This is a list of flags used in or otherwise associated with Argentina.
National flags
| Flag |
Date |
Use |
Description
|
|
1861–present[1] |
National and state flag |
A triband, composed of three equal horizontal bands colored light blue, white and light blue with a yellow Sun of May in the center.[2][3]
|
|
1944–present |
Optional civil flag |
The flag of Argentina without the Sun of May.[4]
|
|
1818–present |
Flag of Argentina (vertical). |
A vertical triband, composed of three equal vertical bands coloured light blue, white and light blue with a yellow Sun of May in the center.[5]
|
Presidential standard
Military
Military schools
Army
| Flag |
Date |
Rank |
Description
|
| Current
|
|
|
Director General of the Military Institutions of the Argentine Land Force |
|
|
|
Army Division Commander |
|
|
|
Cavalry Division Commander |
|
|
|
Commander of an engineering regiment or a communications regiment |
|
|
|
Officer in command of the unit |
|
|
|
Commander of an armored division |
|
|
|
Commander of an armored group |
|
|
|
Command of an Argentine battalion |
|
| Former
|
|
1894–? |
Lieutenant General |
|
|
1894–? |
Major General |
|
|
1894–? |
Brigadier general |
|
|
1894–? |
Superior Commander |
|
|
1835–1850 |
Example of a Federalist military flag |
|
Argentine Navy
Naval ensign
Jack
Rank flags
| Flag |
Date |
Rank |
Description
|
| Current
|
| Fleet
|
|
|
President of Argentina |
|
|
|
Minister of the Navy |
|
|
|
Supreme Commander of the Navy |
|
|
|
Admiral of the fleet |
|
|
|
Admiral |
|
|
|
Vice Admiral |
|
|
|
Rear Admiral |
|
|
|
Captain Commanding a Naval or Naval Air Force |
|
|
|
Commander of a Fleet, Naval or Naval Air Force |
|
|
|
Commander of a Tusk Force, Naval or Naval Air Force |
|
|
|
Commander of a Fleet Naval Division |
|
|
|
Squadron Commander of Naval Air Force |
|
|
|
Senior Officer |
|
| Naval infantry
|
|
|
Admiral |
|
|
|
Vice Admiral |
|
|
|
Rear Admiral |
|
|
|
Captain |
|
|
|
Commander in charge |
|
|
|
Commander of the armed unit |
|
|
|
Officer without Command |
|
| Former
|
|
1894–? |
President of Argentina |
|
|
Minister of the Navy |
|
|
Minister in Chief of the General Staff |
|
|
Ministers of State |
|
|
Admiral |
|
|
Vice Admiral |
|
|
Rear Admiral |
|
|
Captain Adjutant-General |
|
|
Captain in Command |
|
|
19th century |
Commander-in-Chief of the Navy |
|
|
Rear Admiral in command of a subordinate naval force |
|
|
Vice Admiral in command of a subordinate naval force |
|
|
Captain in command of a subordinate naval force |
|
|
Admiral Chief of Arsenal |
|
|
Vice Admiral Chief of Arsenal |
|
|
Rear Admiral Chief of Arsenal |
|
|
Captain Chief of Arsenal |
|
Other
| Flag |
Date |
Use |
Description
|
|
|
War Pennant |
|
|
|
Flag of excellent readiness to battle award |
|
|
1826 |
Admiral William Brown's private flag given to him by the women after the Battle of Los Pozos. |
|
|
1815–1820 |
Flag of the privateers in the service of the League of the Free Peoples |
|
|
|
Air force
| Flag |
Date |
Rank |
Description
|
| Current
|
|
|
Air Group Commander |
|
|
|
Air Group Commander at the base |
|
|
|
Commander of the Aviation Technical Group at the base |
|
|
|
Squadron Commander |
|
|
|
Director of the Air Force School |
|
|
|
Director of the Air Force War Operations School |
|
|
|
Director of the Military Aviation School |
|
Veterans
| Flag |
Date |
Use |
Description
|
|
2013–present |
Flag of veterans of the Malvinas War |
Vertically fringed cloth loaded in its center by a radiant sun, similar to that of the National Flag behind this two lines of equal size of upper red and lower black, symbolizing the blood spilled in the operation theater and the black line the footprint of the ground forces (Argentine Army). On the upper end three broken lines is a symbol of the winds representing the Argentine Air Force. Lower edge wavy movement of lines is a symbol of the Argentine Navy. Thus leaving the veterans' flag with the three weapons that defended our area of honor and remembering the fallen in the line of duty. The contrasting colors indicate that absolutely not everything is won in victory and nothing is definitely lost in defeat: this vertical cut flag recalls one of the original ones given by General Manuel Belgrano to this land on February 27, 1812, in the Barrancas del Rio Parana, the first flag of Argentina.
|
|
?–2013 |
Argentine triband with a black profile of the Malvinas islands in the center instead of the Sun of May.
|
Argentine Naval Prefecture
National Gendarmerie
Police
| Flag |
Date |
Use |
Description
|
| Current
|
|
1943–present |
Argentine Federal Police |
|
|
2025–present |
Federal Department of Investigation |
|
Government
Civil ensign
First-level administrative divisions
Historical flags
National flags
Other historical flags
Proposed flags
| Flag |
Date |
Use |
Description
|
|
1931 |
Proposed civil flag |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ethnic groups flags
Political flags
Rebel groups flags
Argentine Red Cross
Scouts de Argentina
Sporting flags
Vexillology Association flags
| Flag |
Date |
Use |
Description
|
|
?–present |
Argentina Vexillology Association
|
|
?–present |
Foundation Interdisciplinary Center for Cultural Studies
|
|
Argentine shipping company
-
Yacht Club Argentino
-
Club Delta Argentino
-
Caption=Club Náutico Buchardo
-
Caption=Club Marinas Puerto Santa Fe
-
Club de Náutica y Pesca "Comandante Espora"
-
Club Regatas Chascomus
-
Club Regatas La Plata
-
Club Regatas San Nicolas
-
Club San Fernando
-
Club Universitario de Buenos Aires
-
Club Náutico Albatros
-
Club Náutico Bahia Blanca
-
Club Náutico Cordoba
-
Club Náutico Mar Plata
-
Club Náutico Olivos
-
Club Náutico San Isidro
-
Club Mendoza de Regatas
-
Club Náutico San Martin
-
Club Náutico San Pedro
-
Club Náutico Sudeste
-
Club Náutico Victoria
-
Club Náutico Zarate
-
Club de Veleros Barlovento
-
Club de Veleros Rosario
-
Club de Veleros San Isidro
-
Yacht Club Rosario
-
Yacht Club Olivos
-
Yacht Club Santa Fe
-
Club Náutico Quilmes
-
Club Náutico San Fernando
-
Club Suizo de Buenos Aires
-
Yacht Club Buenos Aires
-
Rowing Club Argentino
-
Yacht Club Neuquén
-
Yacht Club San Isidro
-
Yacht Club Entrerriano
-
See also
References
- ^ "ARGENTINA 1862-1944". Angelfire. Retrieved 18 December 2024.
- ^ "Símbolos Nacionales" [National Symbols] (in Spanish). Presidency of the Argentine Nation. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
La Bandera Oficial de la Nación tiene sus colores distribuidos en tres fajas horizontales, dos celestes y una blanca en el medio, en cuyo centro se reproduce el Sol figurado de la moneda de oro de ocho escudos y de la de plata de ocho reales que se encuentra grabado en la primera moneda argentina. El color del sol es el amarillo del oro.
- ^ "Decreto 1650/2010" (in Spanish). Argentina: Poder Ejecutivo Nacional. 23 November 2010. Archived from the original on September 24, 2020.
- ^ "La Bandera Nacional" [The National Flag] (in Spanish). Belgranian National Institute. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
Día 16 de marzo de 1818: el Soberano Congreso dispuso "que la Bandera de Guerra Nacional se componga de tres tiras horizontales; la de en medio blanca, ocupando la mitad, y la alta y baja azules iguales, esto es del quinto de anchura, con un sol en la lista de en medio; y la de los buques mercantes lo mismo sin sol", según lo que participó el Comandante General de Marina, Don Matías de Aldao, al Capitán del Puerto de Buenos Aires.
- ^ "Símbolos Nacionales" [National Symbols] (in Spanish). Presidency of the Argentine Nation. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
La Bandera Oficial de la Nación tiene sus colores distribuidos en tres fajas horizontales, dos celestes y una blanca en el medio, en cuyo centro se reproduce el Sol figurado de la moneda de oro de ocho escudos y de la de plata de ocho reales que se encuentra grabado en la primera moneda argentina. El color del sol es el amarillo del oro.
- ^ "Navy jack". Flags of the World. Retrieved 29 December 2012.
- ^ "Welsh Community (Chubut Province, Argentina)".
- ^ Kohan, Néstor (2006). Fidel para principiantes (1ª ed.). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Era Naciente. p. 136. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
External links
|
|---|
|
| State-related | | | Mobile military | |
|---|
| Mobile civil service | |
|---|
| Mobile civilian | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Other entities | |
|---|
By design
(National) | |
|---|
| By nations | |
|---|
Names in italics indicate non-sovereign (dependent) territories, disputed states and/or former countries. |
Authority control databases |
|---|
| National | |
|---|
| Other | |
|---|