Singapore Ukraine United States China United Kingdom Germany Philippines Canada Australia Indonesia Turkey South Africa Brazil India Malaysia Russia Poland France Ireland Netherlands Nigeria Hong Kong Greece Italy Kenya Sweden Czech Republic Spain Pakistan Austria Norway Finland Japan Mexico Vietnam Portugal New Zealand Denmark South Korea Switzerland Kazakhstan Tanzania Peru Iran Romania Belgium Serbia Bangladesh Colombia Croatia Saudi Arabia Lithuania Israel Taiwan United Arab Emirates Slovakia Argentina Bulgaria Ecuador Egypt Hungary Thailand Chile Uzbekistan Malawi Estonia Nepal Azerbaijan Iraq Latvia Slovenia Malta Ghana Belarus Sri Lanka Morocco Macao Botswana Zimbabwe Uganda Puerto Rico Luxembourg Jamaica Bosnia and Herzegovina Cambodia Namibia Maldives Sierra Leone Trinidad and Tobago Lebanon Algeria Albania Barbados Lesotho Guyana Ethiopia Jordan Cyprus Oman Iceland Costa Rica Moldova Mauritius North Macedonia Eswatini Cameroon Venezuela Rwanda Uruguay Qatar El Salvador Bahamas Georgia Kuwait Armenia Bahrain Guatemala Myanmar Montenegro Palestinian Territory Zambia Kosovo Brunei Darussalam Tunisia Dominican Republic Libya Afghanistan Timor-Leste Guam Togo Sudan Benin Gibraltar Bolivia Liberia Saint Lucia Kyrgyzstan Grenada Laos Paraguay Cayman Islands Madagascar Somalia Fiji Vanuatu Faroe Islands Senegal Turkmenistan Cuba Saint Kitts and Nevis Panama Seychelles Yemen Papua New Guinea Gambia Bhutan Dominica Antigua and Barbuda Honduras Syria Martinique Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Greenland Haiti Nicaragua Jersey South Sudan Mauritania Northern Mariana Islands Isle of Man Cote D'Ivoire Guernsey Aruba Monaco Democratic Republic of the Congo Anguilla Tajikistan Marshall Islands Mongolia Palau Burkina Faso Netherlands Flag Meaning & Details 405 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