United States Netherlands United Kingdom Canada Australia Germany Belgium Indonesia India France Italy Turkey South Africa Norway Spain Malaysia Japan Sweden Brazil Poland New Zealand Mexico Ireland Pakistan Israel Switzerland Singapore Finland China Greece Austria Russia Taiwan Czech Republic Vietnam Thailand Denmark Philippines Egypt Portugal Romania Argentina Hungary United Arab Emirates Ukraine Hong Kong South Korea Bangladesh Iceland Slovakia Chile Bulgaria Estonia Colombia Peru Sri Lanka Serbia Puerto Rico Croatia Lithuania Latvia Cyprus Syria Iraq Morocco Nepal Netherlands Antilles Kuwait Malta Trinidad and Tobago Jordan Costa Rica Aruba Venezuela Lebanon Belarus Suriname Luxembourg Oman Guam Guatemala Uruguay Georgia Bosnia and Herzegovina Kenya Bahamas Qatar Jamaica Slovenia Ecuador Nigeria Algeria El Salvador Mauritius Iran Saudi Arabia Sudan Bahrain Curacao Bolivia Bermuda Dominican Republic Brunei Darussalam Macao Kazakhstan Tunisia Honduras Namibia Cambodia Albania Senegal Uganda Ghana Haiti Libya Botswana Yemen Paraguay Moldova Barbados Armenia Nicaragua Azerbaijan Fiji Afghanistan Panama Myanmar Palestinian Territory Mozambique Guadeloupe North Macedonia Ethiopia Angola Zambia Laos Seychelles Maldives Bhutan Uzbekistan Belize Mongolia Guernsey Saint Kitts and Nevis Cote D'Ivoire Sierra Leone Liechtenstein Niue Cameroon Turks and Caicos Islands Caribbean Netherlands Monaco Mali Burundi Timor-Leste Montenegro Sint Maarten Liberia Cuba Vanuatu Guinea Dominica Cayman Islands French Polynesia Tanzania Zimbabwe U.S. Virgin Islands Eswatini British Virgin Islands Reunion French Guiana Albania Flag Meaning & Details 5 VISITORS FROM HERE! Albania Flag Flag Information red with a black two-headed eagle in the center the design is claimed to be that of 15th-century hero Georgi Kastrioti SKANDERBEG, who led a successful uprising against the Ottoman Turks that resulted in a short-lived independence for some Albanian regions (1443-78) an unsubstantiated explanation for the eagle symbol is the tradition that Albanians see themselves as descendants of the eagle they refer to themselves as "Shqiptare," which translates as "sons of the eagle"
Learn more about Albania »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook