Japan United States Canada Australia Taiwan United Kingdom France Germany South Korea Hong Kong Thailand Singapore Indonesia New Zealand Italy Vietnam Malaysia Switzerland Brazil Netherlands Philippines Ireland Spain Belgium Russia China Mexico Austria India United Arab Emirates Czech Republic Myanmar Sweden Hungary Mongolia Finland Poland Colombia Burkina Faso Denmark Macao Saudi Arabia Guam Cambodia Norway Turkey Nepal Greece Peru Argentina Pakistan Paraguay French Polynesia Chile Egypt Northern Mariana Islands Luxembourg Bolivia Israel Kenya Slovakia South Africa Portugal Qatar Sri Lanka Romania Bangladesh Albania Ukraine Jamaica Malta Morocco Kuwait Jordan Ecuador New Caledonia Democratic Republic of the Congo Uganda Reunion Bulgaria Serbia Algeria Djibouti Trinidad and Tobago Venezuela Dominican Republic Guatemala Tanzania Mauritania Croatia Slovenia Andorra Fiji Estonia Iceland Laos North Macedonia Georgia Eswatini Brunei Darussalam Moldova Uruguay Maldives Costa Rica Lithuania Kazakhstan Malawi Iran Cayman Islands Belarus Uzbekistan Sudan Ghana Papua New Guinea Syria Tunisia Ethiopia Armenia Mozambique Tonga Nicaragua Cyprus Rwanda Senegal Madagascar Latvia El Salvador Mauritius Kyrgyzstan Bhutan Zimbabwe Jersey Oman Seychelles Zambia Iraq Panama Monaco Bermuda Cuba Lebanon Saint Lucia Guinea Palestinian Territory Samoa Bosnia and Herzegovina Micronesia Puerto Rico Marshall Islands Solomon Islands Honduras Nigeria Saint Martin Cote D'Ivoire Belize Sierra Leone Martinique Yemen Gabon Palau Mali Cameroon Namibia South Sudan Barbados Montenegro Afghanistan Suriname Azerbaijan Benin Guernsey Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Guernsey Flag Flag Information white with the red cross of Saint George (patron saint of England) extending to the edges of the flag and a yellow equal-armed cross of William the Conqueror superimposed on the Saint George cross the red cross represents the old ties with England and the fact that Guernsey is a British Crown dependency the gold cross is a replica of the one used by Duke William of Normandy at the Battle of Hastings in 1066
Source: CIA - The World Factbook