Swallowtail (flag)
In flag terminology, a swallowtail is either
- a V-shaped cut in a flag that causes the flag to end in two points at the fly; or
- any flag which has this V-shaped cut.
The name comes from the forked tail that is a common feature of the swallow species of birds.
-
Nautical signal flag for "A"
Variants
Double-pointed
Common in Scandinavia, this swallowtail flag contains a vertical section in the centre of the fly.
Swallowtail with tongue
Also common in the Nordic countries, the swallowtail flag contains a third tail (the "tongue") between the other two tails.
Triangular swallowtail
This is the shape of the United States' state flag of Ohio, as well as some burgees, private signals and pennants of the International Code of Signals (ICS) use a triangular swallowtail shape.
-
Burgee of the Detroit Yacht Club
-
International signal flag for "group"
Guidon
A guidon is the general name given to a small swallowtail flag. Guidons are used to represent military units and are displayed on vehicles attached to a particular unit. In some countries (such as the United States), guidons do not necessarily have a swallow tail.
The military use of the guidon originated from the flags used by cavalry units in Europe. A variant of the guidon – the hussar cut – was used by German cavalry regiments. Instead of a straight V-shaped cut, the swallowtail in a hussar cut flag was curved.
-
Guidon of the USA 7th Cavalry Regiment (19th century)
-
Prussian cavalry standard with hussar cut (18th century)