flag of Belize
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
In 1819 the colony then known as British Honduras obtained its coat of arms, subsequently slightly modified. The design featured a mahogany tree, hinting at the rich sylvan resources of the area, as well as a shield and two supporters. In the original design the supporters were of African background, but now one is a mestizo, the other a mulatto (or “Creole,” as the term is defined in Belize). These men hold tools of the trade—an ax and the paddle used to send trees downriver for export. The shield is divided into three sections—a paddle and a maul crossed on a white background, a two-handed saw and an ax crossed on dark yellow, and a ship sailing over waves on blue. The Latin motto “Sub umbra floreo” (“I flourish in the shade”) is a reference to the area’s forests and its establishment as a colony under British protection. The Union Jack was part of the shield in the coat of arms officially granted in 1907, but it was later omitted.
Believing that in the past the coat of arms had appeared on a white disk in the centre of a blue flag, nationalists established that flag for the People’s United Party, which led the nation to independence. The arms were framed by a wreath bearing 50 leaves, a reminder of the year 1950, when the first opposition to British rule began. After local self-government was established in 1964, the flag unofficially flew over public buildings. Finally, on independence day (September 21, 1981), a revised national flag was officially hoisted. Red horizontal stripes were added at top and bottom for the opposition United Democratic Party so that the national flag would not be simply that of the People’s United Party.