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Austria

2011
50 x 50 x 3.6 cm. 28 kg - glass merged in multilayer with inclusion of pigments

color-separation-wide

According to legend, the Austrian flag dates back to the First Crusade in 1191.
During a glorious combat, the Duke of Babenberg, Leopold V, is said to have slaughtered so many enemies that his tunic was covered in blood, except at the level of the belt which had preserved a large white band. He took off his tunic and placed it on his spear as a banner, to rally his troops.
The three horizontal bands of red-white-red were adopted in 1786, at the time of the creation of the Austria-Hungary "dual monarchy", or Austro-Hungarian Empire, consisting of the Empire of Austria and the Kingdom of Hungary, united by the Habsburg-Lorraine family during the reign of Francis Joseph I.
Subsequently, the white band was loaded with various badges and emblems according to the times and different political changes. At the time of the birth of the first Austrian republic in 1915, when the Habsburg Empire gave way to a republic, only the three stripes were chosen as the national emblem.

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Finally, they will definitively reappear on May 1, 1945, after the period of attachment to Germany (1938-1945),
during which Austria replaced its flag with a swastika.

Official name: Republic of Austria
Continent: Europe | Capital: Vienna
Area: 83 858 km2 | Population (2011) : 8 217 280 habitants
Official language: German | Currency: euro
Border countries: Germany, Hungary, Italy, Liechtenstein, Slovakia, Slovenia, Czech Republic
National holiday: October 26
Member of the United Nations: December 14, 1945
Member of the UNESCO: August 13, 1948

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