Flag of Oman.

 The countrywide flag of Oman (Arabic: علم عُمان) includes 3 stripes (white, green and pink) with a pink bar at the left that carries the national emblem of Oman (Dagger and swords).


Until 1975, Oman used the apparent red banner of the indigenous people. In 1970, the Sultan delivered a entire new set of country wide flags.[clarification needed] Bands of green and white were added to the fly, and the country wide logo, the badge of the Albusaidi Dynasty, become placed inside the canton. This depicts crossed swords over a khanjar, a conventional curved dagger. White has been associated historically with the Imam, the spiritual chief of Oman, and at times the political rival to the ruling Sultan. It also symbolizes peace. Green is historically related to the Jabal al-Akdar, or "Green Mountains," which lie in the direction of the north of the united states of america. Red is a common color in Gulf nation flags. The national emblem is said up to now back to the 18th century. A curved dagger is fixed over a pair of crossed swords. An ornate horsebit links the weapons. Between 1970 and 1995, the dimensions of the center band of the triband turned into slimmer than the other two, making up approximately one 5th of its top, the other bands two-fifths. The naval ensign suggests an azure (blue) subject, with the Oman in the canton or pinnacle-left quarter and the naval carrier emblem in the fly.

The general of the Sultan of Oman is pink with a inexperienced border whose width is ready one-sixth of the height of the flag, surrounded by way of a red border of approximately the equal width. It bears the usa's emblem as a price in the center, coloured gold.

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