Flag of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic
The Flag of the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic was adopted on 25 December 1951. Prior to this, the flag was red with the Cyrillic characters БССР in gold in the top-left corner, surrounded by a gold border. Between 1937 and the adoption of the above flag in the 1940s, the flag was the same, but with a gold hammer and sickle above the Cyrillic characters and no border. Between 1919 and 1927, the flag was red, with the Cyrillic characters ССРБ in the top left-hand corner. In early 1919, a plain red flag was used. The final BSSR flag was used until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. A flag based on this Soviet design is used as the national flag of Belarus.
Design on the 1951 flag
In the end of the 1940s, the political need had arisen to have somewhat visually different designs of the flags of the USSR republics, especially for those that were UN members. For the BSSR flag, the image of the Belarusian folk design was chosen as a distinctive feature of the flag. The picture of the embroidery on the «ruchnik» had been found in the pre-World War II archives of the Belpramsavyet. The embroidery had been made in 1917 by peasant Ms. Matrona Markyevich of the village Kastsilishcha of the Sennin region, and had been named «The Rising Sun»., who previously cooperated with the German occupation administration during World War II had prepared the project of the BSSR flag, basing it on the embroidery, with several symbolic elements added.Symbolically, the design on the BSSR flag is decoded as follows :
- the central rhombus figure symbolises the rising Sun;
- the horn-like figures to the left and right of it symbolise wealth and welfare;
- the figure inside of the rhombus is the "key to happiness";
- the rectangular figure with the smaller rectangles adjoining from the left and right is the "votive sign", expressing the desire for fulfillment of hopes;
- the pattern figure symbolises bread.