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  1. Article History. national flag containing three equal red, blue, and white horizontal stripes and, near the hoist, the Serbian coat of arms. Its width-to-length ratio is 2 to 3. The design of the Serbian flag dates to Serbia ’s revolt against Ottoman rule in 1804, when it adopted the white-blue-red tricolour flag of Russia but with the order ...

  2. State flag (top): horizontal tricolor of red, blue and white, with the royal coat of arms at the center. Civil flag (bottom): horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and white. 1945–1992. Socialist Republic of Serbia. ( SFR Yugoslavia ) Horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and white, with red star at the center. 1992–2004.

    Date
    Use
    Description
    1995–1998
    Horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and ...
    1992–1995
    Horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and ...
    1991
    Flag of SAO Krajina, SAO Western ...
    Horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and ...
    1943–1945
    Flag of Communist Serbian Partisans
    Horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and ...
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  4. The flag of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic: застава Србије, romanized: zastava Srbije), also known as the Tricolour (Serbian Cyrillic: тробојка, romanized: trobojka), is a tricolour consisting of three equal horizontal bands, red on the top, blue in the middle, and white on the bottom (on civil flag), with the lesser coat of arms left of center (on state flag).

    • 1835, 2004 (readopted), 2010 (standardized)
    • 2:3
  5. Feb 6, 2020 · February 6, 2020 07:54. After Yugoslav leader Tito died and the state began to collapse, Serbia developed a new understanding of World War II history with nationalist Chetniks reassessed as Serb ...

  6. Nov 30, 2013 · In Serbia, an "independent" regime led by general Nedić was established, being as independent as in neighbouring Croatia. They issued money (Serbian dinars) and postage stamps, but I found no reference to flags, though the white eagle with the firesteels was a frequent motif. I guess a version of the Serbian colours continued to fly.

  7. Serbia - WWII, Axis, Partisans: Throughout the interwar years the king had attempted to build diplomatic links, initially with France and Czechoslovakia and after 1933 through the Balkan Entente with Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, and Turkey. During the late 1930s, however, Yugoslavia found itself facing an embarrassing divide between its closest economic partners (Germany and Austria) and its ...

  8. Kosovo became (especially during the 19th century) the Jerusalem of the Serbs. Forced to accept the position of vassals to the Turks, Serb despots continued to rule a diminished state of Raška, at first from Belgrade and then from Smederevo. Serbian resistance did not end until the fall of Smederevo in 1459.