There are three colors in the Irish flag. They are green, white and orange. This flag was adopted in 1919 during the Irish War for Independence, and then after the war, by the Irish Free State.
Green - The [Gaelic] people of Ireland
Orange - Supporters of William of Orange (who settled in Northern Ireland in the 17th century)
White - Peace between these two groups of people
The green in the Flag represents the Catholic Irish, in the flag, why the Orange Represents the Prodestant side & the white Represents Peace between the two sides!
Green appears once on the Irish flag, so there is only one shade of green on it.
White.
no -- the 3rd colour on the Irish flag is orange, not gold
There is no gold on the Irish flag. The colour that people confuse and even refer to as being gold is actually orange. See the related question below.
no, the correct colour is orange
Green is the main colour associated with Ireland. The Irish flag is green, white and orange.
Green is the national colour and represents the nationalist community. The orange represents the unionist community. The white, representing peace, is in the middle giving the whole flag the meaning of peace between the nationalist and unionist communities.
The centre circle on a Japanese flag - is Red.
The tri-colour style is used on many flags around the world. The Irish flag could be said to be based on any of them, such as the French flag.
It is green, white and gold. This is not the same as the Irish flag, which is green, white and orange. The two are frequently confused.
A white background with a red dot in the middle.
UAE have 4 colour on their flag:Red on the left of the flag Green on the top White in the middle And Black on the bottom. :)
White with a yellow, human faced sun centered on it.
The flag was first used in 1848 and became the flag of Irish republicanism from then on. It didn't become the official state flag until the Irish Free State was founded in 1922.