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![[Swiss flag]](../images/c/ch_pant.gif) 
  
![[Swiss flag at sea]](../images/c/ch~pant.gif) images
by Zoltan Horvath, 21 October 2024
 images
by Zoltan Horvath, 21 October 2024
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The Swiss flag has been used in an unofficially rectangular shape during 
	opening ceremonies and throughout the games in several Olympic Games, 
	this is documented from probably most – if not all – of the Olympic 
	Games. The same applies to other international sports or non governmental 
	events. I say "unofficially", because the official proportion is 1:1, as 
	every vexillologist knows, except for the national flag for use on sea, 
	which is rectangular with proportions 2:3. But then, no national flags at 
	sea are used during ceremonies at Olympic Games.
As a matter of 
	fact, nobody within the Swiss government cares about the size of our 
	national flag during Olympic Games, which are a joyful and peaceful event of
	humankind. It just complies with the local rules and does what everybody 
	does, thus keeping problems away. There are no official directions as to 
	how the Swiss flag should look during events outside the country. Most 
	Swiss flags used at such events are not manufactured in Switzerland 
	anyway.
If the issue is not sports and world-wide joy, but politics, 
	then the Swiss flag is kept square, like outside the U.N. headquarters in 
	New York and Geneva. Nepal and Switzerland are the only countries within 
	the United Nations not showing the standard rectangular 2:3 flag but the 
	original proportions.
As everybody knows, the standardization of flag 
	proportions during big events follows economic and practical reasons: 
	ordering 10000 flags of the same size is cheaper than ordering 200 sets 
	of 50 flags, with many sets of different sizes. The even more important 
	reason is to avoid the negative public impact of one country being 
	bigger, i.e. different, than the other. At Olympic Games "everybody is 
	equal", and "vexillology, what the hell is that?" [see page of Olympic Flag Manual 2024].
	
There's no great 
	use to discuss about sizes, but we can learn from such a problem to tell 
	good flag design = high identification value, from bad flag design. Good 
	flags remain good, whatever its shape may be.
Emil 
	Dreyer, 14 February 2010
The Swiss entrance in the 1936 Berlin games is one of the most memorable of 
all time, and the flag-bearer is twirling a square flag in true alpine fashion. 
It is clearly visible in 
this clip [original link expired]. 
 M. Schmöger, 
15 February 2010
[Ed. note: In the referenced new video the whole passage of the Swiss entrance is now visible. The flag tosser
described by M. Schmöger (at 9:02 in the video) was not the official flag bearer. The latter is shown
at 8:56 with a rectangular flag. Either way it is an outstanding flag performance, maybe unique of all
Olympic opening ceremonies.]
Switzerland hosted the 2nd Winter Olympics (St. Moritz 1928), and the 
official poster [source: artifiche.com] (a painting, not a photograph) surprisingly shows a rectangular 
Swiss flag alongside the Olympic flag. Surprising, because I would not expect 
this from the host country. 
In the 1980 Moscow Olympics, Switzerland (and a few other nations) 
marched under the Olympic flag in partial support of the US-led boycott 
protesting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. In recent Olympics, the 1992 
Barcelona games are the only instance I find of the Swiss marching behind a 
square flag in the opening ceremonies. All summer games since then have featured 
a rectangular flag. Ditto for all winter games 1988, 1998 and following. Clips 
in youtube are the evidence.
So, in what other games did Switzerland 
carry a square flag? Barring any specific evidence, and despite the record of 
recent games, I would still expect the more correct square flag to be the 
predominant usage in earlier games. Note that the flag leading a national 
delegation is one of a kind, and not subject to the strictures of mass 
production. The flags raised at medal ceremonies at various venues are another 
matter, and more logically subject to pressures for uniformity in proportions.
T.F. Mills, 15 February 2010