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Flag of Mexico

Mexico
Flag of Mexico.svg
Use National flag and ensign FIAV normal.svg
Proportion 4:7
Adopted September 16, 1968
Design A vertical tricolor of green, white and red with the National Coat of Arms centered on the white band.
Mexico (variants)
Mexican Presidential Standard.svg
Proportion 4:7
Adopted De facto
Mexican States Standard.svg
Variant flag of Mexico (variants)
Mexican flag corbata.png
Variant flag of Mexico (variants)
Name Cravat

The flag of Mexico (Spanish: Bandera de México) is a vertical tricolor of green, white, and red with the national coat of arms charged in the center of the white stripe. While the meaning of the colors has changed over time, these three colors were adopted by Mexico following independence from Spain during the country's War of Independence, and subsequent First Mexican Empire. The form of the coat of arms was most recently revised in 1968, but the overall design has been used since 1821, when the First National Flag was created.

Red, white, and green are the colors of the national liberation army in Mexico. The central emblem is the Mexican coat of arms, based on the Aztec symbol for Tenochtitlan (now Mexico City), the center of the Aztec empire. It recalls the legend of an eagle sitting on a cactus that signaled to the Aztecs where to found their city, Tenochtitlan. A ribbon in the national colors is at the bottom of the coat of arms. Throughout history, the flag has changed several times, as the design of the coat of arms and the length-width ratios of the flag have been modified. However, the coat of arms has had the same features throughout: an eagle, holding a serpent in its talon, is perched on top of a prickly pear cactus; the cactus is situated on a rock that rises above a lake. The coat of arms is derived from an Aztec legend that their gods told them to build a city where they spot an eagle on a nopal eating a serpent, which is now Mexico City.


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Wikipedia

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