Greece United States Germany Cyprus Singapore Ireland United Kingdom Belgium France Italy Sweden Canada Australia Turkey Netherlands Russia Brazil Indonesia Switzerland Bulgaria Poland Spain Serbia Romania India Mexico Hungary Norway Austria Japan Albania Saudi Arabia North Macedonia Finland Ukraine Argentina Czech Republic United Arab Emirates Egypt South Korea Portugal South Africa Denmark Chile Slovakia Reunion Lithuania Qatar Israel Thailand Malaysia Peru Pakistan Algeria Colombia Luxembourg Morocco Iraq Philippines Georgia Taiwan Venezuela Croatia Monaco Nigeria China Hong Kong Ecuador Jordan Kuwait Ghana New Zealand Tunisia Slovenia Belarus Bosnia and Herzegovina Vietnam Latvia Bolivia Estonia Lebanon Guatemala Palestinian Territory Moldova Benin Botswana Kazakhstan Malta Bangladesh Azerbaijan Yemen Libya Oman Bahrain Honduras Puerto Rico Cote D'Ivoire Sri Lanka Montenegro El Salvador Dominican Republic Uruguay Armenia Costa Rica Panama Senegal Uzbekistan Nicaragua Afghanistan Zambia Paraguay Kenya Trinidad and Tobago Jamaica Democratic Republic of the Congo Mauritius Sudan Iceland Syria Mozambique Maldives Ethiopia Bahamas Tanzania Kyrgyzstan Uganda Cambodia Nepal Myanmar New Caledonia Mongolia Zimbabwe Guadeloupe Iran Brunei Darussalam Mayotte Cameroon Madagascar Angola Gibraltar Togo Haiti Martinique Mauritania Namibia Kosovo Cuba Greenland Jersey Liechtenstein U.S. Virgin Islands Guernsey Seychelles Lesotho Faroe Islands Turks and Caicos Islands Bhutan Comoros Saint Lucia Djibouti Turkmenistan Somalia Sint Maarten Cabo Verde Aland Islands Barbados Northern Mariana Islands Sao Tome and Principe French Polynesia Sierra Leone French Guiana Equatorial Guinea Burkina Faso Aruba Rwanda Guyana Tajikistan Macao British Virgin Islands Curacao Austria Flag Meaning & Details 476 VISITORS FROM HERE! Austria Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of red (top), white, and red the flag design is certainly one of the oldest - if not the oldest - national banners in the world according to tradition, in 1191, following a fierce battle in the Third Crusade, Duke Leopold V of Austria's white tunic became completely blood-spattered upon removal of his wide belt or sash, a white band was revealed the red-white-red color combination was subsequently adopted as his banner
Learn more about Austria »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook