Indonesia Philippines Singapore United States Malaysia United Kingdom India Vietnam China Australia Pakistan Turkey Russia South Africa Canada Thailand Hong Kong Germany Iran Ecuador Japan South Korea Spain Nigeria Taiwan Netherlands Saudi Arabia Egypt Kazakhstan France Colombia Greece Mexico Kenya Algeria Italy Bangladesh United Arab Emirates Sri Lanka Peru Israel Ireland Brazil Morocco Jordan Ghana Sweden Iraq Oman Chile Finland Poland Lebanon Nepal Uzbekistan Cambodia Ethiopia New Zealand Belgium Austria Romania Switzerland Myanmar Ukraine Czech Republic Qatar Portugal Jamaica Hungary Lithuania Croatia Tanzania Serbia Uganda Libya Panama Palestinian Territory Norway Bahrain Costa Rica Argentina Cyprus Slovakia Guyana Mauritius Laos Eswatini Tunisia Denmark Brunei Darussalam Malta Kuwait Latvia Estonia Macao Slovenia Zimbabwe Kosovo Yemen Bhutan Maldives Timor-Leste Zambia Trinidad and Tobago Bosnia and Herzegovina Azerbaijan Malawi Albania Georgia Somalia Puerto Rico Namibia Mongolia Bulgaria El Salvador Botswana North Macedonia Belize Luxembourg Venezuela Cuba Dominican Republic Afghanistan Nicaragua Guatemala Kyrgyzstan Honduras Rwanda Liberia Moldova Bolivia Uruguay Cameroon Lesotho Papua New Guinea Barbados Antigua and Barbuda Iceland Democratic Republic of the Congo Saint Lucia Fiji Angola Cote D'Ivoire Syria Armenia Madagascar Samoa Senegal Paraguay Curacao Mozambique Gambia Tonga Northern Mariana Islands U.S. Virgin Islands Anguilla South Sudan Saint Kitts and Nevis Djibouti Burundi Isle of Man Dominica Sierra Leone Bahamas British Virgin Islands Cabo Verde Mauritania Montenegro Sudan Bermuda Tajikistan American Samoa Cayman Islands Jersey Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Gabon Guinea-Bissau Turkmenistan Equatorial Guinea Solomon Islands Gibraltar Grenada Benin Vanuatu Estonia Flag Meaning & Details 23 VISITORS FROM HERE! Estonia Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of blue (top), black, and white various interpretations are linked to the flag colors blue represents faith, loyalty, and devotion, while also reminiscent of the sky, sea, and lakes of the country black symbolizes the soil of the country and the dark past and suffering endured by the Estonian people white refers to the striving towards enlightenment and virtue, and is the color of birch bark and snow, as well as summer nights illuminated by the midnight sun
Learn more about Estonia »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook