the origin of the picture. Phil Nelson, 1 September 2003
"Cochin China" is shown at position (6;9) of an 1858 US flag chart: White rectangular ~2:3 flag with tae-guk spiral and animals. António Martins-Tuválkin, 27 August 2008
The taeguk is vertically divided as it spirals inward, the sequence of colors being red-yellow-red-blue-yellow-red. The charges surrounding it are, clockwise from top left:
Bust of man wearing yellow tunic and round cap, looking upward
Eel(?) highlit yellow, and breathing fire(?)
small black-clad running man
monster resembling winged dog. Posture indicates he may be supporting taeguk. Also breathing fire(?)
Aflame cauldron or brazier, highlit yellow
Unidentifiable monster (dragon?), highlit yellow
Black filled-in weasel(?) breathing fire(?)
Unidentifiable snaky monster (another eel?), may or may not have been highlighted yellow (only traces of pigment)
In addition to these we have eight black balls scattered aroud the field; one for each charge? Eugene Ipavec, 2 September 2008