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  1. Serbian Ambassador Mihailovic sends detailed report to the Serbian MFA on the Serbian Day in Washington, including the description of the Serbian flag being raised above the White House. The United States of America officially celebrated July 28, 1918 as “Serbia Day.”

  2. Serbia used the red, blue and white tricolor as a national flag continuously from 1835 until 1918, when Serbia ceased to be a sovereign state after it joined the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, later known as Yugoslavia, the tricolor was a used as a Serbian civil flag, from 1918 to 1945.

    • 1835, 2004 (readopted), 2010 (standardized)
    • 2:3
  3. 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 Serbias revolt against Ottoman rule in 1804, when it adopted the white-blue-red tricolour flag of.

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  5. Aug 28, 2023 · The flag of Serbia carries deep symbolism that reflects the spirit of the people and the country's rich history. It consists of three horizontal stripes in the colors: red, blue and white. The color red represents courage and love for the motherland, blue represents the sky and freedom, while white symbolizes peace and purity.

  6. On this day (July 28th) in 1918, upon the advice of his good friend Mihajlo Pupin, President Woodrow Wilson gave the order to fly the flag of Serbia over the White House. This was one of a number of acts that reflected the solidarity of Americans with the Serbian people who suffered so tremendously during the First World War.

  7. Apr 21, 2024 · History of the Flag of Serbia. Serbia was under Ottoman rule. When the Serbians revolted against the Ottomans, the flag was introduced in 1804. It used the same colors as the Russian Flag, but the stripes were rearranged. The country became independent in 1878, and a red-blue-white flag was adopted. After WWI, Serbia joined what was later known ...

  8. In 2009, the National Assembly adopted the Law on the design and use of the coat-of-arms, flag and anthem of the Republic of Serbia. According to this law, the Serbian coat-of-arms is the one defined by the Law on the coat-of-arms of the Kingdom of Serbia from 16 June 1882.