Flag of the Cherokee Nation
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Adopted | October 9, 1978, September 9, 1989 (modified) |
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Designed by | Stanley John |
The flag of the Cherokee Nation was adopted by the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma on October 9, 1978.
Background
The
Design
A flag for the new nation was designed by Stanley John, and approved by the Cherokee Tribal Council on October 9, 1978. The flag has an orange field with the "Great Seal of the Cherokee Nation" at its center. The seal is surrounded by seven yellow stars with seven points. Each of the stars points toward the star in the center of the seal.[citation needed] The seven-pointed stars represent the seven clans of the Cherokee.[1]
The current version comes the flag being modified in a resolution passed by the council on September 9, 1989.[1] Then, a black seven-pointed star was added to the upper right-hand corner of the flag to represent the light that went out with the deaths of those who perished on the Trail of Tears.[2] The official flag also has a green-and-black rope edging.[1]
The Cherokee script in the central seal reads: "Tsa la gi yi A ye hli" (translation: "Cherokee Nation").[1]
Historic flags
Peace Flag
Oral tradition states that the earliest Cherokee flag was the Cherokee Peace Flag, which had seven red stars with seven points, arranged in the form of the Big Dipper asterism on a white field.[3] Tradition also states the Cherokee War Flag was the same design as the Peace Flag but with the colors inverted.[1]
Confederate Flags
In the 1860s, Cherokee Confederate troops, part of the
-
National Color of the 1st Cherokee Mounted Rifles
Current
The flag used by the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma is not the same as that used Eastern Band of Cherokee, as their seals differ.[1]
See also
- Cherokee Clans
References
- ^ a b c d e f Cherokee Flags; Webmaster account; Rootsweb .com; on-line webpage; accessed July 2020
- ^ "Cherokee Nation website".
- ISBN 9780688029777.