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Keywords: equatorial guinea | guinea ecuatorial | silk | unitad | pax | justicia | 
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![[National flag and ensign]](../misc/oooooo.gif) (2:3~)  
image by Zoltan Horvath, 28 May 2024
 (2:3~)  
image by Zoltan Horvath, 28 May 2024
Flag adopted on 21 August 1979 and Coat of 
Arms adopted on 21 August 1979.
See also:
The flag of Equatorial Guinea is a horizontal tricolor of green over white over red, with a blue triangle at the hoist. The coat of arms are to be found in the centre of the white stripe. The arms are gray with silk cotton tree. Above are six yellow six pointed stars representing the mainland and islands which make up the country. Under shield is a motto: UNIDAD  PAZ  JUSTICIA (Unity, Peace, Justice). The flag was adopted at independence on 12 October 1968. During the dictatorship of Francisco Nguema (197279) the emblem on flag was changed, but the original 1968 coat of arms was restored after Nguema was deposed in August 1979.
The symbolism of the colours is as follows:
Željko Heimer 14 December 1995
The construction details of the flag are given in Album des pavillons nationaux et des marques distinctives (National flags and distinctive markings) 2000 edition [pay00] as (2+2+2):9~ but I think this merely notes that the three stripes are of the same width and that:
Album  [pay00] gives the flag without the coat of arms as 
being the "Unofficial Variant" for a civil flag and ensign.
Željko Heimer, 23 October 2001
The protocol manual for the London 2012 Olympics 
(Flags and Anthems Manual, London, 2012 [loc12]) 
provides recommendations for national flag designs. Each National Olympic 
Committee was sent an image of their flag, including the PMS shades, by the 
London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games (LOCOG) for their approval. 
Once this was obtained, the LOCOG produced a 60 x 90 cm version of the flag for 
further approval. So, while these specifications may not be the official, 
government, version of each flag, they are certainly what the National Olympic 
Committee believed their flag to be. 
For Equatorial Guinea : PMS 355 green, 293 blue, 032 red, 468 brown, 440 brown, 
109 yellow and black. The vertical flag is simply the horizontal version turned 
90 degrees clockwise.
Ian Sumner, 10 October 2012
The Constitution defines the current national flag (see Article 4):
https://www.constituteproject.org/constitution/Equatorial_Guinea_2012?lang=en
The government website has a page about national symbols with illustrations:
https://www.guineaecuatorialpress.com/gobierno
There is a flag without coat of arms (see below), but it's a historical flag used between 1968 and 1973 as 
a first national flag of Equatorial Guinea.
Only French Navy books illustrate the flag without coat of arms (as an unofficial variant), but it seems to
be a mistake.
Other sources for colors:
The Flag Manual - Beijing 2008 gives Pantone colors: PMS 032 (red), PMS 355 (green), PMS 109 
(yellow), PMS 293 (blue), PMS 440 (brown), PMS 468 (tan)
The Album des Pavillons 2000 [pay00] gives approximate colors in Pantone 
and CMYK systems:
Green: Pantone 347c, CMYK 100-0-80-5
Blue: Pantone 312c, CMYK 100-0-10-0
Red: Pantone 186c, CMYK 0-90-80-5
Flags and Anthems Manual London 2012 [loc12] gives Pantone colors:
 
PMS 355 (green), PMS 293 (blue), PMS 032 (red), PMS 468 (beige), PMS 440 (dark brown), PMS 109 (yellow), and PMS Black
The Album des Pavillons 2023 [d2s23] already specifies the colors 
of the flags in three color systems:
Blue: Pantone 293c, CMYK 94-73-0-0, RGB 0-71-182
Red: Pantone 032c, CMYK 0-89-68-0, RGB 239-51-64
Brown: Pantone 2320c, CMYK 37-62-100-49, RGB 109-73-33
Grey: Pantone 421c, CMYK 30-22-23-3, RGB 186-187-188
Yellow: Pantone 109c, CMYK 1-17-93-0, RGB 253-209-0
Green: Pantone 355c, CMYK 84-12-100-1, RGB 0-149-148
Vexilla Mundi gives colors 
in Pantone system:
PMS 287C (blue), PMS 185C (red), PMS White, and PMS 348C (green)
Wikipedia gives color values as follows:
Black: Pantone Black, RGB 0-0-0, CMYK 0-0-0-1, Hex #000000
Blue: Pantone 293c, RGB 0-115-206, CMYK 100-69-0-4, Hex #0073CE
Green: Pantone 355c, RGB 62-154-0, CMYK 91-0-100-0, Hex #3E9A00
White: Pantone White, RGB 255-255-255, CMYK 0-0-0-0, Hex #FFFFFF
Red: Pantone 032c, RGB 227-33-24, CMYK 0-86-63-0, Hex # E32118
Gold: Pantone 051c, RGB 255-215-0, CMYK 0-16-100-0, Hex # FFD700
Flag Color Codes gives the following 
color values:
Green: Hex. # 3E9A00, RGB 62, 154, 0, CMYK 93, 0, 100, 0, Pantone 355, RAL 6018
Blue: Hex. # 0047AB, RGB 0-71-171, CMYK 100-56-0-3, Pantone 300, RAL 5017
White: Hex. # FFFFFF, RGB 255-255-255, CMYK 0-0-0-0, Pantone N/A, RAL N/A
Red: Hex. # E60000, RGB 230-0-0, CMYK 0-90-76-0, Pantone 032, RAL 3026
Zoltan Horvath, 28 May 2024
I recently got a book in Chinese called 
Geguo Gaikuang (or World Factbook) published in 1972 and found the 
Equatorial Guinean flag in that book different from that illustrated or 
described in any other source as illustrated above.
The flag is similar to the official version, but with the blue part being a 
right angle triangle and the coat of arms touches parts of the green and red 
stripes and is not just confined to the white strip.
I've no idea if or when this flag was in use, but considering the year of 
publishing of that book, I'm presuming it was between 1969 and 1973. Can 
anyone shed some light on it?
George Lei Ren, 20 February 2015
As far as I can discover there are no 
official specifications for Equatorial Guinea, and the many flag book 
illustrations I have seen mostly differ as to the length of the triangle and the 
position of the arms. My own specification was based 
upon an unsatisfactory official illustration and it places the triangle at 
one-third the flag's length and centres the arms between the point of the 
triangle and the fly. However, the main image on this page (based upon 
Album des Pavillons) shows the arms centred on the flag and the triangle at 
one-third the width. It would appear that until official specifications 
are published, such variations will continue to be produced.
Christopher Southworth, 20 February 2015
The early history of the flag of 
Equatorial Guinea is vague. It was only on 8 October 1968, four days away from 
independence on 12 October 1968, that its parliament agreed on the design of the 
national flag. Newspaper clippings from those days mention the description 
of the flag without the coat of arms. It looks like there was not much time to 
mass produce the flag design adopted by parliament and so many variants 
appeared. A photograph published in the Het Vrije Volk newspaper in 
Rotterdam shows people holding and waving paper flags with three plain 
horizontal stripes. There is no triangle or arms on the flag. 
Jos Poels, 21 February 2015
The flags which were used officially 
during the Independence celebrations of Equatorial Guinea in Santa Isabel (now 
Malabo), do not have a coat of arms as seen
here in a photo taken on the Plaza de España.
In the October-November 1968 issue of the magazine La Guinea Ecuatorial 
is a photo of 
the government building in Santa Isabel on independence day (12 October 1968). 
It clearly shows a flag flying without the coat of arms. 
Jos Poels, 23 February 2015
.gif) image by Željko Heimer, 23 October 2001
 image by Željko Heimer, 23 October 2001
The coat of arms of Equatorial Guinea were adopted on 21 August 1979 and feature a silk cotton tree (the so called "God Tree") on a gray background. The tree is where the first treaty was signed between Spain and a local ruler signifying the beginning of the colonial period. Above the shield are six yellow six-pointed stars representing mainland and the five main islands which together comprises the country. Under shield is the national motto: UNIDAD  PAZ  JUSTICIA (Unity, Peace, Justice). The Arms were originally at independence but were changed during the dictatorship of Francisco Nguema (197279) and were restored in 1979.
The coat of arms are found in the centre of the white stripe of the national flag.
The coat of arms in the above image is adapted from Corel Clipart collection.
Željko Heimer, 14 December 1995
According to the
website of the Government of Equatorial Guinea, the arms are based on the 
arms granted by the King of Spain to the town of Bata, now the largest town in 
the country. The shield portrays a capoquero (kapok) tree 
surmounted by six stars representing the six components of the country, Fernando 
Poo, Río Muni (the continental component of the country), Elobey Grande, Elobey 
Chico, Corisco and Annobón. The kapok was nicknamed the "Tree of the Gods" 
in the 19th century as the Bonkoro swore loyalty to the King of Spain under such 
a tree.
Kapok (Ceiba pentandra (L.) Gaertn.) Family Malvaceae, is a tree native 
from Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, and West 
Africa as well. The tree is widely cultivated in southeast Asia (where it 
is known as Java kapok) for fibre. Venerated as a sacred tree by the 
Mayas, Kapok is the national tree of Guatemala and
Puerto Rico.
Ivan Sache, 10 October 2010