Last modified: 2005-04-02 by phil nelson
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This is a reconstruction of a Chinese flag, circa 1500 BC shown in
Znamierowski's World Encyclopedia of Flags. Znamierowski notes that the number
of stripes indicated rank, ranging from 12 red ribbons for the Emperor to one
for a low level functionary. The flag was attached to a bamboo staff topped with
a metal trident. The red swallowtail ribbon was used to indicate a battle
signal. It is interesting that the representation shows the yellow border being
wider towards the fly than in the hoist.
Phil Nelson, 18 February 2000
Mencius (the Latinized form of Meng-Tseu) was a Chinese philosopher (375?-290 B.C.) who propagated the Confucius' (Khoung-Tseu) ideology. His book, also named Mencius (Meng-Tseu), is the fourth part of the Sse-Chou (The Four Books of Chinese moral and political Philosophy), considered as the basis of Confucianism. In chapter IV of the second part (Hia-Meng) of Mencius, we read:
Wen-Tchang said: "May I venture to ask you a question: Which kind of thing should be used to call the keepers of the royal reserves?" Meng-Tseu said: "A burskin should be used; to call ordinary men, a plain red silk standard should be used; to call scholars, a standard on which two dragons are shown should be used; for the main administrators (ta-fou), a standard ornate with feathers of five colours hanging from the top of the lance should be used."
The context of this discussion is the following (also from Meng-Tseu's text):
"King, koung (prince) of Thsi, who wanted to go hunting, called the keepers of the royal reserves with their standard. Since they did not answer him, he decided to make them die. [...] Why did Khoung-Tseu (Confucius) defend them? He defended them because the keepers did not answer the call since they had not been called with their specific signal. [Here is the discussion reported above]. Since the signal for the main administrators had been used to call the keepers, those, even facing their own death (which would have been the consequence of their lack of answer) did not dare to answer the call. If the signal for the scholars had been used to call the ordinary men, would the ordinary men have dare to answer? Neither would have answered a wise man if the signal for an unwise man had been used!"
One important part of the Confucianism philosophy is the strict respect of
several complicated rituals, usually associated to the different levels of the
social scale. It seems that standards as signals of rallying were important
things in these rituals.
Ivan Sache, 15 May 2000
An old Japanese plate posted by Nizomi Kariyasu shows a flag captioned "China." The plate is date 1876