The eternal wheel of law/ the laws of Dharma.
There are 24 spokes in the Ashoka Chakra, which is featured on the national flag of India.
Asoka chakra is the name of the wheel on the flag of India
White colour in our national flag signifies Peace. We Indians are peace lovers. We love and respect our national flag.
progress
The chakra is called Ashoka Chakra because it has been derived from Asoka Pillar. The Ashoka Chakra contains 24 spokes which signifies that human must be ready to work for 24 hours of the day. It is in the centre of Tiranga ( The Indian National Flag).
The dragon he red dragon was included to show support to the Tudor family and signify their welsh descent.
There are four (4)colours in Indian national flag.Saffronwhitegreenand Deep blue in ashok chakra
In India, the national flag is referred to as Tirangā, or "tricolor" because it is split into three horizontal panels of orange/saffron, white, and green. In the middle of the flag, there is a blue wheel with twenty-four spokes called the Ashoka Chakra.
On July 22, 1947, during an ad hoc meeting of the Constituent Assembly, it was approved as the National Flag of India with suitable modifications, wherein the Ashok Chakra was adopted in place of the charkha.
The Australian flag doesn't have a black background. It's blue. The Aboriginal flag, however, includes a black stripe representing the Aboriginal people, but this is not the national flag.
The chakra in the centre of the flag is a variation of the Buddhist dharmachakra popularised by the Mauryan Emperor Ashoka. Ashoka's chakra was used for some of the first documented evidence of Buddhism, so in a sense this chakra really is the dharmachakra. The dharmachakra represents the doctrine of dharma, Buddha's stated path to enlightenment. The spokes of the chakra represent different things according to the number of spokes in the wheel; in the case of Ashoka's chakra with 24 spokes, the spokes represent the Twelve Laws of Origination and Twelve Laws of Termination. The turning of the wheel represents Buddha's sequential teachings of dharma, though in the case of the flag's chakra may more metaphorically represent progress or national strength and endurance over time.
King Ashoka was a very brave warrior. Once during a battle he used a weapon in the form of the chakra [located in the middle of the flag] to kill enemies that had circled him.Hence the reason for inclusion of his symbols in the flag and national emblem.