BMI State symbols
State symbols
National symbols (Greek: symbolon = token, insignia, means of identification) play a role on more than just special ceremonial occasions. We also encounter them in our everyday lives - when flags are displayed at public buildings, for instance, and of course when the national anthem is played at international sporting events.
No state can dispense with symbols. First of all, they serve practical purposes: Borders are marked by national emblems, official buildings are identified by official signs, and treaties, laws or documents are authenticated by official seals. In this respect symbols are tokens of state sovereignty and authority.
They are also of non-material significance, however. For the choice of symbols serving as flags and coats of arms and the designation of holidays or days of remembrance to be publicly observed say something about the state's perception of itself, about certain ideas and basic convictions that unite the polity. The historical and political identity of the state and its citizens is concentrated in its symbols. In addition to their representative function, symbols thus also serve an integrative function: They are a vivid outward expression of the desire for and commitment to political unity.
No state can dispense with symbols. First of all, they serve practical purposes: Borders are marked by national emblems, official buildings are identified by official signs, and treaties, laws or documents are authenticated by official seals. In this respect symbols are tokens of state sovereignty and authority.
They are also of non-material significance, however. For the choice of symbols serving as flags and coats of arms and the designation of holidays or days of remembrance to be publicly observed say something about the state's perception of itself, about certain ideas and basic convictions that unite the polity. The historical and political identity of the state and its citizens is concentrated in its symbols. In addition to their representative function, symbols thus also serve an integrative function: They are a vivid outward expression of the desire for and commitment to political unity.
State symbols:




