United States United Kingdom China France Canada Brazil Germany Australia Greece India Spain Italy Netherlands Japan Russia Israel Mexico Turkey Portugal Ireland Iran Philippines Sweden South Korea Taiwan Poland Belgium Norway Switzerland Hong Kong Malaysia Denmark Finland Austria Colombia New Zealand Uruguay Thailand Indonesia Argentina Singapore South Africa Chile Hungary Egypt Saudi Arabia Pakistan Romania Czech Republic Peru Croatia Slovakia Ukraine United Arab Emirates Ecuador Puerto Rico Vietnam Nigeria Slovenia Bulgaria Lithuania Lebanon Kenya Iceland Venezuela Serbia Cyprus North Macedonia Costa Rica Iraq Montenegro Qatar Bangladesh Latvia Morocco Estonia Algeria Trinidad and Tobago Belarus Macao Jordan Georgia Nepal Moldova Sri Lanka Tunisia Panama Jamaica Ethiopia Albania Guatemala Kuwait Bolivia Kazakhstan Malta Luxembourg Oman Dominican Republic Libya Ghana Nicaragua Guam Bosnia and Herzegovina Bahrain Isle of Man Mongolia El Salvador Papua New Guinea Bermuda Azerbaijan Cambodia Bahamas Sudan Barbados Myanmar Cabo Verde Palestinian Territory Cote D'Ivoire Angola Jersey Guadeloupe Tanzania Somalia Kyrgyzstan Zimbabwe U.S. Virgin Islands Brunei Darussalam Guernsey Uzbekistan Sint Maarten Aruba Haiti Martinique Rwanda Saint Kitts and Nevis Caribbean Netherlands Mozambique British Virgin Islands Bhutan Curacao Suriname Madagascar Liechtenstein Gibraltar Guyana Zambia Armenia Cuba Botswana Afghanistan Fiji Malawi Namibia Reunion Mauritius Cayman Islands Paraguay Honduras Syria Senegal 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