United States Singapore United Kingdom Germany France Canada Australia Spain Italy Russia Poland Netherlands Sweden Belgium Brazil New Zealand Czech Republic Denmark Finland Japan South Korea Greece Hungary Ireland Argentina India Ukraine Switzerland South Africa Austria Mexico Indonesia Philippines Portugal Thailand Norway Turkey Slovakia Taiwan Malaysia Romania Hong Kong Serbia Chile China Vietnam Croatia Bulgaria Colombia Israel Pakistan United Arab Emirates Peru Lithuania Latvia Belarus Slovenia Egypt Saudi Arabia Venezuela Estonia Puerto Rico Malta Luxembourg Iceland Cyprus Bosnia and Herzegovina Ecuador Jersey Costa Rica Georgia Kuwait Iraq Panama Sri Lanka Algeria British Virgin Islands Isle of Man Qatar Moldova Bangladesh Guatemala Mongolia Morocco Kazakhstan Guernsey North Macedonia Azerbaijan Uruguay Bolivia Afghanistan Bahrain Angola Reunion Armenia Trinidad and Tobago Jordan Montenegro Palestinian Territory Lebanon Nepal Nigeria Dominican Republic Albania Tunisia Kenya Mauritius Gibraltar New Caledonia Tanzania Greenland Cambodia Myanmar Iran Oman Gabon Sint Maarten Honduras Brunei Darussalam Mozambique French Polynesia Senegal Namibia Guam Jamaica Syria Botswana Guadeloupe Libya Uzbekistan Faroe Islands Aland Islands San Marino Barbados Laos Yemen Djibouti Paraguay Monaco Madagascar Bermuda El Salvador Zimbabwe Zambia Netherlands Antilles Cuba Mali Kyrgyzstan Cayman Islands Uganda U.S. Virgin Islands Macao Seychelles Ghana Cote D'Ivoire Timor-Leste French Guiana Cabo Verde Fiji Aruba Antigua and Barbuda Ethiopia Belize Cameroon Martinique Northern Mariana Islands Gambia Maldives Mauritania Tajikistan Bhutan Nicaragua Hungary Flag Meaning & Details 357 VISITORS FROM HERE! Hungary Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of red (top), white, and green the flag dates to the national movement of the 18th and 19th centuries, and fuses the medieval colors of the Hungarian coat of arms with the revolutionary tricolor form of the French flag folklore attributes virtues to the colors: red for strength, white for faithfulness, and green for hope alternatively, the red is seen as being for the blood spilled in defense of the land, white for freedom, and green for the pasturelands that make up so much of the country
Learn more about Hungary »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook