
Last modified: 2018-02-16 by bruce berry
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 image by Ivan Sache, 18 July 2000
 
image by Ivan Sache, 18 July 2000 
  ![[National flag and ensign]](../misc/oooooo.gif) 1:2  image by Manuel Gabino, 14 Dec 2002
 
1:2  image by Manuel Gabino, 14 Dec 2002
State flag
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Following the overthrow of Emperor Haile Selassie I on 12 September 1974, a one-party state which was called the Provisional Military Government of Socialist Ethiopia (the Derg) was established to replace the Empire of Ethiopia. In 1987 the Chairman of the Derg, Mengistu Haile Mariam, formally abolished the Derg and replaced it with the People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia.
In May 1991 the Mengistu regime came to an end following the fall of 
		communism in Europe and withdrawal of Soviet support.  A Transitional Government of Ethiopia was set up and a new constitution 
		allowing for multi-party elections was established in 1994.
		Bruce Berry, 11 Dec 2010
The new government which replaced that of Emperor Haile Selassie continued to use the plain Ethiopian tricolour 
of green, yellow and red as the national flag.
Nick Artimovich, 12 June 1996  
 image 
by António Martins-Tuválkin, 24 July 2017
 image 
by António Martins-Tuválkin, 24 July 2017
However, the State flag was modified after Haile Selassie's overthrow by 
removing the crown from the lion's head and by changing the Cross finial to a 
Spear point. This version was temporary until a new emblem 
was adopted and replaced the lion emblem in the centre of the State flag.  
The specific ratio of each needs to be confirmed.
Nick Artimovich, 12 June 1996
The main issue to confirm is which emblem was used on the state flag at which 
time? 
Whitney Smith (in both [smi80] and [smi81g]) 
shows only the plain triband, marked as the civil  
flag/civil ensign. Smith is remarkably silent about the state flag in use around 
1980. However, the book shows an emblem/arms that is not shown on FOTW (a blue 
circle with sun, cogwheel, plough, surrounded by a green wreath, with a small 
lion at the bottom). This symbol, designed in 1975 by Taddesse Mesfin, might 
have appeared on the state flag. But we would need more information and proper 
sources to confirm this.
Manuela Schmöger, 07 Sept 2017
1987.gif) 
   
1987t.gif) images by Manuel Gabino, 
14 Dec 2002
 
images by Manuel Gabino, 
14 Dec 2002
This is the emblem used on the flag in Ethiopia between 1987 and 1991. In 1987 Ethiopia became a Democratic People's Republic and Mengistu was confirmed in the presidency. The country was divided into 24 administrative regions and 5 autonomous regions: Eritrea, Assab, Ogaden, Tigre, and Dire-Daua. (Source: "Guía Mundial", edited by Abril Cinco (Colombia) (1992). This was the flag flown at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992 and which had the new national emblem placed in the centre of the Ethiopian tricolour.
The shield is circular in shape and is blue  bearing (according to William Crampton) the "obelisk of Axum" 
(a former Kingdom in the region of Tigre), a cogwheel, a red ribbon depicting a golden lion's head, 
an spear and a scepter, a yellow star on red and a the country's new name at the top in Amharic characters.
Manuel Gabino, 14 Dec 2002
 image sent by Robert Czernkowski, 10 June 1998
 
image sent by Robert Czernkowski, 10 June 1998
This flag appeared on the most common postage stamps even for years after the 
overthrow of the socialist government in 1991. The central device is the emblem 
of the "People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia" as the country was called at the time. 
The five pointed star and rays over a cogwheel is surrounded by a wreath of green leaves.
Simon Gardner,  07 April 2001
 image by David Cox, 15 Aug 2004
  
image by David Cox, 15 Aug 2004
Like the State flag, the ensign was modified after Haile Selassie's overthrow on 12 September 1974 by removing the crown from the lion's head and by changing the Cross finial to a Spear point.
Jaume Ollé, 06 Feb 1999