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When was a 5-pointed star first used in a flag?
Rudnei Cunha, 16 
July 2010
This very much depends upon what you mean by "a flag"? A five-pointed 
	star is not entirely unknown in heraldry (although six points is far more 
	common), so there could be a heraldic flag (banner, pennon, gonfalon etc) 
	dating from as early as the 13th Century, however, the first national flag 
	in its modern sense is generally considered to have been the Stars and 
	Stripes. And the Stars and Stripes (dating from 1777) 
	is, also as far as I know, the first national flag to show such a star?
	Christopher Southworth, 16 July 2010
It is almost certain that some banners used during the Wars of the Roses 
	(mid-15th century) contained 5-pointed stars, especially those used by the 
	troops of the Earl of Oxford, whose arms featured a 5-pointed star 
	(Quarterly gules and or, in the first a 5-pointed star argent). Legend has 
	it that the Battle of Barnet (1471) was lost because allies of Oxford's men 
	turned on them after seeing the starred banner in the mist and mistaking it 
	for the sun-in-splendour banner of enemy forces.
James Dignan, 
	17 July 2010
I think it is safe to say that the S&S has inspired many others to use 
	five pointed stars. According to a myth I've read about sometimes, it was 
	Betsy Ross who came up with the idea of making the stars five-pointed, while 
	the people deciding on the flag first wanted them to be six- pointed. She 
	demonstrated to them how a five-pointed star was easier to make by folding 
	and cutting fabric.
According to Ottfried
	Neubecker: Heraldik, Liber Förlag, 
	Stockholm 1982, p. 142 (translated from German to Swedish by Per Nordenvall), 
	five-pointed stars are preferred in heraldry in southern Europe and 
	six-pointed stars are preferred in heraldry in central Europe. 
At 
	least in Swedish heraldry, I know for a fact that stars are six-pointed by 
	default if not specified otherwise in a blazon (though I have no source for 
	this information at hand at the moment).
Elias Granqvist, 17 
	July 2010
Quoting Whitney 
Smith (1975) ("Flags Through the Ages 
	and Across the World"), pp. 194-195:
"In 1795, however, the star 
	(particularly the five-pointed variety which Americans soon made their 
	standard form) was extremely rare: the city flag of Norden, Germany, the 
	cantonal banner of Valais, Switzerland, and a few military colors were 
	virtually the only examples of its usage in the world."
FOTW  
	reports different old flags of Norden, but all with six-pointed stars:
	de-ni_no.html 
Regarding 
	Valais, 
	FOTW does not say explicitly that the old flags had five-pointed stars.
	Ivan Sache, 17 July 2010
If military colours should be included, one could probably mention the 
	colours of the military regiments in Västergötland in Sweden, of which at 
	least some used colours with the arms of the province on them from the 17th 
	Century onwards (the arms can be seen as a banner of arms
	here), see Theodor Jakobsson: "Svenska fanor och 
	standar, en orientering genom tiderna" published in Meddelanden från 
	Riksheraldikerämbetet X, 1941-1945, Malmö 1945, p. 36, and "Folke Wernstedt: 
	"Svenska standar och fanor 1654-1686, en typologisk undersökning jämte 
	historiker regementsvis samt register", published in the same book, pp. 
	244ff. Even if the arms of this province has changed slightly over the 
	centuries, it has usually has had the two stars accompanying the lion, even 
	if the stars sometimes has been depicted with holes in them as if they were 
	mullets, see Ivar Snell: "De svenska landskapens vapen under 1500-talet", 
	published in Meddelanden från Riksheraldikerämbetet IX, 1940, Malmö 1945, p. 
	19. This is certainly not the earliest use of stars in flags, but it is 
	still pretty old.
Elias Granqvist, 17 July 2010
When did the Ottomans start using a five pointed star? Our site doesn't 
	seem to have any absolute date; it seems that 7 and 5 points were both used. 
	If five points were used as far back as 1453, that might be the oldest.
	Dean McGee, 20 July 2010