Canada United States France Morocco Brazil Algeria Tunisia Belgium Japan Germany Cote D'Ivoire Cameroon India Russia Italy United Kingdom Madagascar Switzerland Senegal China Spain Mexico Togo Benin Netherlands Haiti Reunion Mauritius Czech Republic Portugal Martinique Israel Guadeloupe Philippines Ukraine Romania Dominican Republic Burkina Faso Thailand Poland Iran Ireland Colombia Malaysia Australia Indonesia Argentina Moldova Vietnam South Korea Ecuador Austria Lebanon South Africa Luxembourg Democratic Republic of the Congo Costa Rica Sweden Pakistan United Arab Emirates Angola Venezuela Turkey Peru Greece Hong Kong Egypt Finland Gabon French Polynesia Mali Republic of the Congo Saudi Arabia Hungary New Caledonia Guinea Norway Bulgaria Singapore Seychelles Serbia Denmark Bangladesh Burundi Bosnia and Herzegovina Chile Honduras French Guiana Mauritania Kenya Taiwan Croatia Djibouti British Virgin Islands Uruguay Rwanda Ghana Panama Iraq Cambodia French Southern and Antarctic Lands Albania Bahamas Kuwait Jamaica Nicaragua Sudan Ethiopia Bolivia Guatemala Slovenia Comoros Puerto Rico Nepal Paraguay Mozambique Qatar North Macedonia Armenia Nigeria Lithuania Latvia Central African Republic Saint Pierre and Miquelon Mayotte Sri Lanka Curacao Palestinian Territory Trinidad and Tobago Azerbaijan New Zealand Belize Equatorial Guinea Saint Martin Cuba El Salvador Iceland Kazakhstan Sierra Leone Zimbabwe Myanmar Saint Kitts and Nevis Chad Namibia Guyana Zambia Kyrgyzstan Antigua and Barbuda Guernsey Vatican City Mongolia Slovakia Guam Barbados Turks and Caicos Islands Malta Gibraltar Monaco Estonia Bermuda Guinea-Bissau Gambia Netherlands Antilles Laos Belarus Niger Jordan Netherlands Flag Meaning & Details 56 VISITORS FROM HERE! Netherlands Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of red (bright vermilion top), white, and blue (cobalt) similar to the flag of Luxembourg, which uses a lighter blue and is longer the colors were derived from those of WILLIAM I, Prince of Orange, who led the Dutch Revolt against Spanish sovereignty in the latter half of the 16th century originally the upper band was orange, but because its dye tended to turn red over time, the red shade was eventually made the permanent color the banner is perhaps the oldest tricolor in continuous use
Learn more about Netherlands »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook