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imagebyZoltan Horvath, 29 September 2024
Flag adopted 18th November 1977, coat-of-arms adopted 7th July 1978
See also:
Blue and green flag divided with a yellow rising diagonal and with five whitefive-pointed stars 2-1-2 in canton. I have estimated the width of the diagonalas 1/10 of the hoist. The stars, equally approximately, can be estimated toinscribed in circles with diameter 2/10. There seems to be no officialprescription of the construction details, or at least none were reported yet.
Željko Heimer, 6 January 2003
I made the flag image comparing the shades and star positions in several sources, among them Shipmate'sFlagchart,Album des Pavillons 1990 andSmith 1982.They all agree that the shade of green is a rather dark one. Blue is problem ofits own, so I left one that I believe is acceptable until we get betterinformation. This flag is used as civil, state and war flag on land.
Željko Heimer, 20 May 2000
FromDevereux 1998:
The result of official discussion and a design competition, the flag of the Solomons Islands was created in 1977 and adopted in the following year. The five five-pointed stars on the background of blue represent the archipelagian nation's five administrative units, surrounded by the Pacific (and not, as is sometimes claimed, its main islands, for of these there are six). The green is for vegetal lushness and the yellow is for sunshine.Dorling-Kindersley 1999 [1997?] has:
The national flag, adopted in 1977, is divided diagonally by a stripe of yellow representing the sunshine of the islands. The two triangles formed by the diagonal stripe are blue and green, signifying water and the land. The five stars were initially incorporated to represent the country's five districts. The islands were later divided into seven districts and the symbolism of the stars was modified to refer to the five main groups of islands.Symbolism of flags is usually quite subjective this may be a good example.
The only thing I have regarding the original legislation is a copy of theillustration by the College of Arms upon which the Royal Warrant of 18 November1977 was granted. The only other thing on the Solomon Islands in my collectionis a photograph of an actual flag sent by the Island Government, however, allthat can be said about the flag displayed is that it has five white stars and adiagonal yellow stripe - but is otherwise barely rectangular.
Christopher Southworth, 6 November 2003
There is no official source that gives exact colors of the national flag; these listed below are all approximate colors from the documented sources.
Zoltan Horvath, 14 September 2024
The protocol manual for the London 2012 Olympics (Flagsand Anthems Manual London 2012) provides recommendations for national flagdesigns. Each NOC was sent an image of the flag, including the PMS shades, fortheir approval by LOCOG. Once this was obtained, LOCOG produced a 60 x 90 cmversion of the flag for further approval. So, while these specs may not be theofficial, government, version of each flag, they are certainly what the NOCbelieved the flag to be.
For the Solomon Islands: PMS 300 blue, 123 yellow,355 green. The vertical flag is simply the horizontal version turned 90 degreesclockwise.
Ian Sumner, 11 October 2012
The Flag Manual - Beijing 2008 gives Pantone colors: PMS 355 (green), PMS 116 (yellow), and PMS 300 (blue).
The Album des Pavillons 2000 [pay00] (Corr. No. 2.) gives approximate colors in Pantone and CMYK systems:
Blue: Pantone 293c, CMYK 100-50-0-0
Yellow: Pantone 116c, CMYK 0-10-95-0
Red: Pantone 186c, CMYK 0-90-75-5
Green: Pantone 357c, CMYK 80-0-90-50
The Album des Pavillons 2023 specifies the colors of the flags in three color systems:
Blue: Pantone 293c, CMYK 94-73-0-0, RGB 0-71-182
Red: Pantone 186c, CMYK 10-100-74-2, RGB 210-16-52
Yellow: Pantone 116c, CMYK 0-19-93-0, RGB 255-206-0
Green: Pantone 357c, CMYK 28-72-97-25, RGB 15-77-42
Vexilla Mundi gives colors in Pantone system: PMS 300C (blue), PMS 342C (green), PMS 115C (yellow), and PMS White.
Wikipedia illustrates the flag, and construction details, but doesn�t give any color specification.
TheItalian version gives RGB color values:
Blue: 0-81-186, White: 255-255-255, Yellow: 252-209-22, and Green: 33-91-51.
Flag Color Codes gives the following color values:
Blue: Hex #0051BA, RGB 0-81-186, CMYK 100-56-0-3, Pantone 300, RAL5015
White: Hex #FFFFFF, RGB 255-255-255, CMYK 0-0-0-0
Yellow: Hex # FCD116, RGB 252-209-22, CMYK 0-16-89-0, Pantone 123, RAL 1018
Green: Hex # 215B33, RGB 33-91-51, CMYK93-0-100-0 Pantone 355, RAL 6002
Zoltan Horvath, 29 September 2024
Source:https://solomons.gov.sb/government/
Description of the coat of arms:
Crest: On a helmet guardant, lambrequined Argent and Azure, a Solomon Islands war canoe proper and a Sun radiant Or
Torse: Argent and azure
Shield: Or, a Saltire Vert charged with two spears in saltire, points in base and a bow and two arrows charged with a native shield in fess point, between two Turtles all proper, and on a chief Azure an Eagle sejant on a branch between two Frigate birds all proper
Supporters: On the dexter, a Crocodile, and on the sinister a Shark, both proper
Compartment: A stylised two-headed Frigate bird Sable
Motto: To Lead Is to Serve
The coat of arms was adopted on 7th July 1978.
Zoltan Horvath, 29 September 2024
[Editor's note: see comments on the pre-independence proposals below withinformation about the adoption of the coat of arms.]
Before the adoption of the Salomon Islands' current flag several proposals were made. In July 1975 a contest selected the new national flag: the winner was a blue flag with yellow circle in the center containing a black frigate bird. The circle was bordered with chains. But the frigate bird was only a symbol of one of thedistricts and the new national flag was rejected by several people. Alot of proposals circulated then, include some from the main political leaders in parliament. I have some of the proposals images. One of the proposals changed the stars for coconuts. One of the first proposals was like the current national flag but reversed (hoist to fly), and many of them changed the current diagonal yellow bar for a yellow circle (as in the 1975 winner proposal). Benedik Kinika, Minister of Education and Culture proposed adding red colour. Gideon Zoloveke rejected the yellow color but admitted blue, green and red. Some members of parliament opposed blue because it was identified with the British era, but accepted green, yellow and white (instead of blue). My main source isThe Flag Bulletin, but also personal correspondence helped me in some proposals.
Jaume Ollé, 28 May 2000
I was an entrant in the 1975 contest to design the new national flag. As I remember it, the winning design depicted a black chain formed into an ellipse centred on a red ground. The designer, a national Solomon Islander, stated that the chain represented the 'Blackbirding' history and the red was for blood spilled. The design was published on the front page of theSolomon Islands Drum, the national newspaper at the time. It caused quite a public controversy and was finally withdrawn as the design for the flag, but it was the original winner.
At this time, I was the Visual Arts master at King George VI National Secondary School, Honiara, British Solomon Islands (1974-1978). I returned to New Zealand prior to Solomon Islands independence. The design I entered, was green, yellow and blue. The yellow (dark), was a diagonal stripe running from bottom left corner to top right corner. The upper left triangle was blue (sea/sky), the lower triangle was green (fertile land), the yellow (sun/sandy beaches). A cluster of stars in the top left corner signified the provinces, not the Southern Cross.
One of the Solomon Islander judges told me at the time that my design was favoured, but it was preferred that the winner should be a national. I was surprised later, post Independence, to learn that the adopted national flag was in fact the one submitted in the pre-independence competition by myself.
The Solomon Islands Government invited a number of pre-selected artists in and around Honiara to come up with a design for the coat of arms for the Solomon Islands when it became independent from Britain in 1978. The meetings were held at the Legislative Assembly Building, Honiara, in 1977.
As a result of the meetings my final design was selected to be sent to the Royal College of Heraldry in England. I did receive a letter of thanks from the minister who chaired the meetings.
The final design was presented as a line drawing in black and white. The heraldic shield in the centre was presented blank, for the later inclusion of the pre-existing provincial symbols. The motto,to lead is to serve was added to the scroll. The motto was contributed by a nun from Tenaru School, a fellow member of the invited artists group.
My original design included a knight's visor [helmet?] as traditionally required, but the ministers did not want this and I was told to remove it. I replaced it with the sun and war canoe. However, the Royal College of Heraldry in England to which my design was finally sent, must have convinced the ministers and slipped the visor back in, under the canoe!
I had understood that the Royal College of Heraldry would approve and present the final in colour. Somewhere in the process, a change has been made to the shark armorial bearer. It no longer has the defined shark's tail. The shark's tail has been replaced with that of a nondescript fish! Regrettably, the design has been compromised. It seems unlikely that the Solomon Island Government Printing Office would have made such an error.
John A. Hazeldine, 13 August 2001
On 29 July 2008, Frank O. Kabui, Chairman of the Law Reform Commission, sentthe following letter to the Editor of the "Solomon Star":
"It is fitting towrite about the national flag 30 years on. The national flag was officiallyadopted on 18 November 1977. I have had no access to government files but havevisited this page and have this to say. The quest for thedesign of a national flag began in 1975. A New Zealand citizen who was a VisualArts master at King George VI School had also put in his design. His design wasblue, green and yellow. The yellow was a diagonal stripe that ran from thebottom left corner to the top right corner. This represented the sun. The upperleft triangle was blue, representing the ocean. The lower triangle representedgreen, the land. The five stars represented the then five Provinces. His designseems to have become the national flag. The flag has become a symbol of unity.It represents our environment as a nation.
However, I have onlytwo matters of regret. There are now nine provinces and our flag does notreflect nine stars by 7th July, 2008. Secondly, as public record, the flagshould be described in an Act of Parliament."
http://solomonstarnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2457&change=103&changeown=88&Itemid=45
I can't seehere five administrative divisionsever mentioned.
Ivan Sache, 30 July 2008
Maybe these are the mentioned but not listed, nor numbered, postwardistricts? These were said to be 12 before the war, but that may have changed.Athttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Provinces_of_the_Solomon_Islands#History itsays this:
"After World War II, it was reorganized into four districts,Central, Western, Eastern, and Malaita. These districts were then furthersubdivided into councils. The capital was also moved to Honiara. These were thepolitical divisions that the nation inherited at its independence in 1978."
Four is getting near: Maybe the fifth entity was the capital, if separatedfrom the surrounding province(s), like in many federal states?
AntónioMartins-Tuválkin, 30 July 2008
In a letter to the editor of the "The Solomon Star", 15 August 2008, SirPeter Keniloera, Speaker of National Parliament, provides the followingclarification:
"[...]
As someone whose Cabinet in 1978 was responsiblefor the final decision on the national flag – in particular all its physicalfeatures, I would like to inform the citizens of our country, that for the sameconcern now raised by some of our people, we decided against any feature thatcould be subject to change on our national flag. The five stars, for instance,do not represent number of provinces in the country then. Rather they representthe five major island groupings of our nation – Malaita, Eastern, Central,Western and the Polynesian outliers. I also try to explain this in my recentlypublished Autobiography – “Tell it as it is” – on page 236 for any interestedstudent in history/politics of our country.
[...]"
http://solomonstarnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2872&Itemid=45
Sir Peter's letter elicited a response by Exsley Taloiburi, published as aletter to the editor, "The Solomon Star", 16 August 2008, including thefollowing:
"[...]
Forgive me for my ignorance, but I still question thevalidity of our national flag features, as not truly representative of the“current” Solomon Islands. For instance, if we say that the five stars representmajor island groupings then we have at least six major islands not five.Similarly, after World War II Solomon Islands was reorganized into only fourdistricts: Central, Western, Eastern, and Malaita. These districts were thenfurther subdivided into councils. The capital was also moved to Honiara. Thesewere the political divisions that the nation inherited at its independence in1978. I assume the Polynesian outliers was then categorised under the Easterngrouping. On that same note, what makes Malaita so special above the other eightprovinces that its name is boldly listed as one of the stars on our nationalflag whilst the other eight are subdued and shadowed by general groupings suchas Western, Eastern, Central and the Polynesian outliers. Is Guadalcanal,Choiseul, Isabel or Makira, to name a few, less important? Do our currentleaders think that it's still appropriate for Malaita to play a “big brother”role in Solomon Islands today? I am saying this because a founding commander ofthe disbanded MEF has alluded that the time for Malaita to act as a “bigbrother” is over and it maybe rife to rid the “one island dominancy” notion.Hence the question – is the current features of our national flag accuratelyreflect the true Solomon Islands today as compared to the one in 1978?
[...]"
http://solomonstarnews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2899&change=103&changeown=88&Itemid=45
No answer to the question has been published yet in "The Solomon Star",apparently.
Ivan Sache, 1 January 2009