Ottoman Empire Symbols

The banner of Turkey is the national banner and the national banner of the Republic of Turkey. It comprises of a disappearing moon and five-pointed star, both in white on a red foundation. The banner is called Ay-Yildiz (actually, "star moon"), or a-sancak (the "Red Banner") in Turkish. 

The banner has an exceptionally perplexing starting point. It is first for all intents and purposes indistinguishable from the banner of the Ottoman Empire, with changes to the state of the moon and the quantity of parts of the star from eight to five. The present banner was embraced in 1844, preceding its extents are standard with the Law on Turkish Flag in 1936.
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Ottoman Empire

The star and bow, presently observed as images of Islam, have for some time been utilized in Asia Minor and some Turkic people groups before the landing of Islam.

The Ottomans utilized various courses of action for various uses, for example, utilizing the green banner for the Islamic foundations and utilizing red for mainstream establishments. In 1844 the eight-pointed star was supplanted with a five-pointed banner and after that achieved its present structure.

The starting point of the sickle and star as images date time Babylon and the old Egypt. It has been proposed that the Turkish clans during their relocations from Central Asia to Turkey around 800 AD, have received this image of neighborhood clans and states in the zone of the Middle East today, which embraced thusly these images.

The starting point of the banner is liable to numerous legends in the nation, and some repudiate the historical backdrop of the Ottoman banner. Among the most widely recognized depictions are:

The sickle moon and star were heavenly images to the pre-Islamic Turkish clans, while red is the shading cardinal toward the south.  A sickle and a star appeared to Mehmed II the evening of the fall of Constantinople in 1453

Another date of hypothesis Byzantine Empire, featuring the way that the sickle and star were utilized as images of Byzantium for a considerable length of time. At the point when the Ottomans took Constantinople , they embraced these images to the Ottoman Empire (the moon speaks to the Greek goddess Artemis , and stars the Virgin Mary ). The star and the sickle moon, in any case, were images of the Egyptian goddess Isis prior.

The story told the greater part of the Turkish banner in the year 1071, after the Battle of Manzikert , and the thrashing of the Byzantine armed force, the Seljuk Emperor Alp Arslan was meandering on the war zone when he saw the impression of sickle and star on a pool of blood of Turkish warriors. He chose to make the banner with the Turks. There is another variant of this story with the Ottoman triumph at the Battle of Mohács in Hungary rather than Manzkiert.

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