Flag of Serbia#Modern flags

{{short description|none}}

{{about|the modern flag|the flag during the Habsburg Monarchy|Flag of Serbia (Habsburg)}}

{{Infobox flag

| Name = Republic of Serbia

| Article =

| Type =

| Image = Flag of Serbia.svg

| Nickname = State flag / Državna zastava

| Morenicks =

| Use = 010010

| Symbol = {{FIAV|010010}}

| Proportion = 2:3

| Adoption = {{ubl|2004|2010 (standardized)}}

| Design = Horizontal tricolour of red, blue, and white; charged with the lesser coat of arms left of center

| Designer =

| Image2 = Civil Flag of Serbia.svg

| Nickname2 = Civil flag / Narodna zastava

| Morenicks2 =

| Use2 = 100100

| Symbol2 = {{FIAV|100100}}

| Proportion2 = 2:3

| Adoption2 = {{ubl|1835|2004|2010 (standardized)}}

| Design2 = Horizontal tricolour of red, blue, and white

}}

The flag of Serbia ({{langx|sr|застава Србије|zastava Srbije}}), also known as the Tricolour ({{langx|sr|тробојка|trobojka}}), is a tricolour consisting of three equal horizontal bands, red on the top, blue in the middle, and white on the bottom (on civil flag), with the lesser coat of arms left of center (on state flag). The same tricolour, in altering variations, has been used since the 19th century as the flag of the state of Serbia and the Serb people. The current form of the flag was adopted in 2004 and slightly redesigned in 2010.[http://www.novosti.rs/vesti/naslovna/aktuelno.69.html:308459-Grb-Srbije-Dvoglavi-orao-menja-perje "Grb Srbije: Dvoglavi orao menja perje"] (in Serbian)

History

=Medieval flags=

The son of King Stefan Vladislav (reigned 1233–1243), župan Desa, sent delegates from Kotor to Dubrovnik to bring back part of the king's treasury held at Ragusa, which they did on 3 July 1281; the inventory list included, among other things, "a flag of red and blue color".{{sfn|Stanojević|1934|p=79}} It is described as vexillum unum de zendato rubeo et blavo—"a flag of fabric red and blue"; zendato ({{langx|sr|čenda}}) being a type of light, silky fabric.{{sfn|Samardžić|1983}} This is the oldest known attestation of colours of a Serbian flag; the oldest known Serbian flag was red and blue.{{sfn|Stanojević|1934|p=79}} But already in 1271 the flag colors of župan Desa were red and white.{{sfn|Kostić|1960|p=9-12}} Although the color order is not known, the version with horizontal red and blue is sometimes used in medieval-themed events in modern Serbia.{{Cite web|date=22 July 2020|url=https://www.b92.net/zivot/vesti.php?yyyy=2020&mm=07&dd=22&nav_id=1708947|title=Nije bila trobojka: Ovako je izgledala najstarija srpska zastava|work=B92|access-date=14 September 2020|language=sr}}

Hungarian King Bela IV mentioned in his charter dated 8 April 1268, that his army had defeated King Stefan Uroš I (reigned 1243–1276), and that when he hosted some foreign rulers, his magnates brought captured Serbs and "in the sign of triumph, the flag of King Uroš before the court of Bela IV, and erected it there".{{sfn|Stanojević|1934|p=79}}

In 1326, king Stefan Dečanski sent a delegate to the Mamluk Sultanate in Alexandria and sought a flag in yellow colour, to be used as a war flag.{{harvnb|Kostić|1960|p=16}}, {{harvnb|Stanojević|1934|p=79}} The Byzantines mention that there were several war flags hoisted by the Serbs at the Battle of Velbazhd (1330), and the yellow one was likely one of those.{{sfn|Stanojević|1934|p=79}}

The oldest known drawing of a Serbian flag is from the 1339 map made by Angelino Dulcert; Serbia, at the time ruled by King Stefan Dušan, is represented by a white flag of a red double-headed eagle placed above the capital Skopje (Scopi).{{sfn|Solovjev|1958|pp=134–135}}{{sfn|Škrivanić|1979}} Stefan Dušan was crowned Emperor in 1346; Dušan also adopted the Byzantine tetragramme with four fire-steels, which afterwards became an element of the Serbian flag until today (the Serbian cross).{{sfn|Stanojević|1934|pp=79–80}} A flag in Hilandar, seen by Dimitrije Avramović, was alleged by the brotherhood to have been a flag of Emperor Dušan; it was a triband of red at the top and bottom and white in the centre.{{sfn|Stanojević|1934|p=80}} Emperor Dušan also adopted the Imperial divelion, which was purple and had a golden cross in the centre.{{sfn|Milićević|1995|p=22}} Another of Dušan's flags was the Imperial cavalry flag, kept at the Hilandar monastery on Mount Athos; a triangular bicolor flag, of red and yellow.{{Citation needed|date=January 2025}}

Flag of Serbia on the map of Angelino Dulcert.jpg|Flag of the Serbian Kingdom on the map of Angelino Dulcert (1339)

File:Flag of the Serbian Empire, reconstruction.svg|Flag of the Serbian Empire

File:Divellion of Emperor Dušan.svg|Divellion (imperial insignia and personal banner) of Emperor Stefan Dušan

=Revolutionary flags=

During the First Serbian Uprising, various flags were used. Among the early flags, the one described by Mateja Nenadović could be connected with today's flag and the first Serbian flag: it was red-blue-red with three white crosses.{{cite wikisource|first=Mateja|last=Nenadović|title=Memoari|trans-title=Memoirs|wslink=Мемоари (Матија Ненадовић)/III|wslanguage=sr|quote=Пошљем ја те се изнесе из бранковичке цркве барјак, који је био од белога, црвеног и плавог мусулина, са три крста.|vb=1}}
{{cite web|url=https://srpska.pravoslavie.ru/68881.html|title=Obeleženo 210 godina od Prvog srpskog ustanka|date=2014|website=Pravoslavie.ru|lang=sr}}
{{cite web|url=https://www.valjevskaposla.info/u-znak-secanja-na-ustanike-valjevskog-kraja/|title=U znak sećanja na ustanike valjevskog kraja|date=2019|website=Valjevska posla|lang=sr}}
Similar flags bearing only one Serbian cross could also be found. Regular armies of the uprising usually had light yellow flags with various symbols, while voivode flags were often red-white, and with a superimposed black two-headed eagle. There were also flags of other colors, including red-yellow, red-white-blue and red-blue. This variety of colors was followed by variety of symbols on the flags, most often taken from Hristofor Zhefarovich's book Stemmatographia of 1741. The most common symbol on the flags were the Serbian cross, followed by coat of arms of the Timok Valley (Tribalia) and various other crosses.{{sfn|Samardžić|1993}} Most of the flags were made in Sremski Karlovci, designed by Serbian painters Stefan Gavrilović, Ilija Gavrilović and Nikola Apostolović.{{sfn|Samardžić|1993}} These would carry over to the Second Serbian Uprising as well, alongside its own flags, the most well known of which being the Takovo flag, a white flag with a large red Greek cross in the center.B. A: [http://flagspot.net/flags/rs_pr.html Principality of Serbia (1830–1882) FOTW]

File:Flag of Revolutionary Serbia.svg|Flag from the First Serbian Uprising

File:Serbian tricolor from the First Serbian Uprising.svg|Triband from the First Serbian Uprising

File:Flag used in Takovo at the start of the Second Serbian Uprising.svg|Flag from the Second Serbian Uprising

=Modern flags=

The 1835 Sretenje Constitution described the colors of the Serbian flag as bright red, white and čelikasto-ugasita (that could be translated as steelish-dark).{{cite book |script-title=sr:Уставъ Княжества Сербіє |trans-title=Constitution of the Princedom of Serbia |url=http://scc.digital.nb.rs/document/RA-ustav-1835 |access-date=2011-06-18 |year=1835 |publisher=Princedom of Serbia |location=Kragujevac |language=sr |id=COBISS.SR-ID 150291719 |trans-chapter=Chapter two. Color and Coat of Arms of Serbia |chapter=Глава друга. Боя и Грбъ Сербіє |chapter-url=http://scc.digital.nb.rs/view/RA-ustav-1835&p=003 |quote=3.) Боя народна Србска єстъ отворено-црвена, бѣла и челикасто-угасита. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120218030519/http://scc.digital.nb.rs/document/RA-ustav-1835 |archive-date=2012-02-18 |url-status=dead }} The constitution was criticized, especially by Russia, and the flag was specifically singled out as being similar to the revolutionary flag of France.Mih. Gavrilovic, Suspendovanje prvog srpskog ustava februar-mart 1835 god., Arhiv za pravne i drustvene nauke, I, 1906, 410–412 Soon afterwards, Miloš Obrenović was requesting to the Porte that the new constitution should contain an article about the flag and coat of arms,{{sfn|Samardžić|1983}} and subsequent ferman allowed Serbs to use their own maritime flag, which will have "upper part of red, middle of blue, and lower of white", which is the first appearance of the colors that are used today.D. Matic, Javno pravo Knjazevstva Srbije, Beograd, 1851, 33

The colors of the current flag of Serbia are based on the symbolism of those of the flag of Russia since 1835, but these colors are the reverse of those on the flag of Russia, and various popular stories exist in Serbia which seek to explain why. An example:{{cite news| author=LJ. M. V. – J. Ž. S.| title=Hej, Bože pravde!| date=2006-08-01| work =Vecernje novosti| url=http://www.novosti.rs/code/navigate.php?Id=1&status=jedna&vest=92154&datum=2006-07-25|access-date=2007-04-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090115201957/http://www.novosti.rs:80/code/navigate.php?Id=1&status=jedna&vest=92154&datum=2006-07-25 |archive-date=15 January 2009 |language=Serbian}}

{{cquote|In Karađorđe's time, a delegation from Serbia went to Russia to seek help, and after arriving attended a celebration. When they were asked why they were not participating in the parade, they hastily entered and turned the Russian flag upside down. The citizens thus noticed that Serbs have their own characteristics.}}

Serbia used the red, blue and white tricolor as a national flag continuously from 1835 until 1918, when Serbia ceased to be a sovereign state after it joined the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, later known as Yugoslavia, the tricolor was a used as a Serbian civil flag, from 1918 to 1945. Also in 1918, a Serbian flag was flown over the White House in Washington, D.C. as a show of solidarity by the U.S. towards Serbia during World War I.{{Cite web|url=https://rs.usembassy.gov/our-relationship/day-when-the-serbian-and-u-s-flags-flew-together-over-the-white-house/|title=The Day when the Serbian and U.S. Flags Flew Together over the White House|access-date=2020-03-22|archive-date=2020-10-23|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201023225334/https://rs.usembassy.gov/our-relationship/day-when-the-serbian-and-u-s-flags-flew-together-over-the-white-house/|url-status=dead}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.telegraf.rs/zanimljivosti/svastara/2977128-amerikanci-se-dive-srbima-zbog-jednog-od-vas-na-beloj-kuci-je-pre-100-godina-bila-srpska-zastava-video|title = Amerikanci se dive Srbima: "Zbog jednog od vas, na Beloj kući je pre 100 godina bila srpska zastava" (VIDEO)| date=22 July 2018 }}{{Cite news|url=https://www.kurir.rs/vesti/politika/3093181/srpska-zastava-vijorila-se-na-beloj-kuci-pre-tacno-100-godina-evo-kako-je-doslo-do-ovog-istorijskog-dogadjaja|title=SRPSKA ZASTAVA VIJORILA SE NA BELOJ KUĆI PRE TAČNO 100 GODINA: Evo kako je došlo do ovog istorijskog događaja|newspaper=Kurir.rs }}{{cite tweet|number=1020952134051876865|user=USEmbassySerbia|title=Zahvaljujući jednom od vas pre sto...|date=22 July 2018}}

File:Flag of Serbia (1835-1882).svg|State flag of the
Principality of Serbia
(1835–1882)

File:Civil Flag of Serbia.svg|Civil flag of the
Principality of Serbia
(1835–1882)

File:Flag of Serbia (1882–1918).svg|State flag of the
Kingdom of Serbia
(1882–1918)

File:Civil Flag of Serbia.svg|Civil flag of the
Kingdom of Serbia
(1882–1918)

After World War II, Yugoslavia was reformed into a socialist federal republic, composed of six republics, one of which was Serbia. Each republic was entitled to its own flag on the condition that it contained the socialist red star.Branislav Ž. Vešović: [http://fotw.vexillum.com/flags/yu_wwii.html Yugoslavia during the Second World War] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120217215904/http://fotw.vexillum.com/flags/yu_wwii.html |date=2012-02-17 }} The standardization of the flags of the Yugoslav Republics meant that the flag of SR Serbia was identical to that of SR Montenegro, as they continued the use of the tricolours of the Kingdom of Serbia and the Kingdom of Montenegro respectively. Following the breakup of Yugoslavia, Serbia initially continued using the flag of Serbia as a Yugoslav republic; the 1990 Constitution of Serbia stated that flag and coat of arms of Serbia can only be changed by the same procedure used to change the constitution itself,1990 Constitution of Serbia, Article 5 which required an absolute majority of voters to support it.1990 Constitution of Serbia, Article 133 The 1992 Serbian constitutional referendum asked the voters to choose between the flag with and without the star, with red star gaining the majority of votes, however not the absolute majority of voters. The red star was nonetheless removed from the flag in 1992 by a recommendation by the Serbian parliament;Recommendation on the use of the Flag of Serbia ("Official Gazette of Serbia", No. 49/1992.) however, the coat of arms remained unchanged. In 2004, however, the National Assembly of Serbia issued a recommendation on use of the flag and coat of arms that preferred using different symbols from the ones in the constitution. The 2006 Constitution of Serbia sanctioned that national symbols would be regulated by law;2006 Constitution of Serbia, Article 7 the recommendation remained in use until 2009, when the actual Law on National Symbols was enacted.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009}} On 11 November 2010, a visual redesign of the coat of arms was enacted, which is currently used on the state flag.

File:Flag of Serbia (1945–1992).svg|Flag of the Socialist Republic of Serbia
(SFR Yugoslavia)
1945–1992

File:Flag of Serbia (1992–2004).svg|Flag of the
Republic of Serbia
(FR Yugoslavia)
1992–2004

File:Flag of Serbia (2004–2010).svg|State flag of the
Republic of Serbia
(Serbia and Montenegro until 2006)
(2004–2010)

File:Flag of Serbia (1941–1944).svg|Civil flag of the
Republic of Serbia
(Serbia and Montenegro until 2006)
(2004–2010)

The state flag of Serbia is also popular with Serbs in the Republika Srpska, who usually prefer to fly it instead of the national flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.{{cite web|url=http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/bosnia-s-foreign-flag-still-draws-mixed-feelings-12-05-2017|date=2017|title=Bosnia's 'Foreign' Flag Still Draws Mixed Feelings|website=www.balkaninsight.com}}

Design

The state flag bears the lesser coat of arms, centred vertically and shifted to the hoist side by one-seventh of the flag's length.[http://www.parlament.gov.rs/content/cir/akta/akta_detalji.asp?Id=112&t=O Препорука о коришћењу грба, заставе и химне Србије] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091103201529/http://www.parlament.gov.rs/content/cir/akta/akta_detalji.asp?Id=112&t=O |date=2009-11-03 }} (in Serbian) The flag ratio is 2 to 3 (height/width), with three equal horizontal bands of red, blue and white, each taking one third of the height. Recommended colors (white and black are not documented in Pantone) are:{{cite web|url= http://www.srbija.gov.rs/extfile/sr/142564/uredba_izvornik_grba_zastave_himne0355_cyr.zip |title=Standards of Flag and Coat of Arms, Parliament of Serbia|language=sr}} {{small|(871 KiB)}} The colors have no officially-designated meaning, but traditionally red is taken to represent wartime bloodshed, blue freedom, and white mother's breastmilk.{{cite web | url=https://www.srbija.gov.rs/tekst/en/130128/national-symbols.php#:~:text=Flag,milk%20feeding%20strong%20Serbian%20children. | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190828182230/https://www.srbija.gov.rs/tekst/en/130128/national-symbols.php#:~:text=Flag,milk%20feeding%20strong%20Serbian%20children. | archive-date=2019-08-28 | title=National symbols | access-date=2024-01-01 | url-status=live }}

File:Flag of Serbia construction sheet.svg

class=wikitable width=60% style="text-align:center;"
Scheme

! style="background:#C7363D; color:white" | Red

! style="background:#A12D2E; color:white" | Purpure {{ref|alpha|α}}

! style="background:#0C4076; color:white" | Blue

! style="background:#ffffff; color:black" | White

! style="background:#edb92e" | Yellow

! style="background:#21231e; color:white" | Black

Pantone1797C704C541CWhite143CBlack
CMYK0-73-69-220-90-70-3090-46-0-530-0-0-04-24-95-00-0-0-100
RGB199-54-61161-45-4612-64-119255-255-255237-185-450-0-0
Hexadecimal#C7363D#A12D2E#0C4077#FFFFFF#EDB92E#000000

{{note|alpha|α}} Only used on the greater arms' ermine mantling, as seen on the presidential standards.

Flag protocol

The state flag (de facto national flag) is constantly flown on the entrances of state buildings. The National Assembly flies it only when in session and during national holidays. Institutions of provinces, Vojvodina and Kosovo and Metohija, fly it only on national holidays.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 20}} It can also be flown during celebrations and other solemn manifestations which mark events of importance for Serbia, and on other occasions.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 24}} During state mourning, it is flown at half mast, including by the organs of provinces, local organs, and public services.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 23}} The flag must be displayed in an election room during an election for state bodies{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 22}} and in the room of civil registry dedicated for marriage (the officiant has to carry a sash with flag colours as well).Family Law, article 299

The civil flag is constantly flown on the entrance of the National Assembly and organs of provinces and public services. It must be displayed in an election room during an election for provincial or local organs.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 28}} Also, it can be hoisted during celebrations and other cultural or sport manifestations, and on other occasions.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 29}}

Neither the state flag nor the civil flag can be hoisted so that they touch the ground, nor be used as rests, tablecloths, carpets or curtains, nor to cover vehicles or other objects, nor to attire speaker platforms or tables, except as table flags.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 33}} They must not be used if damaged or otherwise look unsuitable for use.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 6}} The flag is not flown in bad weather conditions. Also, it is flown only in daylight, unless it is illuminated.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 32}}

File:Flag of Serbia hv.svg

If the flag is flown vertically on tables or otherwise, its top field is on the left side of the viewer. If it is flown vertically across a street or square, its top field should be on the northern side if the street has east–west orientation, and eastern side if it has north–south orientation or on a circular square.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 31}}

The law defines how the flag of Serbia is displayed along with other flags, making no difference between state flags and other kinds of flags. If the flag is hoisted with another flag, it is always on the viewer's left, except during an official visit of a representative of another country or an international organization, when the flag of the visitor is on the viewer's left. If the flag is hoisted with another on crossed staffs, its staff must be the front one.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 30}}

If the flag of Serbia is hoisted along with two flags, it must be in the middle.

If the flag is flown with multiple flags,

  • If the flags are flown in a circle, it must be in the centre of the circle, clearly visible;
  • If the flags are flown in a semicircle, it must be in its vertex;
  • If the flags are flown in a column, it must be in the front of the column;
  • If the flags are flown in a row, it must be in the first place, that is, on the viewer's left;
  • If the flags are flown in a group, it must be in the front of the group.

Other official flags

The President of the Republic and the President of the National Assembly use their respective standards.{{harvnb|Republic of Serbia|2009|loc=article 25}}

File:Flag of the President of Serbia.svg|Standard of the President of the Republic

File:Standard of the President of the National Assembly of Serbia.svg|Standard of the President of the National Assembly

Derived flags

{{See also|List of Serbian flags}}

Montenegro used to have a flag inspired by the Serbian tricolour with varying shades of blue. It originated from Montenegrin national costume. During the socialist Yugoslavia, the republics of Serbia and Montenegro had flags of the same pattern and colors arrangement as the flag of Serbia. Montenegro changed its flag in 1993 by altering the proportion and shade of blue in its flag and used that flag until 2004.

The Serbian tricolor was also the basis for the breakaway territories of Republika Srpska and Republic of Serbian Krajina during the Yugoslav Wars. The flag of Republika Srpska is still the Serbian tricolor as well as flag of Serbs of Croatia.{{Cite web|url=https://zeljko-heimer-fame.from.hr/descr/ba-rs.html|title=The FAME: Republic of Srpska|last=Heimer|first=Zeljko|website=zeljko-heimer-fame.from.hr|access-date=2018-03-18}}{{cite web|url=http://www.snv.hr/pdf/odluka_zastava_srpske_manjine_hr.pdf|title=Odluka o zastavi srpske nacionalne manjine u Republici Hrvatskoj|access-date=2013-04-16|archive-date=10 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160310185531/http://snv.hr/pdf/odluka_zastava_srpske_manjine_hr.pdf|url-status=dead}}

File:Flag of Montenegro (1905–1918).svg|State flag of the Principality of Montenegro and the Kingdom of Montenegro
(1905–1918)

File:Flag of Montenegro (1905–1918, 1941–1944).svg|Civil flag of the Principality of Montenegro and the Kingdom of Montenegro
(1905–1918)

File:Flag of Serbia (1947–1992); Flag of Montenegro (1946–1993).svg|Flag of the
Socialist Republic of Montenegro
(1946–1992)

File:Flag of Montenegro (1993–2004).svg|Flag of the
Republic of Montenegro
(1992–2004)

File:State Flag of Serbian Krajina (1991).svg|Flag of Republic of Serbian Krajina
(1992–1995)

File:Flag of Republika Srpska.svg|Flag of Republika Srpska

See also

References

{{Reflist|2}}

Sources

;Official documents

  • {{cite web|author=Republic of Serbia|title=Закон о изгледу и употреби грба, заставе и химне Републике Србије|trans-title=Law on look and use of the coat of arms, flag and anthem of the Republic of Serbia|year=2009|publisher=Republic of Serbia|url=http://www.media.srbija.gov.rs/medsrp/dokumenti/zakon_grb_zastava_himna_rs_cyr.doc}}

;Secondary sources

  • {{cite book|last=Filipović|first=Dušan M.|title=Dokumenti Srpske Zastave|volume=2|year=1977}}
  • {{cite book|last=Filipović|first=Dušan M.|title=Dokumenti Srpske Zastave|volume=3|year=1980}}
  • {{cite book|last=Kostić|first=Lazo M.|title=O zastavama kod Srba: istoriska razmatranja|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6KHRAAAAMAAJ|year=1960|publisher=Izd. piscevo}}
  • {{cite book|last=Milićević|first=Milić|title=Grb Srbije: razvoj kroz istoriju|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nyNYAAAAMAAJ|year=1995|publisher=Službeni glasnik|isbn=9788675490470}}
  • {{cite book|last=Palavestra|first=Aleksandar|title=Ilirski grbovnici i drugi heraldički radovi|publisher=Dosije studio|location=Belgrade|year=2010|url=https://www.academia.edu/10453371}}
  • {{cite book|last=Samardžić|first=Dragana|title=Vojne zastave Srba do 1918.|year=1983|publisher=Vojni muzej}}
  • {{cite book|last=Samardžić|first=Dragana|title=Старе заставе у Војном Музеју|year=1993|publisher=Vojni muzej}}
  • {{cite book|editor=Škrivanić, Gavro A.|title=Monumenta Cartographica Jugoslaviae II: Средњовековне карте|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7E8ZMAEACAAJ|year=1979|publisher=Narodna knjiga|location=Belgrade|ref={{harvid|Škrivanić|1979}} }}
  • {{citation|last=Tomović|first=Gordana|title=Југословенске земље ...|year=1979|pages=35–60}}
  • {{cite book|last=Solovjev|first=Aleksandar Vasiljevič|title=Istorija srpskog grba|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BAVIAAAAMAAJ|year=1958|publisher=Srpska misao}}
  • {{cite book|last=Stanojević|first=Stanoje|title=Iz naše prošlosti|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=omhJAQAAIAAJ|year=1934|publisher=Geca Kon A. D.|location=Belgrade}}
  • Krkljuš, L. 2009, "Features and symbols during the Serbian Nationalist Movement from 1848 to 1849", Istraživanja, no. 20, [http://scindeks-clanci.nb.rs/data/pdf/0350-2112/2009/0350-21120920145K.pdf pp. 145–159]{{dead link|date=December 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  • {{cite book|last=Pavlović|first=Milijvoje|chapter=Od barjaka-krstaša do trobojke|title=Srpska znanja: zvuci, boje, oblici|year=2007|publisher=Čigoja|location=Belgrade|pages=24–28}}