
Last modified: 2023-06-03 by  zachary harden
 zachary harden
Keywords: indonesia | netherlands indies | netherlands | batavia | jakarta | 
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The Dutch East Indies never had a flag on their own. Flags for the Dutch overseas dependencies were only adopted in the 1950s, when Indonesia was already independent.
Mark Sensen, 9 April 1998
 ![[Flag of Batavia]](../images/i/id-batav.gif) image
  by Mark Sensen, 30 June 1999
 
  image
  by Mark Sensen, 30 June 1999 
There was however a (official?) flag for the capital Batavia, nowadays Jakarta.
  Mark Sensen, 9 April 1998 
A flag like this is shown in 1858 US flag chart [hbl58]:
"Batavia" at 
position (6;5) of [hbl58]: Rectangular ~2:3 flag with six horizontal stripes of 
red-white-blue and over all an emblem offset to the hoist: a white sword 
pointing up within a vertically elliptic green wreath tied at all four cardinal 
points with florettes. (Not enough detail for a proper image.)
This is 
similar to the Batavia flag shown above, but differs in the number of stripes 
(9), the color of the sword (golden), the position of the emblem (centred), and 
the details of the wreath (UN-like crossed branches, not a dense laurel crown).
António MARTINS-Tuválkin, 30 August 2008
I have in my possession some 
sheet music labeled on the cover "Javanesische Volksmelodie" and "Vaterlands-Lieder 
für das Piano-Forte bearbeteit von Ferd. Beyer". Inside, there is a subheading 
"(Surung Dayung. = push and row.)" The cover also shows two crossed flagpoles  
showing flags similar to that of Batavia. The flag is more similar to the one 
António reports from [hbl58], with six horizontal stripes, 
red-white-blue-red-white-blue, with a green wreath enclosing a vertical sword 
(blade silver, handle gold) extending just into the first and sixth rows. The 
wreath is dense, and seems to be tied at 8 points (the sword obscures the top of 
the wreath, so no tie is visible there.) Unfortunately, there is no sign of any 
date on the music
Jonathan Dixon, 16 November 2008
Ferdinand Beyer 
lived 1803-1863.
Jan Mertens, 16 November 2008