United States France Spain Belgium Canada Germany Thailand United Kingdom Poland Russia Italy Netherlands Albania Sri Lanka Brazil Philippines Australia Estonia Denmark India Czech Republic Malaysia Finland Vietnam Ireland Singapore Mexico Indonesia Portugal Japan Hungary Slovakia Switzerland Romania Croatia Argentina Turkey Sweden Norway United Arab Emirates Greece South Korea Ukraine New Zealand Hong Kong Austria Taiwan South Africa Morocco Serbia Egypt Chile Slovenia Algeria Bulgaria Lithuania China Latvia Peru Bangladesh Colombia Qatar Bosnia and Herzegovina Myanmar Venezuela Honduras Israel Saudi Arabia Belarus Nepal Malta Tunisia Uruguay North Macedonia Pakistan Luxembourg Mauritius Reunion Moldova Bermuda Andorra New Caledonia Dominican Republic Montenegro Tonga Guernsey Georgia Ecuador Cambodia Fiji French Polynesia Laos Antigua and Barbuda Puerto Rico Kuwait Gibraltar Guadeloupe Cyprus Costa Rica Oman Barbados Guyana Nigeria Azerbaijan Armenia Jordan Panama El Salvador Bahrain Martinique Jamaica Kenya Guam Iceland Saint Lucia Montserrat Trinidad and Tobago Liechtenstein Mongolia Iraq Cote D'Ivoire Jersey Madagascar Curacao Ghana Lebanon U.S. Virgin Islands Guinea Kyrgyzstan Guatemala San Marino Belize Faroe Islands Namibia Norfolk Island Uzbekistan Mozambique Zimbabwe Uganda Kosovo Suriname Cayman Islands Paraguay Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Cuba Palau Kazakhstan Wallis and Futuna Libya Ethiopia Burundi Vanuatu Syria Nicaragua Eswatini Bolivia Cameroon Monaco Tajikistan French Guiana North Korea Iran Afghanistan Aland Islands Saint Pierre and Miquelon Macao Aruba Dominica Rwanda Kiribati Haiti Tanzania Isle of Man Papua New Guinea Greenland Brunei Darussalam Bahamas Gabon Cook Islands Estonia Flag Meaning & Details 246 VISITORS FROM HERE! Estonia Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of blue (top), black, and white various interpretations are linked to the flag colors blue represents faith, loyalty, and devotion, while also reminiscent of the sky, sea, and lakes of the country black symbolizes the soil of the country and the dark past and suffering endured by the Estonian people white refers to the striving towards enlightenment and virtue, and is the color of birch bark and snow, as well as summer nights illuminated by the midnight sun
Learn more about Estonia »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook