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The flag of Italy (Italian: bandiera d'Italia, Italian: [banˈdjɛːra diˈtaːlja]), often referred to as The Tricolour (il Tricolore, Italian: [il trikoˈloːre]), is a flag featuring three equally sized vertical pales of green, white and red, with the green at the hoist side, as defined by Article 12 of the Constitution of the Italian Republic. [1]
The state flag had no letters. An Italian tricolour with two "R"s (Repubblica Romana) in the center. 1859–1860 Flag of the United Provinces of Central Italy: An Italian tricolour. 1860–1861 Flag of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies: An Italian tricolour with the arms of the King of the Two Sicilies in the center. 1861–1946
[[File:Tricolour Flag Template (Vertical).svg|border|96x176px]] Description Tricolour Flag Template (Vertical).svg English: A template for a tricolour flag with vertical stripes, based upon Image:Tricolour Flag Template (Horizontal).svg , and modified using Notepad2 .
English: A template for a tricolour flag with horizontal stripes, based upon Image:African National Congress Flag.svg, and modified using Microsoft WordPad and Notepad2. Date 22 June 2007
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Flag of Italy. Generated in Inkscape, based on images at the World Flag Database and other sources. This version of the Flag use rough hexadecimal conversion of the official Pantone colors in order to be printed on Cloth.
The Italian tricolour cockade, by convention, has the green in the centre, the white in an intermediate position and red in the periphery. This custom derives from one of the conceptual characteristics of the cockades, which can be imagined as flags rolled around the flagpole seen from above.
The need to precisely define the colours was born from an event that happened at the Justus Lipsius building, seat of the Council of the European Union, of the European Council and of their Secretariat, when an Italian MEP, in 2002, noticed that the colours of the Italian flag were unrecognizable with red, for example, which had a shade that ...