Last modified: 2016-01-16 by ian macdonald
Keywords: anchors: 2 (white) | swords: 2 (white) | crescent | stars: 4 (white) | stars: 5 (white) | rear admiral | vice admiral | lieutenant general | major general | ambassador |
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image by Mohamed Hossam and Miles Li, 19 May 2009
The rank flag of an admiral, according to Jane's
Fighting Ships, was green with three stars.
Mohamed Hossam, 18 August 2005
image by Željko Heimer, 13 November
2004
Source: Flaggenbuch
[neu92]
The naval ensign with two white stars added one in each fly corner.
Željko Heimer, 13 November
2004
Mohamed Hossam and Miles Li, 19 May 2009
This naval rank flag is as shown according to Jane's Fighting Ships.
Miles Li, 19 May 2009
image by Željko Heimer, 13 November
2004
Source: Flaggenbuch
[neu92]
The naval ensign with a white star added in top fly corner.
Željko Heimer, 13 November
2004
Mohamed Hossam and Miles Li, 19 May 2009
This naval rank flag is as shown according to Jane's Fighting Ships.
Miles Li, 19 May 2009
image by Željko Heimer, 14 November 2004
The naval ensign in the form of a broad pennant (triangular swallow-tailed).
Željko Heimer, 14 November 2004
image by Mohamed Hossam and Miles Li, 19 May 2009
The Seniority pennant was triangular, green, with a single white star.
Mohamed Hossam, 18 August 2005
The 1939 Flaggenbuch doesn't show this flag, but is it not meant to represent
a Command Pennant assuming that such actually existed in the Royal Egyptian
Navy? I also wonder if it's the equivalent of the pennant flown by the
Austro-Hungarian and (as far as I know) by the German navies to indicate the
presence on board of a comparatively junior officer who is a group leader - that
is a Commodore's pennant but hoisted by means of headstick and attached cord
rather than directly to the mast via the halyard?
Christopher Southworth,
30 June 2010
image by Željko Heimer, 13 November 2004
Source: Flaggenbuch
[neu92]
The army flag with two white stars added one in each fly corner.
Željko Heimer, 13 November 2004
image by Željko Heimer, 13 November 2004
Source: Flaggenbuch
[neu92]
The army flag with a white star added in top fly corner.
Željko Heimer, 13 November 2004
image by Mohamed Hossam, 18 August 2005
Army Regimental Flags were fringed national flags with ribbons with victories
in which the unit took part. The most common one was "Filastin" (Palestine) for
the 1948 war.
Mohamed Hossam, 18 August 2005
image by Željko Heimer, 14 November 2004
The national flag with two additional stars one in each fly corner.
Željko Heimer, 14 November 2004
The lance pennant of the Royal Guard was blue over red, today it is the
pennant of the Presidential Guard.
Mohamed Hossam, 18 August 2005
The rank flags of the Air Force were similar to British ones, but with green
and white stripes.
Mohamed Hossam, 18 August 2005
image by Miles Li, 16 May 2009
After the country became a republic (1953) the crescent flag set was retained
for some time and a republican rank flag is shown in Kannik’s ‘Alverdens Flag i Farver’ (1956) and
in a British edition ‘A Handbook of Flags’
(1958). The image here is taken from the second book, ill. 576 p. 91 (in both
books), drawing by Wilhelm Petersen. The flagpole is on the right as that is the
position the other Egyptian flags are shown in. Two green horizontal stripes
edge the white field, a couple of two narrower ones are put in the centre.
Jan Mertens, 27 October 2008
Listed as "Marque du Commandant en Chef de la Flotte Aérienne" (Mark of
Commander-in-Chief of the Air Fleet) in "Protocole du Royaume d'Égypte" of 1947.
Miles Li, 16 May 2008
image by Miles Li, 16 May 2009
Listed as "Marque du Commandant d'Escadre de l'Air" (Mark of Commander of an
Air Squad) in "Protocole du Royaume d'Égypte" of 1947.
Miles Li, 16 May 2009
image by Miles Li, 9 August 2009
Flag shown on Flags of All Nations Volume 2.