United States Brazil Russia Canada United Kingdom Singapore France Germany India Spain Portugal Australia Italy Netherlands Sweden Mexico Argentina South Korea Ukraine Philippines Indonesia Nigeria Malaysia Pakistan Japan Ireland Norway Colombia Thailand Czech Republic Belgium Switzerland Venezuela Finland Poland Angola Turkey Peru New Zealand Chile South Africa Egypt Mozambique Saudi Arabia Kazakhstan Austria Croatia Vietnam Israel Ghana United Arab Emirates Romania Hong Kong Serbia Slovenia Greece Ecuador Denmark Belarus China Taiwan Hungary Kuwait Latvia Uruguay Iraq Bolivia Oman Trinidad and Tobago Uganda Estonia Algeria Bulgaria Qatar Sri Lanka Mongolia Libya Slovakia Lithuania Jamaica Kenya Azerbaijan Tunisia Guyana Puerto Rico Iceland Kyrgyzstan Dominican Republic Ethiopia Jordan Moldova Morocco Bosnia and Herzegovina Tanzania Brunei Darussalam Guatemala Lebanon Panama Cote D'Ivoire Malta Costa Rica Bangladesh Myanmar Botswana Cameroon Albania Georgia North Macedonia Isle of Man Sudan Cyprus Cambodia Nicaragua Honduras El Salvador Cabo Verde Uzbekistan Yemen Paraguay Aland Islands Reunion Luxembourg Namibia Saint Lucia Mauritius Zambia Nepal Bahrain Maldives Laos Timor-Leste Bermuda Suriname Belize Armenia Iran Haiti Netherlands Antilles French Guiana Sao Tome and Principe Dominica Somalia Liberia Barbados Lesotho Saint Martin Cuba Turks and Caicos Islands Fiji Curacao Comoros Guadeloupe Equatorial Guinea Palestinian Territory Senegal Afghanistan Saint Kitts and Nevis Madagascar Macao Bhutan Guernsey Andorra Cayman Islands Liechtenstein Antigua and Barbuda Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Albania Flag Meaning & Details 7 VISITORS FROM HERE! Albania Flag Flag Information red with a black two-headed eagle in the center the design is claimed to be that of 15th-century hero Georgi Kastrioti SKANDERBEG, who led a successful uprising against the Ottoman Turks that resulted in a short-lived independence for some Albanian regions (1443-78) an unsubstantiated explanation for the eagle symbol is the tradition that Albanians see themselves as descendants of the eagle they refer to themselves as "Shqiptare," which translates as "sons of the eagle"
Learn more about Albania »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook