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![[Flag of the New National Party]](../images/z/za}nnp.gif) image
by Ivan Sarajcic, 23 Mar 1999
image
by Ivan Sarajcic, 23 Mar 1999
According to its website, the New National Party (NNP) logo represents a renewed vigour, and the dynamism and energy
of the Party with its new message. It is a modern design which
enhances the strong symbol of the sun and intensifies our colours of gold,
blue and green. Its design reflects and indigenous quality and the broad
based membership of our party. It takes the main elements of our old logo
and moulds them into a single and powerful emblem, which together with
our new slogan, strengthens our image and drives home our message in the
lead up to the 1999 elections and beyond...
Info from the nnp-website.
Dov Gutterman, 22 Mar 1999
The NNP announced a merger with the ruling ANC in 2004.  The parties 
agreed to fight the 2006 general election under the banner of the ANC.  The 
NNP has effectively disbanded following the elections with many of its members 
joining other political parties.
Bruce Berry, 29 Apr 2006
 
The National Party (NP) was the ruling party in South Africa from 1948 until 26 April 1994 when the ANC came to power. The NP was formed in 1912 and was committed to the defence of Afrikaner interests, the abandonment of South Africa's ties with Britain and pursuing a policy of "separate development" between the races - later institutionalized as apartheid. According to Philip Rault's paper on Afrikaner Political Flags presented at the XVII International Congress of Vexillology in Cape Town (1997), the NP initially had no particular emblem or flag. A flag using the then national colours was finally adopted in 1939 comprising a blue gunpowder horn, fimbriated in white, in the centre of an orange field. In 1937 orange was adopted as the official party colour.
 image by
Martin Grieve, 23 Apr 2005
  image by
Martin Grieve, 23 Apr 2005
The powder-horn (kruithoring) 
was symbolic of the Great Trek of 1836 - 1852 when a number of Afrikaners (known 
as the Voortrekkers) left 
the Cape Colony to settle in the interior and in the process established a 
number of Afrikaner republics. Rault comments that the power-horn was borrowed 
from the arms of the Orange Free State, which were a gift of the Dutch King 
William III to the Orange Free State government in 1856.  Its three horns 
were taken from the arms of the House of Orange - a hunting horn azure enguichee 
gules.  The House of Orange has used a hunting horn symbol since the middle 
ages and a horn still features in the arms of the Dutch Royal House as well as 
in those of the French city of Orange.  
Bruce Berry, 25 April 2005
I am writing a thesis on Marlene van Niekerk's novel in Afrikaans 'Triomf'. 
I have been trying to research the NP flag as the writer relies heavily on 
symbolism of the party. I found your page of South African political flags very 
useful as the flag with the sun links very nicely with my studies. However, 
there is also heavy referencing to moons as well as suns and I was wondering if 
you have any knowledge about the moons on their flag or any other sources that 
might
enlighten me?
Jessica Griffiths, 12 Mar 2006
The National Party apparently had no particular emblem during the first 25 
years of its existence. In 1934 at the Junior National Party conference, orange 
was adopted as the junior party's official colour.  In 1937, the Federal 
Council of the Gesuiwerde Nasionale Party recommended that orange would 
be the party's official colour in all four provinces and in 1939 a flag was also 
adopted consisting of an orange field charged with a blue powder horn (kruithoring) 
outlined in white.  These were in fact the colours of the then
national flag of South Africa. The powder horn was 
supposedly symbolic of the Great Trek and is certainly
borrowed from the Arms of the Orange Free State (OFS). 
However, the three horns on the OFS coat of arms had their origin in the horn 
which was a traditional emblem of the House of Orange of the Netherlands and 
that was originally a bugle horn. Regarding it as a powder horn was therefore a 
mistake. As the party emblem, the powder horn appeared mainly on posters and as 
lapel badges.
At the beginning of the 1980s, the powder horn was progressively replaced by a 
new logo consisting of the letters 'NP' with an arrow pointing upwards, in the 
colours blue, white and orange. This logo was first used during the general 
election campaign in 1981. Although the logo did not appear on flags it was used 
on white vertical banners.
 sent 
by Andre Burgers, 14 Mar 2006
 sent 
by Andre Burgers, 14 Mar 2006
On 29 April 1993 the NP did away with the powder horn and the orange, white 
and blue as its official emblem and colours and adopted a new flag  (shown 
above). This flag consists of diagonal bars of blue, white, yellow and green. 
The centre of the white bar is charged with a stylized sun which symbolized 
life, light, warmth and growth. Just as the sun stabilizes the entire solar 
system, so does the NP stabilize South African politics said the then South 
African President and NP leader, F.W. de Klerk. 
Another change occurred later in the 1990s when along with its name change to the
New National Party (NNP). The NNP adopted a new emblem and 
flag. According to the announcement "...the new NNP logo represented a renewed 
vigour and the dynamism and energy of the New National Party with its new 
message. It is a modern design which enhances the strong symbol of the sun and 
intensifies our colours of gold, blue and green. Its design reflects the 
indigenous quality and broad based membership of our party".
Andre Burgers, 14 Mar 2006
![[National Party]](../images/z/za-np.gif) image
by Bruce Berry, 25 April 1996
image
by Bruce Berry, 25 April 1996
The party changed its flag and colours from the former South African national colours of orange, white and blue as well as its kruithoring symbol on 29 April 1993 (see SAVA Newsletter 05/93). The new sun logo symbolizes :