د افغانستان بيرغ
د ويکيپېډيا لخوا
د افغانستان ملي بیرغ تور سور او شین په لومړي ځل غازي امان الله خان داسې تشریج کړ. تور یعنې افغانستان د انګریزانو تر استعمار لاندې سور د هغو شهیدانو په ویاړ چې د انګریزانو په وړاندې یې سپیځلی جهاد کولو. شین د خپلواکۍ او پرمختګ په معنی.
Flag of Afghanistan was adopted by the transitional government of Transitional Islamic State of Afghanistan in 2002–2004. This flag is similar to the one flown in Afghanistan during the monarchy between 1930 and 1973. The difference is the addition of the shahadah at the top of the coat-of-arms (seen in gold/yellow) in the center. The new flag was adopted January 4, 2004.
This flag consists of three stripes of the colors black, red, and green. This has been present on most flags of Afghanistan in the last twenty years. The center emblem is the classical emblem of Afghanistan with a mosque with its mihrab facing Mecca.
The pre-Taliban-era and Afghan Northern Alliance flag featured the same emblem, but with green, white and black horizontal stripes instead.
Afghanistan has had more changes of its national flag during the twentieth century than any other country in the world.[1]
[سمول] تاريخي بيرغونه
| د دود کالونه | بېرغ | Ratio | دولت | يادښتونه |
| 1747-1823 | 2:3 | دراني سلطنت | The flag of the Durrani Empire was a green-white-green tricolor.[2] After the Durrani Shahs were overthrown, it was used in Herat until 1842. | |
| 1880-1901 | 2:3 | د افغانستان امارات | Flag flown under the rule of Abdur Rahman Khan. | |
| 1901-1919 | 3:5 | د افغانستان امارات | Flag flown under the rule of Habibullah Khan. Habibullah added to his father’s flag a seal that is the precursor of the modern-day seal. | |
| 1919-1921 | 2:3 | د افغانستان امارات | First flag flown under the rule of Amanullah Khan. He expanded upon his father’s flag by adding rays emanating from the seal in the form of an octogram. This new style of seal was common in the Ottoman Empire. Afghanistan became a kingdom in 1926. | |
| 1921-1928 | 2:3 | د افغانستان پاچايي | Second flag flown under the rule of Amanullah Khan/Shah, with an oval surrounding the seal instead of a circle. Afghanistan became a kingdom in 1926. | |
| 1928 | 2:3 | د افغانستان پاچايي | Third flag flown under the rule of Amanullah Shah. He replaced the octogram with a wreath and slightly modified the national seal. | |
| 1928-1929 | 2:3 | د افغانستان پاچايي | Fourth flag flown under the rule of Amanullah Shah. The black, red, and green tricolor, respectively representing the past (previous flags), the bloodshed for independence (Third Anglo-Afghan War), and hope for the future, was probably influenced by Khan’s visit abroad to Europe in 1927. The new seal shows the sun rising over two snow-capped mountains, representing a new beginning for the kingdom. | |
| 1929 | 2:3 | د افغانستان پاچايي | Flag flown under the rule of Habibullah Kalakani or Habibullah Khan, formerly known as Bacha-i-Saqao. The red, black, and white tricolor was the same flag that was used when modern-day Afghanistan was under Mongol occupation in the 13th Century. | |
| 1929-1930 | 2:3 | د افغانستان پاچايي | First flag flown under the rule of Mohammed Nadir Shah. The black, red, and green tricolor was re-established; the octogram seal borrowed from the first flag of Amanullah Shah replaced the sun and mountains seal. | |
| 1930-1973 | 2:3 | د افغانستان پاچايي | Second flag flown under the rule of Mohammed Nadir Shah, it was also used by his son, Mohammed Zahir Shah. The black, red, and green tricolor were retained. The octogram rays were removed, and the seal enlarged. In between the mosque and the seal is the year ١٣٤٨ (1348 of the lunar Islamic calendar, or 1929 AD of the Gregorian calendar) the year Mohammed Nadir Shah’s dynasty began. | |
| 1973-1974 | 2:3 | د افغانستان جمهوريت | First flag flown for the Republic of Afghanistan. It is identical to the previous flag, except that the year ١٣٤٨ was removed. | |
| 1974-1978 | 2:3 | د افغانستان جمهوريت | Second flag flown for the Republic of Afghanistan. The same colors were used, but the meanings reinterpreted: black for the obscure past, red for blood shed for independence, and green for prosperity from agriculture. In the canton is a new seal, with an eagle with spread wings, a pulpit on the eagle’s chest (for a mosque), wheat surrounding the eagle, and the sun’s rays above the eagle (for the new republic). | |
| 1978 | 2:3 | د افغانستان ډيموکراتيک جمهوريت | When the leader of the republic was killed in a coup, the new regime established a communist government. The same flag design was kept, but no seal. | |
| 1978-1979 | 1:2 | د افغانستان ډيموکراتيک جمهوريت | This flag used a red field with a yellow seal in the canton, a common design for communist regimes. The wreath of wheat remained, but a star was added at top (representing the five ethnic groups of the nation) and the word 'Khalq' in Arabic script (meaning people) in the center. The flag was also the flag of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan's Khalq faction under President Nur Muhammad Taraki until his murder in September 1979. | |
| 1979 | 1:2 | د افغانستان ډيموکراتيک جمهوريت | This flag was used between September to December 1979 during the short rule of Hafizullah Amin. It featured a cogwheel representing industry and an ear of wheat to represent agriculture. It was the original flag of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan. Despite being a party flag, it eventually became the flag of the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan itself. However this was brief, lasting only four months until the Soviet invasion in December. | |
| 1979-1987 | 1:2 | د افغانستان ډيموکراتيک جمهوريت | After the overthrow of the Khalq faction by the Parcham faction (lead by Babrak Karmal), the flag was changed again. The overthrow occurred in December 1979. The new leadership re-established the black, red, and green tricolor, representing the past, blood shed for independence, and the Islamic faith, respectively. A new seal was designed, with a rising sun (a reference to the former name, Khorasan, meaning "Land of the Rising Sun"), a pulpit and the Qur'an for Islam, ribbons with the national colors, a cogwheel for industry, and a red star for communism. | |
| 1987-1992 | 1:2 | د افغانستان جمهوريت | Same as the previous flag, except that in the national seal, the cogwheel is moved from the top to the bottom, the red star and the book are removed, and the green field curved to resemble the horizon. | |
| 1992 | 1:2 | د افغانستان جمهوريت | This flag was used as a provisional flag after the fall of the pro-Soviet regime. It appeared in many variants of which one is shown here. In the upper stripe is Arabic Allahu Akbar, (“God is great”); the center stripe contains the Shahadah. | |
| 1992-1996 | 1:2 | د افغانستان اسلامي دولت | The black and green stripes are switched from the previous flag. Also, the Shahadah is replaced with another logo. | |
| 1996-1997 | 2:3 | د افغانستان اسلامي امارات | A plain white flag was flown by the Taliban. | |
| 1997-2001 | 2:3 | د افغانستان اسلامي امارات | In 1997 the Taliban added the Shahadah on the flag. | |
| 2001 | 1:2 | د افغانستان اسلامي دولت | The 1992 Flag was re-adopted after the Taliban regime was deposed. | |
| 2001-2002 | 1:2 | د افغانستان اسلامي انتقالي دولت | This flag consists of three vertical stripes of the colors black, red, and green. This has been present on most flags of Afghanistan in the last twenty years. The center emblem is the classical emblem of Afghanistan with a mosque with its mihrab facing Mecca. This flag is similar to the one flown in Afghanistan during the monarchy between 1930 and 1973. The difference is the addition of the shahadah at the top of the coat-of-arms (seen in gold/yellow) in the center. It now shows the year ١۲۹٨ (1298), the solar Islamic calendar equivalent of 1919 AD of the Gregorian Calendar, the year of independence from Great Britain. | |
| 2002-2004 | 1:2 | د افغانستان اسلامي انتقالي دولت | Like the previous flag but with a white emblem. | |
| 2004-Present | 2:3 | د افغانستان اسلامي دولت | Similar to the previous flag, but a different ratio. There is some additional Arabic text on the emblem. |
کينډۍ:Asia topic کينډۍ:Nationalflags