DENMARK
The Danish flag is the first Scandinavian flag to be
established but many Danes also claim it to be the oldest national flag
in the world.
According to legend the Dannebrogen (Flag of the Danes)
fell from heaven during the battle of Lyndanisse in Estonia in 1219. As
long as the Danish bishop kept his arms up in the air praying to God,
the flag did not hit the ground. Thanks to the flag the Danes were victorious
over the heathens. This dramatic scene was described by the Franciscan
monk Peder Olsen in 1527 and it became the motive of a famous patriotic
painting by C.A. Lorentzen (in 1809) that all Danes know from their history
books.
The same flag that was victoriously brought back to
Denmark tied to a ship's mast, was lost by King Hans in battle in 1500.
59 years later King Fredrik II won it back in another battle and had it
hung up in the Slesvig Cathedral in present day Germany.
The first depiction of Dannebrogen is on Valdemar IV
Atterdag's coat of arms in 1390. Historians believe that he was the first
Danish king to use the Dannebrog. It is believed that he first saw the
red flag with the white cross, that was then the banner of the Holy Roman
Empire, when he was growing up at the imperial court. The design goes
back to Emperor Constantine's dream of a cross before the battle in 312
in which he became absolute monarch of the Roman Empire and converted
to Christianity. His vision of the cross (with the words "under this
sign you will be victorious") was used by the Portuguese Order of
Christ in 1318 and by others in their crusades against the Moors. The
same design and phrase also appeared on Portuguese coins and was later
copied by Christian IV on Danish coins.
Today the Danish flag is honoured on Valdemar Day June
15 in commemoration of the day in 1219 when the flag fell from the sky,
as well as, the reunification with Southern Jutland in 1920. Danes love
their flag and fly it at their homes and even decorate Christmas trees
with miniature versions. Weddings, anniversaries and birthdays are traditionally
marked with the national flag and it is not unusual for birthday cakes
to be decorated with small paper flags.
Scandinavian Press, Issue 2, 1998