Japan United States Taiwan China Singapore Australia South Korea Germany Canada Thailand United Kingdom Vietnam Philippines Hong Kong France Belgium Indonesia Mexico Malaysia Netherlands India Brazil Russia Italy Spain New Zealand Switzerland Sweden Ireland Turkey Myanmar Cambodia Poland Finland Hungary Austria Ukraine Czech Republic Norway United Arab Emirates Romania Colombia Denmark Argentina Saudi Arabia Chile Portugal Peru Israel Bolivia Mongolia Greece Guam Egypt Sri Lanka Laos Venezuela Ecuador Slovakia Slovenia Croatia Lithuania Algeria Estonia Serbia Morocco Nepal Pakistan Kenya Macao Bangladesh South Africa Belarus Qatar Luxembourg Bulgaria Latvia Guatemala Paraguay Puerto Rico Moldova Georgia Costa Rica Tunisia Uganda Ghana Bosnia and Herzegovina Tanzania Zambia Fiji Kuwait Albania Iraq Bhutan El Salvador Papua New Guinea Jordan Palestinian Territory Senegal Palau Bahrain Dominican Republic Lebanon Kazakhstan Uruguay Oman Honduras Jamaica Nigeria Tonga Rwanda Madagascar Kyrgyzstan Panama Malta Iceland Botswana Azerbaijan North Macedonia Armenia Cote D'Ivoire Haiti Mozambique Namibia Djibouti Malawi Mali Nicaragua Uzbekistan Cyprus Northern Mariana Islands Maldives Libya Cabo Verde Syria Andorra Micronesia Guinea Samoa North Korea New Caledonia Zimbabwe Reunion Trinidad and Tobago French Polynesia Mauritius Brunei Darussalam Seychelles South Sudan Mauritania Antigua and Barbuda Vanuatu Monaco Solomon Islands British Virgin Islands French Guiana Angola Democratic Republic of the Congo Timor-Leste Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Aruba Marshall Islands Gambia Jersey Gabon Aland Islands Sudan Liechtenstein Greenland Dominica Cameroon Montenegro Burkina Faso Hungary Flag Meaning & Details 92 VISITORS FROM HERE! Hungary Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of red (top), white, and green the flag dates to the national movement of the 18th and 19th centuries, and fuses the medieval colors of the Hungarian coat of arms with the revolutionary tricolor form of the French flag folklore attributes virtues to the colors: red for strength, white for faithfulness, and green for hope alternatively, the red is seen as being for the blood spilled in defense of the land, white for freedom, and green for the pasturelands that make up so much of the country
Learn more about Hungary »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook