Flag of Uruguay


The national flag of Uruguay is one of the three official flags of Uruguay along with the flag of Artigas and the flag of the Treinta y Tres. It has a field of nine equal horizontal stripes alternating white and blue. The canton is white, charged with the Sun of May, from which 16 rays extend, alternating between triangular and wavy. The flag was first adopted by law on December 16, 1828, and had 19 stripes until July 11, 1830, when a new law reduced the number of stripes to nine. The flag was designed by Joaquín Suárez.

Symbolism and design

The horizontal stripes on the flag represent the nine original departments of Uruguay, based on the U.S. flag, where the stripes represent the original 13 colonies. The first flag designed in 1828 had 9 light blue stripes; this number was reduced to 4 in 1830 due to visibility problems from distance. The Sun of May represents the May Revolution of 1810; according to the historian Diego Abad de Santillán, the Sun of May is a figurative sun that represents Inti, the sun god of the Inca religion. It also appears in the Flag of Argentina and the Coat of Arms of Bolivia.

Colors scheme

YellowBrownBlueWhite
RGB252-209-22123-63-00-56-168255-255-255
Hexadecimal#fcd116ff#7b3f00ff#0038a8ff#FFFFFF
CMYK0-17-91-10-49-100-52100-67-0-340-0-0-0

Co-official flags

Presidential standards

Historical banners

During Spanish rule:
Independence from Spain:
Flag of Cisplatina, under Brazilian occupation between 1821 and 1825:
Uruguayan independence:

Historical flags

Variations

During the Great Siege of Montevideo Uruguay had two parallel governments, with two different flags:

Gallery