Vietnam United States Singapore Australia Canada Germany France China Belgium Japan Switzerland Taiwan United Kingdom Norway Russia South Korea Netherlands Czech Republic Ireland Thailand Hong Kong Denmark Laos India Cambodia Malaysia Sweden Poland Finland Italy New Zealand Indonesia Brazil Austria Philippines Ukraine Angola Mexico Spain Hungary Turkey Iceland Romania South Africa United Arab Emirates Nigeria Myanmar Slovakia Bulgaria Saudi Arabia Israel Peru Macao New Caledonia Luxembourg Argentina Portugal Pakistan Greece Bangladesh Sri Lanka Colombia Cyprus Senegal Belarus Zimbabwe Qatar Cote D'Ivoire Chile Ghana Algeria Malta Egypt Morocco Serbia Georgia Tanzania Venezuela Mozambique Iran Estonia Puerto Rico Mongolia Moldova Latvia Lithuania Brunei Darussalam Tunisia Costa Rica Kazakhstan Cameroon Seychelles Panama Vatican City Azerbaijan Kuwait Iraq Haiti Paraguay Jordan Afghanistan Syria Oman Croatia Cuba Benin Nepal Kenya Bahrain Guam North Macedonia Burkina Faso Kyrgyzstan Maldives Armenia Micronesia Liberia Ecuador Slovenia Uganda Mali Bosnia and Herzegovina Palestinian Territory Reunion Albania Yemen Uzbekistan Dominican Republic British Virgin Islands Honduras Papua New Guinea Kosovo Guatemala French Polynesia Tajikistan Togo French Guiana Uruguay Mauritius Northern Mariana Islands Anguilla Lebanon Madagascar El Salvador Saint Kitts and Nevis Faroe Islands Ethiopia Bolivia Sierra Leone Vanuatu Sudan Bhutan Guinea Malawi Martinique Monaco Namibia United States Minor Outlying Islands Nicaragua Gibraltar Guinea-Bissau American Samoa Libya Saint Martin Democratic Republic of the Congo Antigua and Barbuda Fiji Montenegro U.S. Virgin Islands Aland Islands Hungary Flag Meaning & Details 168 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