United States United Kingdom India Canada Indonesia Philippines Germany France Brazil Australia Italy Singapore Malaysia Netherlands Mexico Turkey Poland Romania Greece Thailand Hungary Spain Belgium Argentina Sweden Russia Czech Republic Finland Portugal Taiwan Bulgaria Vietnam Chile Japan Pakistan Denmark Israel Colombia Switzerland Ukraine Hong Kong Serbia South Africa Morocco Norway New Zealand Saudi Arabia Slovakia Croatia Austria Algeria Peru Egypt United Arab Emirates South Korea Iraq Ireland Venezuela Slovenia Ecuador Bangladesh Lithuania Tunisia Jordan Iceland Trinidad and Tobago Bosnia and Herzegovina Puerto Rico Sri Lanka Dominican Republic Costa Rica Estonia Latvia El Salvador Nigeria Kuwait North Macedonia China Ghana Malta Mauritius Cambodia Georgia Guatemala Qatar Lebanon Uruguay Jamaica Azerbaijan Belarus Cyprus Nepal Bolivia Oman Albania Paraguay Kenya Bahrain Panama Brunei Darussalam Mongolia Reunion Montenegro Honduras Nicaragua British Virgin Islands Luxembourg Moldova Maldives Cote D'Ivoire Libya Palestinian Territory Cameroon Armenia Syria Kazakhstan Bahamas Barbados Guyana Yemen Myanmar Macao Madagascar Afghanistan Namibia Netherlands Antilles Senegal Zimbabwe Iran Tanzania Angola Laos Saint Kitts and Nevis Fiji Guadeloupe Mozambique Martinique Uganda Faroe Islands Sudan French Guiana Uzbekistan Democratic Republic of the Congo Belize Suriname Saint Lucia Haiti Ethiopia Monaco Guinea Cayman Islands Northern Mariana Islands Republic of the Congo Dominica Burkina Faso Gabon French Polynesia Mali New Caledonia Kyrgyzstan Gambia Guernsey American Samoa Sierra Leone Cook Islands Rwanda Zambia Grenada Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Togo Djibouti Aruba Anguilla Seychelles Antigua and Barbuda Aland Islands Gibraltar Bermuda Jersey Austria Flag Meaning & Details 173 VISITORS FROM HERE! Austria Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of red (top), white, and red the flag design is certainly one of the oldest - if not the oldest - national banners in the world according to tradition, in 1191, following a fierce battle in the Third Crusade, Duke Leopold V of Austria's white tunic became completely blood-spattered upon removal of his wide belt or sash, a white band was revealed the red-white-red color combination was subsequently adopted as his banner
Learn more about Austria »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook