Prehistory , ancient bronze flag found at
Shahdad, c. 2400 BC. This flag is one of the oldest in human history. The oldest flag found in Iran is the
Bronze Age Shahdad Standard, found in
Shahdad,
Kerman province, dating back to , made of bronze. It features a seated man and a kneeling woman facing each other, with a star in between. This iconography can be found in other Bronze Age pieces of art in the area as well.
Achaemenid Empire The Old Persian word for "banner, standard" was
drafša- (
Avestan drafša-, Middle Persian
drafš, cognate with Sanskrit
drapsá-).
Xenophon in
Cyropaedia (7.1.4) describes the standard of
Artaxerxes II at
Cunaxa as "a golden eagle, with outspread wings, borne aloft on a long spear-shaft", the same banner recorded to be used by
Cyrus the Great. According to
Herodotus (9.59), each Persian army division had its own standard, and "all officers had banners over their tents" (Xenophon, 8.5.13). One such banner, a square plaque in
saltire, is depicted on a Greek vase, the so-called "Douris cup" held by the
Louvre. A similar design is known from an
Urartian bronze disk from
Altıntepe. Similar square plaques on poles are known from six of the audience scenes of the Throne Hall relief at Persepolis. The
Alexander Mosaic of
Pompeii, a Roman-era copy of a Hellenistic painting dated , also shows the royal Persian standard., depicted as a rectangular plaque, possibly originally in purple, with a dark red border with yellow dots. In the field, a golden bird is only partially preserved. The "royal falcon" of Persia (
varəγna) represented
farr 'glory', while the eagle was associated with the Achaemenid dynasty itself. A square tile representing a miniature (12 cm2) banner was discovered at
Persepolis in 1948. The tile is made of Egyptian blue frit and likely represents
Ancient Egyptian
Horus, but in the Persian context suggests local association with the Avestan
varəγna or the royal eagle of the Achaemenids.
Sasanian Empire during the
Seleucid era.
Seljuk Empire Various emblems and banners have been recorded to be used by the
Seljuks in different periods. Early Seljuks were using their traditional emblems, but they gradually adopted local Muslim emblems and banners. The official flag of the empire was most probably a black flag, similar to the flag of the
Abbasid Caliphate. The flag was decorated with emblems, which were either superimposed over it or was placed above the flag. This black flag was traditionally presented to the Seljuk sovereigns by the Abbasid caliphs.
Ghaznavid dynasty The Turkic
Ghaznavid dynasty were invested in promoting Iranian culture. They are known to have displayed a number of heraldic emblems that harked back to pre-Islamic Iran, including the Sun and Lion motif, as well as the Griffin motif. Their banners appear to have shown chequered motifs.
Safavid Empire , 1578.
Secaatname (1586) 's visit to
Versailles, August 1715|332x332px By the time the
Safavids created a unified state and promoted
Shiʿism as the national creed, the
lion and sun had become a familiar sign everywhere—on copper coins, on banners, and on artworks. although various ʿalams and banners were employed by the Safavids, the lion and sun symbol had become by the time of
Shah Abbas the recognised emblem of Iran. The association may originally have been based on a learned interpretation of the
Shahnameh's references to "the Sun of Iran" and "the Moon of the
Turanians/Turks." As noted earlier, the Sasanians had called their king “the Sun of the East” and the
Roman emperor "the Moon of the West." The evidence of the Shahnameh was certainly well known to the Safavid shahs. Since the crescent moon had been adopted as the dynastic and ultimately national emblem of the
Ottoman sultans, who were the new sovereigns of “Rūm,” the Safavids of Persia, needing to have a dynastic and national emblem of their own, chose the lion and sun motif.
Afsharid era Nader Shah consciously avoided the using the colour green, as green was associated with
Shia Islam and the
Safavid dynasty. The two imperial standards were placed on the right of the square already mentioned: one of them was in stripes of red, blue, and white, and the other of red, blue, white, and yellow, without any other ornament: though the old standards required 12 men to move them, the shah lengthened their staffs, and made them yet heavier; he also put new colours of silk upon them, the one red and yellow striped, the other yellow edged with red: they were made of such an enormous size, to prevent their being carried off by the enemy, except by an entire defeat. The regimental colours were a narrow slip of silk, sloped to a point, some were red, some white, and some striped. Navy Admiral flag being a white ground with a red Persian Sword in the middle.
Flags {{gallery items|width=180
Zand era The state flag of
Zand Iran was a white triangular pennant with a green border and a gold lion and sun in the centre. Another version shown below included the same design but with green and red.
Flags Early Qajar era Few sources directly describe the national flag during
Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar's reign.
Gholam Hossein Afzal ol-Molk refers to the
Beyraq Qapuq ('execution flag') of the
Naserid period as originating from Agha Mohammad Khan's time. This
pennon flag is red and displays the lion and sun motif with a sword, although it is unlikely that the emblem resembled that of Agha Mohammad Khan's time given the sword-less design on the coins of this era. Several modern sources attribute a square flag with a red background and a pale yellow circle in the center, featuring a lion and a sun motif with a sword, to the period of Agha Mohammad Khan. The only visible source for this design is an unidentified portrait of Agha Mohammad Khan, where such a banner is present next to him. This painting was featured on the cover of the 1992 book ''Les Rois oubliés: L'épopée de la dynasty Kadjare'', by
Ali Mirza Qajar (grandson of
Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar). Moreover, the painting was also photographed at a Qajar family gathering at Chateau de Bonmont,
Cheserex, Switzerland in 2003. In contradistinction, various contemporary and modern sources provide more detailed descriptions of Iranian flags and the development of the lion and sun motif during
Fath-Ali Shah Qajar's rule, particularly in military contexts.
Colonel Gaspard Drouville, a French officer who served as a military instructor for the Iranian government after the signing of the
Treaty of Finckenstein, authored a two-volume travelogue that offers additional information on Iranian flags and standards. Drouville expounds that in 1813, Fath-Ali Shah Qajar and
Abbas Mirza attended a royal inspection of the
regular infantry in
Azarbaijan to personally confer each standard to their respective corps. These flags included the lion and sun motif, a date or number pertaining to the unit, and the inscription:
"Sultan ibn Sultan Fath-Ali Shah Qajar" (Sultan son of Sultan Fath-Ali Shah Qajar), in reference to
Abbas Mirza's title. An illustration by the French battle painter
Hippolyte Bellangé depicts Abbas Mirza reviewing Iranian regular troops. The infantry corps carries a standard with a spearhead finial bearing a couchant lion and sun with a sword, similar to the cavalry flag of the Nezam lancers depicted by Drouville. However, as the work dates to 1835, two years after Abbas Mirza's death, the flag's design may be an artistic oversight. In his accounts of the Russo-Persian war,
Captain Yermolov, the Russian commander-in-chief in the Caucasus, documented the Iranian military in detail. One excerpt from his notes provides a vivid portrayal of a Nezam drummer, soldier, and officer carrying a Sarbaz infantry military banner dated to 1817. This banner, which shares many similarities with contemporary European regimental flags, features a lion and sun motif devoid of a sword within a white
lozenge accented by a golden border. The light blue banner boasts a flagpole crowned by the silver
Hand of Ali. at the
Hermitage Museum. A painting, believed to be the work of
Allahverdi Afshar between 1814 and 1817, which adorned the walls of Abbas Mirza's
Ojan castle portrays the Iranian triumph at the
Battle of Sultanabad on 13 February 1812. The painting exhibits Persian troops carrying banners of Napoleonic style, featuring the passant lion and sun equipped with a sword. No contemporary sources have made any other indications of a sword wielded by the lion until the reign of
Mohammad Shah. However, Zoka mentions the inscription of a coin from the
Urmia mint, dated 1833 (1249 AH), in which a couchant lion is depicted holding a sword. According to Zoka, these sources prove that the earliest representation of the sword-wielding lion and sun pre-dates the reign of Mohammad Shah and was likely institutionalised in the latter years of Fath-Ali Shah's reign.
Alexis Soltykoff's Voyage en Perse includes an illustration depicting a standing lion wielding a sword. The painting is titled ''Entrée de l'ambassade de Perse a St. Petersbourg'' ('Entrance of the Persian Embassy to
St. Petersburg') and shows the arrival of
Mirza Abolhassan Khan Ilchi, then the Iranian ambassador to Russia, in 1838. The image features a Persian standard-bearer holding a rectangular flag with a lion passant, holding a curved sword in front of the setting sun. Atop the flagpole is the
Hand of Ali finial. The painting was included in Soltykoff's book, which was published in 1851, several years after the events it depicts. French orientalist
Louis Dupeux stated that one of the privileges enjoyed by the Shah of Iran was the right to "raise" several flags. Dubeux suggests that
Mohammad Shah had two flags. He describes one of these flags as displaying the
Zulfiqar while the other depicted a couchant lion and sun motif. While Iranian flags and military banners were largely uniform and similar in design by Mohammad Shah's reign, ''Ahmad Naqash's'' 1860 oil painting depicting the successful Iranian siege of the fort of
Ghurian in 1837 serves as a contradictory source of information. Several noteworthy discrepancies arise. Firstly, the use of pennon banners is unusual as square and rectangular flags were more prominently used in Iran and adopted by the military at that time. Secondly, the sword-less lion and sun motif depicted in the painting is outdated. Thirdly, the white and green colour combination contradicts contemporary literature describing military banners and standards as being red or blue. According to Zoka, the painter may have relied on local designs as the work likely originated from
Isfahan or
Shiraz, where forts in the provinces often raised flags different from those in
Tehran. Zoka also suggests that the Herat expedition's army could have reused dated standards predating the new designs. There was also a naval ensign which had a red and green border and a civil ensign which looked the same as the naval ensign but without the lion and sun in the middle.
Flags Post-Constitutional Revolution The first version of the modern Iranian tricolour was adopted during the
Iranian Constitutional Revolution in the 14 August 1905 constitution. The
Supplementary Fundamental Laws of 7 October 1907 described the flag as a tricolour of green, white, and red, with a lion and sun emblem in the middle. A decree dated 4 September 1910 specified the exact details of the emblem, including the shape of the lion's tail and the position and the size of the lion, the sword, and the sun. There were three variants of the flag in use. The
state flag was a tricolour with the lion and sun emblem in the centre. The
national flag and
civil ensign was a plain tricolour with no emblem, similar to an inverted
Hungarian flag (post-1957). The
naval ensign and
war flag was similar to the state flag, but the emblem was surrounded by a wreath and surmounted by a crown. All three flags had a 1:3 ratio. Lion and Sun flag design in use during the late Pahlavi era (1970s) The flag was modified twice during the
Pahlavi era. In 1933, the colours of the flag were darkened and the design of the emblem was changed. The sun's facial features were removed and the
Kiani Crown on the naval ensign was replaced with the
Pahlavi Crown. In 1964, the ratio was changed from 1:3 to 4:7 and the emblem on the naval ensign was shrunk to fit entirely within the white stripe. Following the
Iranian Revolution, the
Interim Government of Iran removed the crown from the naval ensign. The old state and national flags remained unchanged until 29 July 1980, when the modern Iranian flag was adopted. However, the post-revolutionary Iranian government had viewed the Lion and Sun symbol as representing the "oppressive
Westernising monarchy" that had to be replaced, despite the emblem's traditional
Shi'a meanings and the lion's association with
Ali, the first
Imam of the Shi'a. For that reason, the name of the
Red Lion and Sun Society was changed to
Red Crescent Society. use the
Lion and Sun flag Currently, the
Lion and Sun flag is used by many Iranian opposition groups as a protest against the Islamic Republic. Some political groups in Iran, including monarchists, continue to use it as well. In
Los Angeles, California and other cities with large Iranian expatriate communities, the Lion and Sun, as a distinguishing marker, appears on Iranian flags and souvenirs to an extent that far surpasses its display during the years of monarchy in its homeland, where the plain tricolour was usually used even prior to the revolution. After the Islamic Revolution in Iran and the replacement of the lion and sun flag with the new flag, new designs of this flag were still presented. ==Historical flags==