United States Australia Canada United Kingdom China Brazil Germany Netherlands South Africa New Zealand Ireland Sweden Russia France Italy India Czech Republic Philippines Japan Indonesia Switzerland Norway Spain Austria Mexico South Korea Pakistan Portugal Singapore Finland Denmark Belgium Poland Kenya Thailand Greece Argentina Nigeria Romania Hong Kong Israel Malaysia Ukraine Turkey Puerto Rico Colombia Jamaica Ecuador Vietnam Zimbabwe Chile Hungary Trinidad and Tobago Ghana Peru Barbados Venezuela Saudi Arabia Serbia Egypt Uganda Slovakia Bulgaria Luxembourg Namibia Belarus Costa Rica Croatia Algeria Cyprus Panama United Arab Emirates Bahamas Zambia Taiwan Qatar Slovenia Iceland Bosnia and Herzegovina Mauritius Mozambique Rwanda Saint Lucia Kazakhstan Jordan Myanmar Cambodia Lithuania El Salvador Belize Tanzania Honduras Bangladesh Sri Lanka Kuwait Morocco Dominican Republic Nepal Uruguay Seychelles Fiji Cote D'Ivoire Ethiopia Bahrain Albania Bolivia Malta Grenada Cameroon Guatemala Antigua and Barbuda Latvia Burundi Moldova Jersey Syria Senegal Bermuda North Macedonia Guyana Botswana Democratic Republic of the Congo Suriname Mongolia Isle of Man Saint Kitts and Nevis Afghanistan Lebanon British Virgin Islands Estonia U.S. Virgin Islands Haiti Yemen Angola Armenia Guernsey Malawi Paraguay Cayman Islands Papua New Guinea Sierra Leone Oman Dominica Timor-Leste Greenland Liberia Tunisia Martinique Cook Islands Cabo Verde Gabon Solomon Islands Guam Sudan Iraq Azerbaijan Palestinian Territory Montenegro Burkina Faso Palau Togo Faroe Islands Laos Aruba New Caledonia Nicaragua Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Brunei Darussalam Benin Hungary Flag Meaning & Details 22 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