
Last modified: 2024-07-20 by ian macdonald
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![[Lebanon]](../images/l/lb)seal.gif) image by Zoltan Horvath, 26 June 2024
image by Zoltan Horvath, 26 June 2024
The General Directorate of the Presidency of the Republic announced the 
completion of designing a logo for the Presidency for the first time since 
independence, to be officially adopted in occasions and correspondence between 
His Excellency the President and the Presidency alike, in order to add a unique, 
private, distinctive and powerful symbol that the institution represents in the 
history, present and future of the Lebanese.
The design, which reflects 
Lebanon's history and cultural and civilizational identity, includes symbols and 
meanings rooted in the Lebanese national memory, the most important of which is 
the cedar tree, the immortal symbol of Lebanon, the homeland, and the rays of 
the sun pointing to the East and its heart, Lebanon, the beacon of freedom and 
culture, in addition to the stars and the brilliance of the role of the Lebanese 
person, as well as the snow-capped mountains, the symbol of pride, dignity and 
purity National.
The adopted symbols also include the olive branch, which 
symbolizes peace, and the Phoenician ship, which represents history, the 
alphabet, heritage, and the culture of communication, in addition to the waves, 
which symbolize the sea and the Lebanese coast, which constitutes the face of 
the country open to the world, while the arrows were chosen because they 
historically represent the official symbol of the Lebanese Republic.
In 
addition to the symbols, a group of indicative and harmonious colors were used 
in the design, such as yellow for the sun's rays, dark blue for the color of the 
sea, white for the snow, and light blue for the sky.
Source:
https://www.presidency.gov.lb/Arabic/News/Pages/Details.aspx?nid=22911 
It was announced on 28 March 2014.
Zoltan Horvath, 26 June 2024
| ![[Presidential Sash (Lebanon)]](../images/l/lb_sshs5.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 16 March 2012 | ![[Presidential Sash (Lebanon)]](../images/l/lb_sshs6.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 16 March 2012 | 
A photo of Lebanese president Michel Suleiman (2008-) shows him wearing the presidential sash. Oddly enough it is not a more-or-less faithful interpretation on the national flag, but rather a solid red band with a white rectangle containing the cedar. (One wonders if this might not be the relic of the pattern of some long-obsolete presidential standard?) The red is slightly darker than normal, and the cedar has a black – or very dark brown – trunk and branches. Presidential sashes do not ordinarily seem to be a custom in the Middle East; it must be the French influence.
Eugene Ipavec, 20 Jan 2010
Here is a photo of 
the former president of Lebanon Emile Lahoud (1998-2007) wearing a presidential 
sash with lighter red.
Aleksandar Nemet, 24 Jan 2010
| ![[Presidential Sash (Lebanon)]](../images/l/lb_sshs3.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 16 March 2012 | ![[Presidential Sash (Lebanon)]](../images/l/lb_sshs4.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 16 March 2012 | 
...and another of Amine Gemayel wearing a different sash.
Aleksandar Nemet, 24 Jan 2010
| ![[Presidential Sash (Lebanon)]](../images/l/lb_sshs1.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 20 Jan 2010 | ![[Presidential Sash (Lebanon)]](../images/l/lb_sshs2.gif) image by Eugene Ipavec, 20 Jan 2010 |