Singapore United States India United Kingdom Canada France Russia Australia Brazil Belgium Ireland Pakistan Germany Indonesia South Africa United Arab Emirates Netherlands Ukraine Philippines Saudi Arabia Malaysia China Hong Kong Nigeria New Zealand Egypt Japan Poland Bangladesh Italy Spain South Korea Vietnam Mexico Thailand Turkey Bulgaria Israel Romania Finland Taiwan Switzerland Sri Lanka Sweden Jordan Greece Austria Qatar Portugal Serbia Denmark Kenya Kuwait Colombia Argentina Belarus Czech Republic Nepal Norway Myanmar Lithuania Morocco Hungary Sudan Peru Armenia Botswana Oman Venezuela Ghana Ethiopia Kazakhstan Bahrain Chile Azerbaijan Lebanon Slovakia North Macedonia Estonia Tunisia Croatia Zimbabwe Costa Rica Bosnia and Herzegovina Ecuador Moldova Georgia Mauritius Albania Cambodia Puerto Rico Latvia Uganda Cameroon Algeria Panama Tanzania Palestinian Territory Jamaica Afghanistan Yemen British Virgin Islands Slovenia Luxembourg Cote D'Ivoire Dominican Republic Senegal Mozambique Trinidad and Tobago Iraq Malta Uruguay Zambia Cyprus Guatemala Uzbekistan Libya Namibia El Salvador Maldives Bolivia Bahamas Papua New Guinea Fiji Lesotho Benin Burkina Faso Madagascar Montenegro Kyrgyzstan Micronesia Mongolia Somalia Syria Reunion Guinea Laos Faroe Islands Democratic Republic of the Congo Iran Nicaragua Timor-Leste Brunei Darussalam Angola Seychelles Martinique Mali Barbados Saint Kitts and Nevis Sierra Leone U.S. Virgin Islands Mauritania Palau Rwanda Haiti Eswatini Saint Lucia French Polynesia Gambia Gabon Greenland Monaco Jersey Curacao Bermuda Guyana Bhutan Belize Hungary Flag Meaning & Details 32 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