Millions of Azerbaijanis around the world celebrate the 106th anniversary of the tricolor Azerbaijani flag, a state symbol of the country and the legacy of the first democratic republic in the Muslim and Turkic world.
“Our flag is our source of pride. Our flag is our soul, our heart,” Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev said in 2010 at the inauguration ceremony of National Flag Square, located along the Caspian Sea promenade in Azerbaijan’s capital Baku.
On Friday, President Aliyev visited the newly renovated National Flag Square, where he raised the national flag on one of the world’s tallest flagpoles, standing 191 meters high.
Following renovations, the National Flag Museum, one of the core elements of the flag square, reopened with a renewed design and richer collection, featuring 431 items. The state-of-the-art facility includes an exhibition called the “Victory Gallery” dedicated to the 44-day Patriotic War. This gallery displays photographs of President Aliyev raising the State Flag in the liberated territories, alongside images from the military parade in Khankendi, the Karabakh (Garabagh) region of Azerbaijan in 2023.
One of the six exhibition halls of the museum focuses on the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic and the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) periods. It showcases the National Flag raised in the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic's parliament on December 7, 1918, alongside historical photographs, currency, postage stamps from that time, and flags, coats of arms, constitutions, banknotes, and postage stamps from the former Azerbaijan SSR.
On November 9, 1918, following the collapse of the Russian empire and shortly after the formation of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic – the predecessor of the modern-day Republic of Azerbaijan, the central government ordered to change an earlier version of the flag, which had a white crescent and a white eight-pointed star on a red background. The design of the flag was changed to three horizontal bands in equal size, of blue, red, and green colors, with a white crescent and an eight-pointed star in the center. The decision was ratified unanimously on November 9, 1918, and paved the way for the adoption of an all-new tricolor flag of the newborn democratic republic.
The independent Azerbaijan Democratic Republic existed for 23 months before it was occupied by the Bolsheviks on April 28, 1920, and later incorporated into the Soviet Union. During Soviet rule, the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic adopted eight different flags with the first in 1921 and the last in 1952. The eighth and final flag depicted a horizontal bottom blue and red upper band. A converged image of a hammer and sickle, as well as a five-point star, which were the official symbols of the Soviet Union, was added to the left upper corner.
The fall of the red Soviet flag took place in 1991 when Azerbaijan regained its sovereignty and brought back the national flag, nicknamed “Üçrəngli Bayraq” (the tricolor flag).
In 2009, President Aliyev signed a decree making the ninth of November a public holiday, called State Flag Day, to commemorate the country’s history and pay respects to a flag that withstood the tests of time.
The uppermost band of blue on the flag symbolizes the Turkic origin of the Azerbaijani nation. The middle band of red is symbolic of modern society, democracy and progress. The green band represents Azerbaijan’s connection to Islam, the predominant religion in a country of 10 million.
Some historians and researchers are divided over the reasons why an eight-pointed star and a crescent were put on the flag of Azerbaijan.
While the crescent and star are acknowledged as the signs of Islam, Fatali Khan Khoyski, the first prime minister of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, wrote that eight points of the star testify to the eight letters in the word “Azerbaijan” as written in Arabic. Others claim the star is also a symbol of Turkic ideology, which together with the crescent creates a complete Turkic identification of the Azerbaijani nation. Eight points symbolize the eight branches of Turkic peoples.
Historically, each of the eight points of the star has its own meaning, which is explained by eight different values: Turkism, Islamism, modernism, statehood, democracy, equality, Azerbaijanism, and culture. The star was widely used in the Azerbaijani architectural style.
Specifications for the tricolor are enshrined in Clause 23 of the country’s constitution. The flag is considered one of the state’s symbols, alongside the state anthem and emblem.
This year's celebrations of State Flag Day come on the heels of the fourth anniversary of Azerbaijan's victory in the Second Karabakh War. On November 8, 2020, the Azerbaijani forces liberated the strategic Shusha city in the country's Karabakh region from decades-long Armenian occupation. Liberation of the city had a crucial impact on the surrender of Armenia's forces and the signing of a tripartite statement on November 10, 2020, which ended the 44-day war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the latter's Karabakh region.
Armenia and Azerbaijan had been in an armed conflict for nearly 30 years over the Karabakh (Garabagh) region, which is an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan. Armenia launched full-blown military aggression against Azerbaijan following the Soviet Union’s dissolution in 1991. The bloody war lasted until a ceasefire in 1994 and saw Armenia occupying 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized territories. Over 30,000 Azerbaijanis were killed, and one million were expelled from those lands in a brutal ethnic cleansing campaign conducted by Armenia.
Although the United Nations Security Council adopted four resolutions in 1993 demanding the immediate withdrawal of the occupying forces from Azerbaijani lands and the return of internally displaced Azerbaijanis to their ancestral lands, Armenia failed to comply with all four legally binding documents.
On September 27, 2020, the decades-old conflict took a violent turn after Armenia’s forces deployed in the occupied Azerbaijani lands shelled military positions and civilian settlements of Azerbaijan. During the counter-attack operations that lasted 44 days, Azerbaijani forces liberated over 300 settlements, including the cities of Jabrayil, Fuzuli, Zangilan, Gubadli, and Shusha, from nearly 30 years of illegal Armenian occupation. The war ended in a tripartite statement signed on November 10, 2020, by Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia. Under the statement, Armenia also returned the occupied Aghdam, Kalbajar, and Lachin districts to Azerbaijan.
President Aliyev hoisted the Azerbaijani flag in all the liberated lands, saying it would wave forever in those territories.
In September 2023, after successful local anti-terror measures of the Azerbaijan Armed Forces in the Karabakh region, Baku restored sovereignty over the region's entire territory taking Khankendi, Aghdara, Khojavand, and Asgaran back under control. In October, President Aliyev raised the State Flag of Azerbaijan in these settlements.
On November 8, 2023, the third anniversary of Victory Day commemorating the triumph of Azerbaijan in the 44-day war of 2020, was celebrated in Khankendi.