France Vietnam United States Canada Belgium Switzerland Germany Reunion Morocco New Caledonia United Kingdom Algeria Australia Tunisia Italy Netherlands Spain Japan China Thailand Taiwan Guadeloupe Russia French Polynesia Singapore Luxembourg Martinique Brazil South Korea French Guiana Madagascar India Portugal Cote D'Ivoire Hong Kong Senegal Indonesia Sweden Mexico Norway Poland Malaysia Lebanon Mauritius Romania Czech Republic Cambodia Turkey Denmark Ireland Israel Ukraine Argentina Philippines United Arab Emirates Greece Finland Austria Egypt Hungary Colombia Monaco New Zealand Cameroon Laos Peru Haiti Bulgaria Kyrgyzstan Chile Saudi Arabia South Africa Costa Rica Gabon Mali Benin Democratic Republic of the Congo Venezuela Mayotte Burkina Faso Ecuador Djibouti Serbia Slovakia Togo Lithuania Dominican Republic Qatar Estonia Moldova Latvia Panama Cyprus Republic of the Congo Andorra Pakistan Slovenia Saint Pierre and Miquelon Jordan Bolivia Belarus Iceland Malta Iran Georgia Vanuatu Nigeria El Salvador Macao Kazakhstan Kuwait Ghana Croatia Myanmar Bosnia and Herzegovina Iraq Kenya Uruguay Sri Lanka Puerto Rico Bangladesh North Macedonia Yemen Bahrain Burundi Armenia Mauritania Saint Barthelemy Seychelles Azerbaijan Albania Oman Guatemala Uzbekistan Saint Martin Wallis and Futuna Cabo Verde Paraguay Guinea Angola Mongolia Nicaragua Syria Jamaica Netherlands Antilles Montenegro Equatorial Guinea Tanzania Bahamas Niger Comoros Palestinian Territory Mozambique Vatican City Zambia Maldives Afghanistan Uganda Curacao Sudan Nepal Rwanda Turkmenistan Chad British Virgin Islands Trinidad and Tobago Belize Sint Maarten Dominica Central African Republic Somalia Liechtenstein Barbados Brunei Darussalam Libya Honduras Cuba Micronesia Jersey San Marino Lesotho Turks and Caicos Islands Gibraltar Bhutan Guam Namibia Saint Lucia Suriname Papua New Guinea Ethiopia Faroe Islands Palau Netherlands Flag Meaning & Details 1,236 VISITORS FROM HERE! Netherlands Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of red (bright vermilion top), white, and blue (cobalt) similar to the flag of Luxembourg, which uses a lighter blue and is longer the colors were derived from those of WILLIAM I, Prince of Orange, who led the Dutch Revolt against Spanish sovereignty in the latter half of the 16th century originally the upper band was orange, but because its dye tended to turn red over time, the red shade was eventually made the permanent color the banner is perhaps the oldest tricolor in continuous use
Learn more about Netherlands »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook