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{{Short description|Symbols to promote peace}}
{{redirect|Peace sign|the hand gesture called the "peace sign"|V sign}}
{{Redirect|Peace sign|other uses|Peace Sign (disambiguation)}}
{{Anti-war}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2024}}
[[File:Peace symbol (bold).svg|thumb|The symbol designed for the British [[Nuclear disarmament|nuclear disarmament movement]] in 1958 is now widely known as the "peace sign".]]

A number of '''peace symbols''' have been used many ways in various cultures and contexts. The [[Doves as symbols|dove]] and [[olive branch]] was used symbolically by early Christians and then eventually became a secular peace symbol, popularized by a [[Dove lithograph (Picasso)|''Dove'' lithograph]] by [[Picasso|Pablo Picasso]] after World War II. In the 1950s, the "peace sign", as it is known today (also known as "peace and love"), was designed by [[Gerald Holtom]] as the logo for the British [[Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament]] (CND),<ref name="cnduk">{{cite web |url=http://www.cnduk.org/information/info-sheets/item/435-the-cnd-symbol |title=The CND symbol |publisher=Cnduk.org |date=22 January 2014 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110724002411/http://www.cnduk.org/information/info-sheets/item/435-the-cnd-symbol |archive-date=24 July 2011 }}</ref> a group at the forefront of the [[peace movement]] in the UK, and adopted by anti-war and [[counterculture of the 1960s|counterculture]] activists in the US and elsewhere. The symbol is a [[wikt:superposition|superposition]] of the [[semaphore]] signals for the letters "N" and "D", taken to stand for "nuclear disarmament",<ref name="Breyer2010" /> while simultaneously acting as a reference to [[Francisco Goya|Goya]]'s ''[[The Third of May 1808]]'' (1814) (aka "Peasant Before the Firing Squad").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cnduk.org/the-symbol/|title=History of the Symbol|website=Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament|language=en-GB|access-date=8 May 2019|archive-date=26 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180726021852/https://cnduk.org/the-symbol/|url-status=live}}</ref>

The [[V-sign|V hand signal]] and the [[peace flag]] also became international peace symbols.

==Olive branch==

===Classical antiquity===
[[File:OliveBritAmerica1775.jpg|200px|thumb|An engraving from ''[[The London Magazine]]'', January 1775, showing the Goddess of Peace bringing an olive branch to America and Britannia.]]

The use of the olive branch as a symbol of peace in Western civilization dates at least to 5th century BC Greece. The olive branch, which the Greeks believed represented plenty and drove away evil spirits,<ref>Rupert Graves, ''The Greek Myths'', Harmonsdsworth: Penguin Books, 1962, Section 53.7</ref> was one of the attributes of [[Eirene (goddess)|Eirene]],<ref name="theoi">{{cite web |url=http://www.theoi.com/Ouranios/HoraEirene.html |title=''Theoi Greek Mythology'' |publisher=Theoi.com |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120222004646/http://www.theoi.com/Ouranios/HoraEirene.html |archive-date=22 February 2012 }}</ref> the Greek goddess of peace. Eirene (whom the Romans called [[Pax (mythology)|Pax]]), appeared on Roman Imperial coins<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.coinsofromanegypt.org/html/library/bmc_intro/html%20files/coinage_2.html# |title=Coins of Roman Egypt |publisher=Coins of Roman Egypt |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120313060140/http://www.coinsofromanegypt.org/html/library/bmc_intro/html%20files/coinage_2.html |archive-date=13 March 2012 }}</ref> with an olive branch.

The [[Rome|Roman]] poet [[Virgil]] (70–10 BC) associated "the plump olive"<ref>Virgil, ''Georgics'', 2, pp.425ff (trans. Fairclough)</ref> with Pax and he used the olive branch as a symbol of peace in his ''[[Aeneid]]'':<ref name="greatseal">{{cite web|url=http://www.greatseal.com/peace/olivebranchvirgil.html |title=Great Seal |publisher=Great Seal |access-date=21 February 2012}}</ref>

<blockquote><poem>High on the stern Aeneas his stand,
And held a branch of olive in his hand,
While thus he spoke: "The Phrygians' arms you see,
Expelled from Troy, provoked in Italy
By Latian foes, with war unjustly made;
At first affianced, and at last betrayed.
This message bear: The Trojans and their chief
Bring holy peace, and beg the king's relief."</poem></blockquote>

The Romans believed there was an intimate relationship between war and peace. [[Mars (mythology)|Mars]], the god of war, had another aspect, Mars Pacifer, Mars the bringer of Peace, who is shown on coins of the later Roman Empire bearing an olive branch.<ref>Ragnar Hedlund, "Coinage and authority in the Roman empire, c. AD 260–295", ''Studia Numismatica Upsaliensia'', 5, University of Uppsala, 2008</ref><ref name=elmes/> [[Appian]] describes the use of the olive-branch as a gesture of peace by the enemies of the Roman general [[Scipio Aemilianus]] in the [[Numantine War]]<ref>{{cite web |author=Appian of Alexandria |url=https://www.livius.org/ap-ark/appian/appian_spain_19.html#1 |title=Appian's History of Rome: The Spanish Wars (§§91–95) |publisher=Livius.org |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113152510/https://www.livius.org/ap-ark/appian/appian_spain_19.html#1 |archive-date=13 January 2012 }}</ref> and by [[Hasdrubal I of Carthage|Hasdrubal]] of [[Carthage]].<ref>[[Nathaniel Hooke]], [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_Qu3QAAAAMAAJ/page/n77 <!-- pg=58 quote=olive-branch. --> ''The Roman history: From the Building of Rome to the Ruin of the Commonwealth'', London: J. Rivington, 1823] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180220082109/https://books.google.com/books?id=Qu3QAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=olive+branch+roman+surrender&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=9 |date=20 February 2018 }}</ref>

===Later representations===
[[File:William and Mary.jpg|thumb|right|James Thornhill, ''Peace and Liberty Triumphing Over Tyranny'']]

Poets of the 17th century associated the olive branch with peace.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xrO_1qyt5mUC&q=oliveRaymond&pg=PA27 |title=A. Anselment, ''Loyalist resolve: patient fortitude in the English Civil War'', Associated University Presses, 1988 |isbn=9780874133387 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130619050555/http://books.google.com/books?id=xrO_1qyt5mUC&pg=PA27&dq=peace+descends+on+a+cloud&hl=en&ei=FZ2uTY--NIKHhQeg8oXfAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&sqi=2&ved=0CC0Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=olive&f=falseRaymond |archive-date=19 June 2013 |last1=Anselment |first1=Raymond A. |year=1988 }}</ref> A [[Charles I of England|Charles I]] gold coin of 1644 shows the monarch with sword and olive branch.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.petitioncrown.com/CHARLES_I_OXFORD_MINT.html |title=Coins of Quality: The art of Coins |publisher=Petitioncrown.com |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120215110456/http://www.petitioncrown.com/CHARLES_I_OXFORD_MINT.html |archive-date=15 February 2012 }}</ref> Throughout the 18th century, English coins show [[Britannia]] with a spear and olive branch.

The [[Old Royal Naval College]], [[Greenwich]], contains an allegorical painting by [[James Thornhill]], ''Peace and Liberty Triumphing Over Tyranny'' (1708–1716), depicting [[William III of England|King William III]] and [[Mary II of England|Queen Mary]] (who had enacted the [[English Bill of Rights]]) enthroned in heaven with the Virtues behind them. Peace, with her doves and lambs, hands an olive branch to William, who in turn hands the cap of liberty to Europe, where [[absolute monarchy]] prevails. Below William is the defeated French king, [[Louis XIV]].<ref>[http://www.oldroyalnavalcollege.org/data/files/english-ph-june-06-offical-new-30.pdf Old Naval College] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070626185300/http://www.oldroyalnavalcollege.org/data/files/english-ph-june-06-offical-new-30.pdf |date=26 June 2007 }}</ref>

In January 1775, the frontispiece of the ''[[London Magazine]]'' published an engraving of Peace descending on a cloud from the Temple of Commerce, bringing an olive branch to America and Britannia. In July that year, the American [[Continental Congress]] adopted the "[[Olive Branch Petition]]" in the hope of avoiding a full-blown war with Great Britain.<ref name=greatseal/>


On the [[Great Seal of the United States]] (1782), the olive branch denotes peace, as explained by [[Charles Thomson]], Secretary to Congress: "The Olive branch and arrows denote the power of peace & war which is exclusively vested in Congress."<ref name=greatseal/>
A '''peace symbol''' (☮) is a representation or object that has come to symbolize [[peace]]. Several different symbols have been used throughout history, of which the [[dove]], [[olive branch]] and the [[nuclear disarmament]] symbol are perhaps the best known.


==Dove and olive branch==
==Dove and olive branch==
{{Redirect|Peace dove|the sculpture|Peace Dove (Sumgait)}}
[[Image:Peace dove.svg|left|thumb|120px|A white [[dove]] with an [[olive branch]]]]
===Christianity===
In [[Judaism]] and [[Christianity]], a white [[dove]] is generally a sign for [[peace]]. The [[Torah]] describes a story in which a dove was released by [[Noah]] after the [[Great Flood (Biblical)|Great Flood]] in order to find land. The dove came back carrying an [[olive branch]] in its beak, telling Noah that the Great Flood had receded and there was land once again for Man. ([[Genesis]] 8:11).
[[File:PEACE BAPTISM.png|thumb|Diagram showing the relationship between the Flood, baptism, water, peace and the dove in early Christian thinking.|right]]
[[File:Noah catacombe.jpg|right|thumb|Wall painting from the early Christian [[Catacombs of Marcellinus and Peter]] in Rome, showing Noah, in the [[orans|orante]] attitude of prayer, the dove and an olive branch]]
[[File:The Descent of the Holy Spirit -Tiffany.jpeg|thumb|right|200px|The descent of [[Holy Spirit]] in the [[Christianity|Christian]] [[Trinity]] depicted as a dove of peace in a church memorial [[stained glass]] window.]]
The use of a [[Doves as symbols|dove as a symbol of peace]] originated with [[early Christians]], who portrayed [[Baptism in early Christianity|baptism]] accompanied by a dove, often on their [[sepulchre]]s.<ref name="elmes">[https://books.google.com/books?id=iSWGTy2WeVsC&q=olive+branch&pg=PT472 James Elmes, ''A General and Bibliographical Dictionary of the Fine Arts'', London] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230410063930/https://books.google.com/books?id=iSWGTy2WeVsC&q=olive+branch&pg=PT472 |date=10 April 2023 }}: [[Thomas Tegg]], 1826 {{Cite web |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iSWGTy2WeVsC&dq=pacifer+%2Bolive&pg=PT472 |title=A General and Bibliographical Dictionary of the Fine Arts: Containing Explanations of the Principal Terms Used in the Arts of Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, and Engraving, in All Their Various Branches; Historical Sketches of the Rise and Progress of Their Different Schools; Descriptive Accounts of the Best Books and Treatises on the Fine Arts; and Every Useful Topic Connected Therewith |access-date=30 September 2010 |archive-date=10 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230410063926/https://books.google.com/books?id=iSWGTy2WeVsC&pg=PT472&lpg=PT472&dq=pacifer+%2Bolive&source=bl&ots=knWZF7ELCR&sig=RgPVlfMRdnTqGbt_FIzGlUwgSJw&hl=en&ei=tE6kTLfWNZG7jAeb6ZCoDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result |url-status=bot: unknown |last1=Elmes |first1=James |year=1826 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03417b.htm |title=''Catholic Encyclopedia'', Roman Catacombs: Paintings |publisher=Newadvent.org |date=1 November 1908 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120111063744/http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03417b.htm |archive-date=11 January 2012 }}</ref>


The [[New Testament]] compared the dove to the [[Holy Spirit|Spirit of God]] that descended on Jesus during [[Baptism of Jesus|his baptism]].<ref>{{bibleverse|Mt|3:16}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05144b.htm |title='Catholic Encyclopedia' Dove: As an artistic symbol |publisher=Newadvent.org |date=1 May 1909 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120206071146/http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05144b.htm |archive-date=6 February 2012 }}</ref> Christians saw similarities between baptism and Noah's Flood. The [[First Epistle of Peter]] (composed around the end of the first century AD<ref>''The Early Christian World,'' Volume 1, p. 148, [[Philip Esler]]</ref>) said that the Flood, which brought salvation through water, prefigured baptism.<ref>{{bibleverse|1Pt|3:20–21}}</ref> [[Tertullian]] ({{Circa|160|220}}) compared the dove, who "announced to the world the assuagement of divine wrath, when she had been sent out of the ark and returned with the olive branch, to the Holy Spirit who descends in baptism in the form of a dove that brings the peace of God, sent out from the heavens".<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zkvl7ZwGQhMC&q=dove |title=Worshipping with the Church Fathers |publisher=InerVarsity Press|orig-year=2009| page=32 |year=2010 |isbn=9780830838660 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130616122125/http://books.google.com/books?id=zkvl7ZwGQhMC&q=dove |archive-date=16 June 2013 |last1=Hall |first1=Christopher A. }}</ref>
The motif can also represent "hope for peace" and even a peace offering from one man to another, as in the phrase "extend an olive branch". Often, the dove is represented as still in flight to remind the viewer of its role as messenger.


At first the dove represented the subjective personal experience of peace, the peace of the soul, and in the earliest Christian art it accompanies representations of baptism. By the end of the second century (for example in the writing of Tertullian)<ref>"'' ... praeco columba terris adnuntiavit dimissa ex arca et cum olea reversa – quod signum etiam ad nationes pacis praetenditur eadem dispositione spiritalis effectus terrae ... ''" Tertullian, [http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0321.htm ''On Baptism'', Chapter 8] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161224043148/http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0321.htm |date=24 December 2016 }}</ref> it also represented social and political peace, "peace unto the nations", and from the third century it began to appear in depictions of conflict, such as Noah and the Ark, [[Daniel (biblical figure)|Daniel]] and the lions, the [[Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego|three young men in the furnace]], and [[Susannah and the Elders]].<ref name="snyder">Graydon D. Snyder, ''Ante Pacem: archaeological evidence of church life before Constantine'', Macon: Mercer University Press, 2003</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://faculty.maryvilleCollege.edu/scripts/as_web4.exe?Command=Doc&File=Crossan.ask&DocID=1012654 |title=John Dominic Crossan, ''Inventory of Biblical Scenes on Pre-Constantinian Christian Art'' |publisher=Faculty.maryvillecollege.edu. |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120325222538/http://faculty.maryvillecollege.edu/scripts/as_web4.exe?Command=Doc&File=Crossan.ask&DocID=1012654 |archive-date=25 March 2012 }}</ref>
== Broken Rifle ==
[[Image:Broken rifle.svg|left|thumb|175px|The broken rifle symbol]]The broken rifle is a symbol widely identified with [[War Resisters' International]] and its affiliates, but actually it predates the foundation of WRI (in 1921). The first known example was the masthead of <i>De Wapens Neder</i> (Down with Weapons), the monthly of the International Antimilitarist Union in the Netherlands. The symbol spread, and in 1925 [[Ernst Friedrich]], the founder of the [[Anti-Kriegs Museum]] in Berlin began using the symbol for badges, brooches, belt buckles and tiepins.<ref>Bill Hetherington, "Symbols of Peace", Housmans Peace Diary 2007</ref><ref>Other examples of the broken rifle symbol can be found at [http://wri-irg.org/desktop/resources.htm].</ref>


The dove appears in Christian inscriptions in the [[Roman catacombs]], sometimes accompanied by the words {{Lang|la|in pace}} (Latin for {{Lang|la|in peace}}). For example, in the [[Catacomb of Callixtus]], a dove and branch are drawn next to a Latin inscription {{Lang|la|NICELLA VIRCO DEI OVE VI XIT ANNOS P M XXXV DE POSITA XV KAL MAIAS BENE MERENTI IN PACE}}, meaning {{Gloss|Nicella, God's virgin, who lived for more or less 35 years. She was placed [here] 15 days before the Kalends of May [17 April]. For the well deserving one in peace.}}<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.usask.ca/antiquities/benemerenti/benemerenti_catacombs3.html#nicella |title=Bene Merenti – Inscriptions from the Roman Catacombs|publisher=Usask.ca |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120110034540/http://www.usask.ca/antiquities/benemerenti/benemerenti_catacombs3.html#nicella |archive-date=10 January 2012 }}</ref> In another example, a shallow relief sculpture shows a dove with a branch flying to a figure marked in Greek as {{Lang|grc|ΕΙΡΗΝΗ}} ({{Lang|grc-latn|Eirene}}, or {{Gloss|Peace}}).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.salomoni.it/davide/theology/blog/images/catacomb_dove.png |title=David Salmoni |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314122557/http://www.salomoni.it/davide/theology/blog/images/catacomb_dove.png |archive-date=14 March 2012 }}</ref> The symbol has also been found in the Christian catacombs of [[Sousse]], Tunisia (ancient [[Carthage]]), which date from the end of the first century AD.<ref>{{cite EB1911|wstitle= Hadrumetum |volume= 12 |last= Babelon |first= Ernest Charles François | pages = 802&ndash;803; see page 803 |quote= In these catacombs we find numerous sarcophagi and inscriptions painted or engraved of the Roman and Byzantine periods}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://archive.org/stream/muslimworld12hartuoft/muslimworld12hartuoft_djvu.txt |title=Where the stones cry out |work=The Moslem World |volume=Vol. XII, No.4 |date= October 1922 |access-date=21 February 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.patrimoinedetunisie.com.tn/eng/monuments/catacombes_sousse.php |title=''The Sousse Catacombs'' |publisher=Patrimoinedetunisie.com.tn |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120118211021/http://www.patrimoinedetunisie.com.tn/eng/monuments/catacombes_sousse.php |archive-date=18 January 2012 }}</ref>
== Shalom and Salaam==
{{main|Shalom|Salaam}}
[[Image:ShalomSalamPeaceIsraelisPalestinians.png|left||thumb|170px|'''<font color="#0000CC">"Shalom" (in blue</font>''') and '''<font color="#008000">"Salaam" (in green</font>''') mean "peace" in Hebrew and Arabic respectively.]]
The [[Hebrew]] word "[[Shalom]]" (Hebrew: {{hebrew|שָׁלוֹם}}), and the [[Arabic]] "[[Salaam]]" (Arabic: {{lang|ar|سلام}}) have been used as peace symbols. Shalom and Salaam literally mean "peace" and are [[cognate]]s of each other, derived from the [[Semitic]] [[Triconsonantal]] of ''Ś-L-M'' (realized in Hebrew as [[Š-L-M]] and in Arabic as [[S-L-M]]). They have come to represent "[[Mideast]] peace" and an end to the [[Arab-Israeli conflict]]. Wall plaques and signs are sold with both the words and are featured in such [[:Category:Israeli songs about Peace|Israeli peace songs]] such as "[[Salaam (song)|Salaam (Od Yavo Shalom Aleinu)]]."


The Christian symbolism of the olive branch, invariably carried by the dove, derives from Greek usage and the story of Noah in the Hebrew Bible.<ref>Graydon F. Snyder, "The Interaction of Jews with Non-Jews in Rome", in Karl P. Donfreid and Peter Richardson, ''Judaism and Christianity in Early Rome'', Grand Rapids: Wm B. Ferdman, 1998</ref> The story of Noah ends with a dove bringing a freshly plucked olive leaf (Hebrew: {{Lang|hbo|עלה זית|rtl=yes}} {{Lang|hbo-latn|alay zayit}}),<ref>{{bibleverse|Gen|8:11}}</ref> a sign of life after the Flood and of God's bringing Noah, his family and the animals to land. [[Rabbi]]nic literature interpreted the olive leaf as "the young shoots of the Land of Israel"<ref>''[https://archive.org/stream/midrashrabbahgen027557mbp#page/n312/mode/1up][[Genesis Rabbah]]'' 33:6'</ref> or the dove's preference for bitter food in God's service, rather than sweet food in the service of men.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.halakhah.com/sanhedrin/sanhedrin_108.html#PARTb |title=Babylonian Talmud Sanhedrin 108b |publisher=Halakhah.com |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120203130401/http://www.halakhah.com/sanhedrin/sanhedrin_108.html#PARTb |archive-date=3 February 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.halakhah.com/pdf/moed/Eiruvin.pdf |title=Eruvin 18b |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120202054240/http://www.halakhah.com/pdf/moed/Eiruvin.pdf |archive-date=2 February 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tachash.org/texis/vtx/chverse/+JwwBmeuAz1ecXHxwwxFqrHnDn5o5qFqAgrwpBnGaX8mFqDeR8qxG5neWykDXWWeuxww/search2.html#hit1 |title=Rashi |publisher=Tachash.org |access-date=21 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819171131/http://www.tachash.org/texis/vtx/chverse/+JwwBmeuAz1ecXHxwwxFqrHnDn5o5qFqAgrwpBnGaX8mFqDeR8qxG5neWykDXWWeuxww/search2.html#hit1 |archive-date=19 August 2018 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Neither represented peace in Jewish thought, but the dove and olive branch acquired that meaning in Christianity.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Peace Sign – Meaning And A Brief History In 2021|url=https://innerpeacezone.com/peace_sign/|access-date=20 September 2021|language=en-US|archive-date=20 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920213111/https://innerpeacezone.com/peace_sign/|url-status=live}}</ref>
== Peace flag ==<!-- This section is linked from [[Rainbow flag]] -->
{{main|Peace rainbow flag}}


Before the [[Peace of Constantine]] (313 AD), in which Rome ceased its persecution of Christians following Constantine's conversion, Noah was normally shown in an [[Orans|attitude of prayer]], a dove flying toward him or alighting on his outstretched hand. According to Graydon Snyder, "The Noah story afforded the early Christian community an opportunity to express piety and peace in a vessel that withstood the threatening environment" of Roman persecution.<ref name=snyder/> According to Ludwig Budde and Pierre Prigent, the dove referred to the descending of the Holy Spirit rather than the peace associated with Noah. After the Peace of Constantine, when persecution ceased, Noah appeared less frequently in Christian art.<ref name=snyder/>
[[Image:PACE-flag.svg|thumb|right|The peace rainbow flag.]]
In recent years, especially in connection with the [[2003 Invasion of Iraq]], there has been a surge in popularity of the Peace flag, a series of seven [[rainbow]] colors (red on bottom) with the word '''PACE''' (''Peace'' in [[Italian language|Italian]] and [[Romanian Language|Romanian]], derived from the [[Latin]] word ''[[pax]]'', pronounced ''pah-chay'') boldly printed across the middle. The more recent usage originated in [[Italy]]. In most of the world, however, the rainbow flag (red on top) is most often connected with [[gay pride]]. The usage of the rainbow can either be tracked back to pacific coexistence of different people, or to the rainbow that God showed [[Noah]] at the end of the [[Noah's Ark|worldwide flood as recorded in the Bible]], as a token of the covenant that He made between Himself and mankind, that He would not again destroy the entire world with a flood (Genesis 9)[http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Genesis%209%20;&version=9;]. The flag in its current shape appeared as early as [[September 24]] [[1961]], in an Italian peace march. It had previously featured a dove drawn by [[Pablo Picasso]]. [http://www.elettrosmog.com/bandieradellapace.htm]
The flag is often flown from balconies in Italy by citizens opposed to the Iraq war. Its use has spread to other countries as well, with the Italian "pace" replaced with its translation in various other languages.


In the fourth century, [[St. Jerome]]'s [[Vulgate|Latin Bible]] translated the Hebrew {{Lang|hbo-latn|alay zayit}} in the Noah story as {{Lang|la|ramum olivae}}, ({{Gloss|olive branch}}), possibly reflecting the Christian equivalence between the peace brought by baptism and peace brought by the ending of the Flood. By the fifth century, St Augustine confirmed the Christian adoption of the olive branch as a symbol of peace, writing that, "perpetual peace is indicated by the olive branch (Latin: {{Lang|la|oleae ramusculo}}) that the dove brought with it when it returned to the ark."<ref name="augustine">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=51dMXa3SmlgC&q=olive+branch&pg=PA42 |title=Augustine of Hippo, 'On Christian Doctrine'|year=1883 |isbn=9781593774943 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130619194156/http://books.google.com/books?id=51dMXa3SmlgC&pg=PA42&lpg=PA42&dq=%22augustine+of+hippo%22+%2B%22olive+branch%22&source=bl&ots=bj0YbrdtY_&sig=83aD_pOaUFQMPiuJ6ZkRKBnnQJY&hl=en&ei=YwevTcPSK4a7hAeW8fzdAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=olive%20branch&f=false |archive-date=19 June 2013 }}</ref>
According to [[Amnesty International]], producer Franco Belsito had produced only about 1,000 flags annually for 18 years, and suddenly had to cope with a demand in the range of millions.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.amnesty.no/web.nsf/pages/494DD08999FC10CEC1256D3D00328635 |title=Det nytter! |accessdate=2008-03-22 |date=2003-06-06 |publisher=[[Amnesty International]] |language=Norwegian }}</ref>


Medieval [[illuminated manuscript]]s, such as the [[Holkham]] Bible, showed the dove returning to Noah with a branch.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/sacredtexts/holkham_lg.html |title=British Library, ''The Holkham Bible'' |publisher=Bl.uk |date=30 November 2003 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120207140102/http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/sacredtexts/holkham_lg.html |archive-date=7 February 2012 }}</ref> [[Wycliffe's Bible]], which translated the Vulgate into English in the 14th century, uses "{{Lang|enm|a braunche of olyue tre with greene leeuys|italic=no}}" ("a branch of olive tree with green leaves") in Gen. 8:11.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.studylight.org/desk/?l=en&query=Genesis+1&section=2&translation=wyc&oq=ge%25201&new=1&nb=ge&ngt=Go+To%3A&ng=8&ncc=1 |title=Wycliffe Bible, Gen 8:11 |publisher=Studylight.org |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120202022858/http://www.studylight.org/desk/?l=en&query=Genesis+1&section=2&translation=wyc&oq=ge%25201&new=1&nb=ge&ngt=Go+To%3A&ng=8&ncc=1 |archive-date=2 February 2012 }}</ref> In the Middle Ages, some Jewish manuscripts, which were often illustrated by Christians,<ref>[http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/sacredtexts/golden.html?ns_campaign=treasures&ns_mchannel=ppc&ns_source=google&ns_linkname=Golden%20haggadah&ns_fee=0&gclid=CPbe-rGFoM0CFTMo0wodS5ALxg British Library, "Golden Haggadah"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160806094915/http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/sacredtexts/golden.html?ns_campaign=treasures&ns_mchannel=ppc&ns_source=google&ns_linkname=Golden%20haggadah&ns_fee=0&gclid=CPbe-rGFoM0CFTMo0wodS5ALxg |date=6 August 2016 }}</ref> also showed Noah's dove with an olive branch, for example, the Golden [[Haggadah]] (about 1420).<ref>Narkiss, Bezalel, ''The Golden Haggadah'', London: The British Library, 1997, p. 22</ref><ref>[http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/sacredtexts/ttpbooks.html British Library, Online Gallery, Sacred Texts.] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110814022955/http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/sacredtexts/ttpbooks.html |date=14 August 2011 }} ''The Golden Haggadah'', p.3, lower left hand panel.</ref>
==V-sign==
{{main|V-sign}}
[[Image:In money we lust.jpg|thumb|right|A 2003, [[Los Angeles]] [[anti-war]] protester flashing the [[V-sign|peace sign]].]]
The "V-sign", also called the "peace sign" and the "victory sign," is a [[hand gesture]] with the index and middle fingers open and all others closed, facing the viewer. Originally strictly a sign for victory, it developed into a peace sign during protests against the [[Vietnam War]] (and subsequent anti-war protests) and by the [[counterculture]] as a sign of peace. Because the [[hippies]] of the day often flashed this sign (palm out) while vocalizing "Peace", it became popularly known through association as the peace sign. Originally, however, its symbolic meaning was ''love''; signing "love" and saying "peace" was a hippie anthem and mutual greeting.


English Bibles from the 17th-century [[King James Bible]] onwards, which translated the story of Noah direct from Hebrew, render the Hebrew {{Lang|hbo-latn|aleh zayit}} as {{Gloss|olive leaf}} rather than {{Gloss|olive branch}}, but by this time the association of the dove with an olive branch as a symbol of peace in the story of Noah was firmly established.{{cn|date=February 2021}}
[[John Lennon]] and his wife [[Yoko Ono]] later made "Peace and love" an ongoing theme in their relationship and public personae, even conducting a public "bed-in" (a parallel construction to a favorite hippie theme event during the 60s and early 70s, the "[[love-in]]") in [[Queen Elizabeth Hotel]] in [[Montreal]], [[Canada]], where they refused to leave their hotel bed.


===Secular representations===
==The peace symbol==
[[File:Saint-Pierre-d'Aurillac Colombe.JPG|thumb|Adaption of Picasso's ''[[Dove (Picasso)|La Colombe]]'']]
[[Image:Peace symbol.svg|left|thumb|150px|The CND or Peace symbol]]
<!-- [[File:Wrocław 2011 028.jpg|thumb|[[Monopol Hotel]]]] Commented out as the relation of this image to the subject of the article is unclear. -->
* '''Late 15th century''' In the late 15th century, a dove with an olive branch was used on the seal of {{Lang|it|Dieci di Balia}}, the [[Florence|Florentine]] committee known as The Ten of Liberty and Peace,<ref>Mattingly, Gareth, "Michiavelli", in Plumb, J.H., ''The Horizon Book of the Renaissance'', London: Collins, 1961</ref> whose secretary was [[Machiavelli]]; it bore the motto {{Lang|la|Pax et Defencio Libertatis}} (Peace and the Defence of Liberty).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://oll.libertyfund.org/?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php%3Ftitle=776&chapter=76321&layout=html&Itemid=27 |title="Commission and instruction to Niccolo Machiavelli, Sent to Sienna by the Ten of Liberty and Peace", in Niccolo Machiavelli, ''The Historical, Political, and Diplomatic Writings'', vol. 3 (Diplomatic Missions 1498–1505) |publisher=Oll.libertyfund.org |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121024191328/http://oll.libertyfund.org/?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php%3Ftitle=776&chapter=76321&layout=html&Itemid=27 |archive-date=24 October 2012 }}</ref>
* '''Late 18th century''' In 18th-century America, a £2 note of North Carolina (1771) depicted the dove and olive with a motto meaning: "Peace restored". Georgia's $40 note of 1778 portrayed the dove and olive and a hand holding a dagger, with a motto meaning "Either war or peace, prepared for both."<ref name=greatseal/>
* '''Early 19th century''' The [[Society for the Promotion of Permanent and Universal Peace]], also known as The London Peace Society, formed on a [[Quaker]] initiative in 1816, used the symbol of a dove and olive branch.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://santibox.ch/Peace/Peacemaking.html |title=Santi, Rainer, ''100 years of peace making: A history of the International Peace Bureau and other international peace movement organisations and networks'', Pax förlag, International Peace Bureau, January 1991 |publisher=Santibox.ch |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120421104457/http://santibox.ch/Peace/Peacemaking.html |archive-date=21 April 2012 }}</ref>
* '''Early 20th century''' A German war loan poster of 1917 showed the head of an eagle over a dove of peace in flight, with the text, "Subscribe to the War Loan".{{cn|date=February 2021}}
* '''Mid 20th century''' [[Picasso]]'s lithograph, ''[[Dove (Picasso)|La Colombe]]'' (The Dove), a traditional, realistic picture of a pigeon, without an olive branch, was chosen as the emblem for the [[World Peace Council]] in Paris in April 1949.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O%3ATA%3AE%3Aex4693&page_number=96&template_id=1&sort_order=1 |title=Museum of Modern Art |publisher=Moma.org |date=9 January 1949 |access-date=21 February 2012 |archive-date=12 October 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111012081042/http://www.moma.org/collection/browse_results.php?criteria=O%3ATA%3AE%3Aex4693&page_number=96&template_id=1&sort_order=1 |url-status=live }}</ref> The dove became a symbol for the peace movement and the ideals of the [[Communist Party]] and was used in Communist demonstrations of the period. At the 1950 World Peace Council in [[Sheffield]], Picasso said that his father had taught him to paint doves, concluding, "I stand for life against death; I stand for peace against war."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ViewWork?workid=20858&searchid=17036 |title=Tate Gallery |publisher=Tate.org.uk |access-date=21 February 2012 |archive-date=13 January 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113055410/http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ViewWork?workid=20858&searchid=17036 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcone/modernmasters/virtual-exhibition/picasso/13-dove.shtml |title=BBC Modern Masters |publisher=BBC |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120414135231/http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcone/modernmasters/virtual-exhibition/picasso/13-dove.shtml |archive-date=14 April 2012 }}</ref> At the 1952 World Peace Council in Berlin, Picasso's ''Dove'' was depicted in a banner above the stage. The dove symbol was used extensively in the post-[[World War II|war]] peace movement.{{citation needed|date=October 2010}} [[Anti-communism|Anti-communists]] had their own take on the peace dove: the group {{Lang|fr|[[Paix et Liberté]]|italic=no}} distributed posters titled {{Lang|fr|La colombe qui fait BOUM}} ({{Gloss|the dove that goes BOOM}}), showing the peace dove metamorphosing into a [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] [[tank]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/mudd/online_ex/paix/pages/BOUM.html |title=Princeton University Library |publisher=Infoshare1.princeton.edu |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120318085413/http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/mudd/online_ex/paix/pages/BOUM.html |archive-date=18 March 2012 }}</ref>


==Broken rifle==
This forked symbol was designed for the [[Direct Action Committee Against Nuclear War]] (DAC) and was adopted as its badge by the [[Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament]] (CND) in Britain, and originally was used by the British nuclear disarmament movement. It was later generalised to become an international icon for the 1960s [[anti-war movement]], and was also adopted by the [[counterculture]] of the time. It was designed and completed [[February 21]] [[1958]] by [[Gerald Holtom]], a professional designer and artist in [[UK|Britain]] for the [[April 4]] march planned by DAC from Trafalgar Square, London to the [[Atomic Weapons Research Establishment]] at [[Aldermaston]] in [[England]]<ref name=Time Magazine 20080407>{{cite web
| title = A Piece of Our Time
| publisher = [[Time Magazine]]
| url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1725969,00.html
| accessdate = 2008-04-02
}}</ref>.


[[File:Broken rifle.svg|thumb|175px|The broken rifle symbol of [[War Resisters' International]]]]
The symbol itself is a combination of the [[Flag semaphore|semaphoric]] signals for the letters "N" and "D," standing for '''N'''uclear '''D'''isarmament. In semaphore the letter "N" is formed by a person holding two flags in an upside-down "V," and the letter "D" is formed by holding one flag pointed straight up and the other pointed straight down. These two signals imposed over each other form the shape of the peace symbol. However, Holtom, a conscientious objector during the Second World War, subverted this use of semaphores by placing the D over the N, the “upside down logo” signifying his anti-military principles. <ref>Early CND badges. http://www.cnduk.org/pages/ed/cnd_sym.html</ref> In the first official CND version (''preceded by a ceramic pin version that had straight lines, but was short lived'') the lines widened at the edge of the circle which was white on black. <ref>The CND symbol. Hugh Brock Papers. http://www.brad.ac.uk/library/special/cwlhbp.php</ref><ref name=CNDlogo>{{cite web
| title = The CND logo
| publisher = [[Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament]]
| url = http://www.cnduk.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=435&Itemid=131
| accessdate = 2008-04-03
}}</ref>


The broken rifle symbol is used by [[War Resisters' International]] (WRI) and its affiliates but predates the foundation of WRI in 1921. The first known example of the symbol is in the masthead of the January 1909 issue of {{Lang|nl|De Wapens Neder}} (Down with Weapons), the monthly paper of the International Antimilitarist Union in the Netherlands. In 1915 it appeared on the cover of a pamphlet, {{Lang|no|Under det brukne Gevær}} (Under the Broken Rifle), published by the [[Norges Socialdemokratiske Ungdomsforbund|Norwegian Social Democratic Youth Association]]. The (German) League for War Victims, founded in 1917, used the broken rifle on a 1919 banner.{{cn|date=February 2021}}


In 1921, Belgian workers marching through La Louvrière on 16 October 1921, carried flags showing a soldier breaking his rifle. [[Ernst Friedrich (peace activist)|Ernst Friedrich]], a German who had refused military service, founded the Anti-Kriegs Museum in Berlin, which featured a bas-relief broken rifle over the door. The museum distributed broken-rifle badges, girls' and women's brooches, boys' belt buckles, and men's tie pins.<ref>Bill Hetheringon, ''Symbols of Peace, Housmans Peace Diary 2007,' London: Housmans, 2006''</ref>
[[Image:Semaphore November.svg|left|thumb|90px|Semaphore 'N']] [[Image:Semaphore Delta.svg|left|thumb|90px|Semaphore 'D']]


==White poppy==
Holtom later wrote to [[Hugh Brock]], editor of [[Peace News]], explaining the genesis of his idea in greater depth: "I was in despair. Deep despair. I drew myself: the representative of an individual in despair, with hands palm outstretched outwards and downwards in the manner of [[Goya]]’s [[The Third of May 1808|peasant before the firing squad]]. I formalised the drawing into a line and put a circle round it."<ref name=CNDlogo/> <!--He also mentioned that he had intended its obvious resemblance to the [[anarchy symbol]].{{Fact|date=February 2007}} However, it is more commonly believed that Holtom merely put a circle around a symbol that appeared throughout the English countryside near airbases. That symbol was of a strategic bomber which could be seen on road signs indicating where the air fields were located.{{fact|date=July 2007}}-->
{{main|White poppy (symbol)}}
In 1933, during a period in which there was widespread fear of war in Europe, the [[Women's Co-operative Guild]] began the practice of distributing [[White Poppy|white poppies]]<ref name="HWA">{{cite web | publisher = Hull Women's Archives | url = http://www.hull.ac.uk/women-of-conviction/women_of_conviction/MLD-and-EF.html | work = Women of Conviction | title = Margaret Llewelyn Davies (1861–1943) and Emmy Freundlich (1878–1948) | url-status = live | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081012001126/http://www.hull.ac.uk/women-of-conviction/women_of_conviction/MLD-and-EF.html | archive-date = 12 October 2008 | df = dmy-all }}</ref> as an alternative to the red poppies distributed by the [[Royal British Legion]] in commemoration of servicemen who died in the First World War.<ref name = HWA/> In 1934 the newly formed [[Peace Pledge Union]] (PPU), which was the largest British peace organization in the inter-war years, joined in distributing white poppies and laying white poppy wreaths "as a pledge to peace that war must not happen again". In 1980, the PPU revived the symbol as a way of remembering the victims of war without glorifying militarism.{{cn|date=February 2021}}


==Roerich's peace banner==
[[Image:USVietPeace.JPG|thumb|250px|A [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] [[Prisoner of War|PoW]] discusses his peace symbol necklace with his [[North Vietnamese Army]] captors during the [[Vietnam War]]]]
{{main|Banner of Peace}}


[[File:Roerich_symbol (bold, red).svg|thumb|right|The Pax Cultura emblem of the [[Roerich Pact]] or Treaty on the Protection of Artistic and Scientific Institutions and Historic Monuments of 1935]]
The peace symbol flag first became known in the United States in 1958 when [[Albert Bigelow]], a pacifist protester, sailed his small boat outfitted with the CND banner into the vicinity of a nuclear test. The peace symbol button was imported into the United States in 1960 by Philip Altbach, a freshman at the [[University of Chicago]], who traveled to [[England]] to meet with British peace groups as a delegate from the [[Student Peace Union]] (SPU). Altbach purchased a bag of the "chickentrack" buttons while he was in England, and brought them back to Chicago, where he convinced SPU to reprint the button and adopt it as its symbol. Over the next four years, SPU reproduced and sold thousands of the buttons on college campuses.


[[Nicholas Roerich]] (1874–1947), a Russian artist, cultural activist, and philosopher, founded a movement to protect cultural artifacts. Its symbol was a maroon-on-white emblem consisting of three solid circles in a surrounding circle. It has also been used as a peace banner. In 1935 a pact initiated by Roerich was signed by the United States and Latin American nations, agreeing that "historic monuments, museums, scientific, artistic, educational and cultural institutions" should be protected both in times of peace and war.
In [[Unicode]], the peace symbol is U+262E: <big>☮</big>, and can thus be generated in [[HTML]] by typing &amp;#x262E; or &amp;#9774;. However, many browsers will not have a font that can display it.


According to the Roerich Museum,
=== Symbol Archive ===
The original drawing of the CND is housed in the Peace Museum, U.K.<ref>[http://www.peacemuseum.org.uk/ The Peace Museum, Bradford<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> in [[Bradford]], England, where a replica is on public display.


<blockquote>The Banner of Peace symbol has ancient origins. Perhaps its earliest known example appears on Stone Age amulets: three dots, without the enclosing circle. Roerich came across numerous later examples in various parts of the world, and knew that it represented a deep and sophisticated understanding of the [[triple deities|triune]] nature of existence. But for the purposes of the Banner and the Pact, Roerich described the circle as representing the totality of culture, with the three dots being Art, Science, and Religion, three of the most embracing of human cultural activities. He also described the circle as representing the eternity of time, encompassing the past, present, and future. The sacred origins of the symbol, as an illustration of the trinities fundamental to all religions, remain central to the meaning of the Pact and the Banner today.<ref>[http://www.roerich.org/nr.html?mid=pact "Pact and Banner Of Peace Through Culture"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130316045013/http://www.roerich.org/nr.html?mid=pact |date=16 March 2013 }}, Nicholas Roerich Museum, New York</ref></blockquote>
=== Antagonism ===
The fact that the symbol resembles a bird foot in a circle gave rise to spurious alternative interpretations, ranging from plain mockery of "[[crow's foot]]" or "The footprint of the American Chicken" (suggesting that peace activists were cowards) to a number of [[occultism|occult]] meanings, such as an upside down crucifix with the arms broken downward, suggesting the way that [[Saint Peter|St. Peter]] was martyred (see [[Cross of St. Peter]]). Others have claimed that the symbol resembles a medieval sign known as "[[Nero's Cross]]" that represents Satanism. Alternatively, some have suggested that the symbol is an inverted [[Elhaz]] rune, which would reverse the rune's meaning, according to the critics, from 'life' to 'death' (although the Elhaz rune is thought to mean ''elk''<ref>{{cite book| last =Plowright| first =Sweyn| authorlink =| coauthors =| title =The Rune Primer| publisher =LuLu| date =2006| location =| pages =pp.18,123| url =| doi =| id =ISBN 1847282466}}</ref>). As well, a commonly repeated conjecture during the 1960s was that it was an [[antichrist]] symbol: a representation Jesus on the cross upside-down or the broken cross of Christianity.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.docspopuli.org/articles/Fist.html | title= The origin of the Peace Symbol | work=Docs Populi | accessdate=2008-03-21 }}
</ref><ref>[http://www.nisbett.com/symbols/peace_sign.htm Christian Resource Centre: Peace Sign]</ref><ref>{{cite web | title=Subdivision bans peace sign Christmas wreath | date=2006-11-27 | publisher=[[Associated Press]] | url =http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15912456/ | work =[[MSNBC]] | pages = | accessdate = 2008-03-22 | quote = Homeowners association threatens to impose $25-a-day fine }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | first=Kirk | last=Johnson | coauthors= | title=Pro-Peace Symbol Forces Win Battle in Colorado Town | date=2006-11-29 | url =http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/29/us/29wreath.html | work =[[New York Times]] | pages = | accessdate = 2008-03-22 | language = }}</ref>. Gerald Holtom's explanation of the genesis of the symbol and his first drawings of it, however, do not support those interpretations.
Ken Kolsbum, a correspondent of Mr. Holtum, says that the designer came to regret the symbolism of despair, as he felt that peace was something to be celebrated and wanted the symbol to be inverted.<ref>{{cite news | first=Kathryn | last=Westcott | coauthors= | title=World's best-known protest symbol turns 50 | date=2008-03-20 | publisher= | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7292252.stm | work =[[bbc.co.uk]] | pages = | accessdate = 2008-03-20 | language = }}</ref>
The peace symbol was also believed by some to represent a swept-wing bomber, the type that would be used to deliver a nuclear weapon.
Ironically, a nearly identical symbol was used by the [[Nazi Germany|Nazi German]] [[3rd Panzer Division]] during [[World War II]].<ref>Panzer Divisional Markings. [http://www.germandressdaggers.com/Panzer%20Section%20Divisional%20markings%201%20to%203.htm</ref>


== White Poppy ==
== ==
{{Infobox symbol
The [[White Poppy]] was first developed in 1933 by the [[Women's Co-operative Guild]] as an alternative to the Red Poppies used to commemorate British military dead. The newly-formed [[Peace Pledge Union]] (PPU) joined in distributing them in 1934, and white poppy wreaths were laid "as a pledge to peace that war must not happen again. In 1980, the PPU revived the symbol as a form of remembering the victims of war without glorifying militarism. In 1986 UK Prime Minister [[Margaret Thatcher]] expressed her "deep distaste" for the symbol.<ref>Bill Hetherington, "Symbols of Peace", Housmans Peace Diary 2007</ref>
| name=Peace symbol
| mark=☮
| unicode= {{unichar|262E|Peace symbol|html=}}
| see also = {{unichar|1F54A|Dove of Peace|nlink=Doves as symbols}}<br />{{unichar|270C|Victory hand|nlink=V sign}}
| different from= [[Mercedes-Benz]] logo
}}
The symbol now known internationally as the "peace symbol" or "peace sign", was created in 1958 as a symbol for Britain's campaign for [[nuclear disarmament]]<!-- not yet CND, so no link -->.<ref name=pmbGHdesign/> It went on to be widely adopted in the American [[anti-war movement]] in the 1960s and was re-interpreted as generically representing [[world peace]]. It was also used by activists [[Anti-nuclear movement|opposing nuclear power]] in the 1980s,{{cn|date=June 2024}} although the [[Smiling Sun]] image ([[file:Smiling Sun English Language.svg|20px]]) ["Nuclear power? No thanks!]" predominated.


===Origin===
==Other peace symbols==
The symbol was designed by [[Gerald Holtom]] (1914–1985), who presented it to [[Direct Action Committee]] on 21 February 1958.<ref name="cnduk" /> It was "immediately accepted" as a symbol for the movement and used for a march from [[Trafalgar Square]], London, to the [[Atomic Weapons Research Establishment]] at [[Aldermaston]] in Berkshire on 4 April.<ref>{{Cite news|last1=Jack|first1=Ian|title=He gave his unforgettable work for nothing. Shouldn't the designer of the peace symbol be commemorated?|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/nov/28/shouldnt-british-designer-gerard-holtom-of-peace-symbol-be-commemorated-paris-attacks|access-date=20 February 2018|work=The Guardian|date=28 November 2015|archive-date=20 February 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180220212546/https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/nov/28/shouldnt-british-designer-gerard-holtom-of-peace-symbol-be-commemorated-paris-attacks|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="pmbGHdesign">{{cite web |url=http://www.bradford.ac.uk/library/libraries-and-collections/special-collections/collections/nuclear-disarmament-symbol-drawings/ |publisher=The Peace Museum, Bradford |work=The Peace Museum's Collection |title=Nuclear Disarmament Symbol Drawings |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140201233916/http://www.bradford.ac.uk/library/libraries-and-collections/special-collections/collections/nuclear-disarmament-symbol-drawings/ |archive-date=1 February 2014 }}"</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://acircleandthreelines.com/wp-content/themes/eximius/images/ACATL%20March%20to%20Aldermaston%20highres.jpg |title=First use of the peace symbol, 1958 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120219234704/http://acircleandthreelines.com/wp-content/themes/eximius/images/ACATL%20March%20to%20Aldermaston%20highres.jpg |archive-date=19 February 2012 }}</ref><ref name="Time Magazine 20080407">{{Cite news | title = A Piece of Our Time | work = Time Magazine | url = http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1725969,00.html | access-date = 2 April 2008 | date = 27 March 2008 | first = Richard | last = Lacayo | url-status = dead | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080401202054/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1725969,00.html | archive-date = 1 April 2008 | df = dmy-all }}</ref> Holtom's design was adapted by [[Eric Austen]] (1922–1999) to ceramic lapel badges.<ref name=driver/><ref>{{cite news |author=W. J. Mc Cormack |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/obituary-eric-austen-1106837.html |title=Obituary of Eric Austen, ''The Independent'', 17 July 1998 |work=The Independent |location=UK |date=17 July 1999 |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120122060057/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/obituary-eric-austen-1106837.html |archive-date=22 January 2012 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=On February 21, 1958, the Peace Symbol Design Was Completed by Gerald Holtom |date=21 February 2022 |website=vintag.es |publisher=Vintage Everyday |url=https://www.vintag.es/2022/02/peace-symbol.html |access-date=20 March 2022 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220221134230/https://www.vintag.es/2022/02/peace-symbol.html |archive-date=21 February 2022}}</ref> The original design is in the [[Peace Museum, Bradford|Peace Museum]] in Bradford, England.<ref name=driver/>
[[Image:Madrid peace dove graffiti.jpg|thumb|right|Peace dove graffiti in Madrid. The Spanish "paz" translates to "peace".]]
Some unique items have come to symbolize peace. For example, the [[Japanese Peace Bell]] was a gift from the UN Association of Japan to the [[United Nations]], presented to them in 1954. The bell remains at UN headquarters and is struck yearly, in remembrance for peace.


{{Multiple image
The [[Pax Cultura]] symbol, created by Nicholas Roerich has also been used as a peace symbol.
| total_width = 200
| image1 = Semaphore November.svg
| caption1 = N
| image2 = Semaphore Delta.svg
| caption2 = D
| alt1 = Semaphore "N"
| alt2 = Semaphore "D"
| header = [[Flag semaphore]] "ND"
}}


The symbol is a super-imposition of the [[flag semaphore]] for the characters "N" and "D", taken to stand for "nuclear disarmament".<ref name="Breyer2010">{{cite web |url=http://shine.yahoo.com/event/green/where-did-the-peace-sign-come-from-2392559/ |title=Where did the peace sign come from? |access-date=30 September 2010 |last=Breyer |first=Melissa |date=21 September 2010 |work=Shine |publisher=Yahoo! |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107233803/http://shine.yahoo.com/green/where-did-the-peace-sign-come-from-2392559.html |archive-date=7 November 2012 |url-status=live }}</ref>
[[Guernica_(painting)|Guernica]], a painting by [[Pablo Picasso]], has also been associated with pacifism. Although it was not conceived by the author as a representation of war's horrors, its depiction of the [[Nazi]] [[Bombing_of_Guernica|bombing]] of [[Guernica_(town)|Guernica]] is now considered an iconic anti-war statement.
This observation was made as early as 5 April 1958 in the ''Manchester Guardian''.<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/century/1950-1959/Story/0,,105488,00.html "Early Defections in March", ''Manchester Guardian'', 5 April 1958] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161122000810/https://www.theguardian.com/century/1950-1959/Story/0,,105488,00.html |date=22 November 2016 }} "By the time the marchers had left Chiswick they numbered less than two thousand. Above them bobbed the signs of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, a sort of formalised white butterfly which, it appeared, was the semaphore sign for "N.D." "</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = The CND symbol | work = Hugh Brock Papers | url = http://www.bradford.ac.uk/library/special-collections/ | url-status = live | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131003032600/http://www.bradford.ac.uk/library/special-collections/ | archive-date = 3 October 2013 | df = dmy-all }}</ref> In addition to this primary genesis, Holtom additionally cited as inspiration [[Francisco Goya]]'s painting ''[[The Third of May 1808]]'' :{{efn|in the painting, the peasant shown has his arms stretched upwards, not downwards.}}


<blockquote>I was in despair. Deep despair. I drew myself: the representative of an individual in despair, with hands palm outstretched outwards and downwards in the manner of Goya's peasant before the firing squad. I formalised the drawing into a line and put a circle round it.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://cnduk.org/the-symbol/|title=History of the Symbol|website=Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament|language=en-GB|access-date=2019-05-08|archive-date=26 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180726021852/https://cnduk.org/the-symbol/|url-status=live}}</ref></blockquote>
==See also==

*[[Peace pipe]]
Ken Kolsbun, a correspondent of Holtom's, says that the designer came to regret the symbolism of despair, as he felt that peace was something to be celebrated and wanted the symbol to be inverted.<ref>{{Cite news | first=Kathryn | last=Westcott | title=World's best-known protest symbol turns 50 | date=20 March 2008 | url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7292252.stm | publisher=BBC News | access-date=20 March 2008 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080321113603/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7292252.stm | archive-date=21 March 2008 | df=dmy-all }}</ref> Eric Austen is said to have "discovered that the 'gesture of despair' motif had long been associated with 'the death of man', and the circle with 'the unborn child'{{-"}}.<ref name=driver/>
*[[Palm frond]]

The symbol became the badge of the [[Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament]], and wearing it became a sign of support for the campaign that argued for British unilateral [[nuclear disarmament]]. An account of CND's early history described the image as "a visual adhesive to bind the [Aldermaston] [[Aldermaston March|March]] and later the whole Campaign together ... probably the most powerful, memorable and adaptable image ever designed for a secular cause".<ref name="driver">Christopher Driver, ''The Disarmers: A Study in Protest'', London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1964.</ref>

<gallery widths="200" heights="200">
File:CND badge, 1960s.jpg|[[Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament]] badge (1960s)
File:Vietnam....Specialist. 4 Richard Champion, squad leader, Company B, 4th Battalion, 21st Infantry, 11th Light Infantry... - NARA - 531467.jpg|A U.S. soldier [[Vietnam War|in Vietnam]] wearing various amulets, including the "peace symbol" and the Buddhist swastika (1971 photograph).
File:Hippie memorial peace sign.jpg|A "peace symbol" forming part of the "Hippie Memorial" (1992) in [[Arcola, Illinois]], United States.
File:Give Peace a Chance!.jpg|A "[[Give Peace a Chance]]" pin, likely a reference to the 1969 John Lennon song
</gallery>

===International reception===
[[File:Hiroshima Day Activist 2014.JPG|thumb|upright|Nuclear disarmament activist in [[Wellington]] handing out [[peace crane]]s and holding a peace symbol commemorating the [[atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki]] (6 August 2014)).]]

Not copyrighted, trademarked or restricted, the symbol spread beyond CND and was adopted by the wider disarmament and [[anti-war movement]]s. It became widely known in the United States in 1958 when [[Albert Bigelow]], a pacifist protester, sailed a small boat fitted with the CND banner into the vicinity of a nuclear test.<ref>{{Cite book | title = The Struggle Against the Bomb: Volume Two, Resisting the Bomb: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement | page = 55 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=vJuaAAAAIAAJ&q=voyage+of+the+golden+rule&pg=RA1-PA55 | author = Lawrence S Wittner | year = 1993 | publisher = Stanford University Press | isbn = 9780804729185 | access-date = 24 July 2009 | url-status = live | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130616113039/http://books.google.com/books?id=vJuaAAAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PA55&dq=voyage+of+the+golden+rule | archive-date = 16 June 2013 | df = dmy-all }}</ref> Buttons with the symbol were imported into the United States in 1960 by [[Philip Altbach]], a freshman at the [[University of Chicago]]. Altbach had traveled to England to meet with British peace groups as a delegate from the [[Student Peace Union]] (SPU) and, on his return, he persuaded the SPU to adopt the symbol.{{cn|date=February 2021}}

Between 1960 and 1964, they sold thousands of the buttons on college campuses. By 1968, the symbol had been adopted as a generic peace sign,<ref name="peacesymbol">{{Cite book |title= Peace: The Biography of a Symbol |author= Ken Kolsbun with Mike Sweeney |publisher= [[National Geographic Society|National Geographic]] Books |date= 1 April 2008 |isbn= 978-1-4262-0294-0 |url= https://archive.org/details/peacebiographyof0000kols |access-date= 28 August 2008 |df= dmy-all |url-access= registration }}</ref>
associated especially with the [[History of the hippie movement|hippie movement]] and [[Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War|opposition to the Vietnam War]].<ref name="Stanford">[http://passionatesceptic.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/on-trail-of-witchs-foot-how-john-birch.html George Stanford, ''The Myth of the Witch's Foot: How the John Birch Society Created a Hoax About the Peace Sign''], Monday, 3 December 2012 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151017223108/http://passionatesceptic.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/on-trail-of-witchs-foot-how-john-birch.html |date=17 October 2015 }}</ref>

In 1970, two US private companies tried to register the peace symbol as a trade mark: the Intercontinental Shoe Corporation of New York and Luv, Inc. of Miami. Commissioner of Patents William E. Schuyler Jr, said that the symbol "could not properly function as a trade mark subject to registration by the Patent Office".<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ev1HAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wf8MAAAAIBAJ&dq=peace-symbol&pg=932%2C7037538 |title=''The Morning Record'', Meriden, Conn, 22 Oct 1970, p.29 |access-date=18 March 2016 |archive-date=11 April 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160411080936/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ev1HAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wf8MAAAAIBAJ&dq=peace-symbol&pg=932%2C7037538 |url-status=live }}</ref>

In 1973, the [[South Africa]]n government tried to ban its use by opponents of [[apartheid]].<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/7292252.stm "World's best-known protest symbol turns 50"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320130805/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7292252.stm |date=20 March 2012 }}. ''[[BBC News Magazine]]'', 20 March 2008</ref>

===Interpretations===
Gerald Holtom had originally considered using a [[Christian cross]] symbol within a circle, but he was dissuaded by several priests who expressed reservations towards using the cross on a protest march.<ref name="CNDlogo">{{cite web|url=http://www.cnduk.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=435&Itemid=131|title=The CND logo|publisher=[[Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080325173521/http://www.cnduk.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=435&Itemid=131|archive-date=25 March 2008|url-status=live|access-date=3 April 2008}}</ref> Holtom's symbol was nevertheless compared to the Christian cross symbol, as well as to the [[death rune]] (the inverted [[ᛘ]] rune associated with death in early 20th century esotericism).<ref>"In the past, a very similar inverted cross was known to represent Peter hanging upside down on the cross. When that symbol was placed on the door, it was a sign to persecuted Christians that there would be church services in that home." Pasadena ''Star-News'' 8 May 1968, cited after [http://passionatesceptic.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/on-trail-of-witchs-foot-how-john-birch.html George Stanford, ''The Myth of the Witch's Foot: How the John Birch Society Created a Hoax About the Peace Sign''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151017223108/http://passionatesceptic.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/on-trail-of-witchs-foot-how-john-birch.html |date=17 October 2015 }}, Monday, 3 December 2012.</ref>

In 1968, the anti-Communist evangelist [[Billy James Hargis]] described the symbol as a "broken cross", which he claimed represented the [[antichrist]]. Hargis' interpretation was taken up by a member of the [[John Birch Society]], Marjorie Jensen, who wrote a pamphlet claiming the symbol was equivalent to "a symbol of the devil, with the cross reversed and broken" supposedly known as "the crow's foot or witch's foot".<ref>{{Cite news |last=Walling |first=Marie H. |date=January 13, 1969 |title=Popular pendant's meaning: symbol of peace or evil? |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/arizona-republic-popular-pendants-meani/143811416/ |access-date=March 21, 2024 |work=[[Arizona Republic]] |pages=41 |via=[[Newspapers.com]]}}</ref> In June 1970, ''[[American Opinion]]'', the journal of the John Birch Society, published an article which compared the symbol to a supposed "broken cross" claimed to have been "carried by the Moors when they invaded Spain in the 8th century". The newsletter of the National Republican Congressional Committee of 28 September 1970 on its question page made the comparison to a design of a "death rune" in a wreath published by the German [[Nazi party]] as representing (heroic) death, in 1942.<ref> National Republican Congressional Committee (28 September 1970), cited after Stanford (2012). Caption Wochenspruch der NSDAP. / Herausgeber / Folge 12, 15. – 21. Marz [https://web.archive.org/web/20160116203852/http://umedia.lib.umn.edu/node/43005 ''Wochenspruch'' Folge 12, 15–21 März], Reichspropagandaleitung der NSDAP (1942).</ref> ''Time'' magazine in its 2 November 1970 issue made note of these comparisons, pointing out that any such resemblance was "probably coincidental".<ref>{{Cite magazine |date=November 2, 1970 |title=What's in a Symbol |url=https://time.com/archive/6843515/nation-whats-in-a-symbol/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240922095005/https://time.com/archive/6843515/nation-whats-in-a-symbol/ |archive-date=September 22, 2024 |access-date=September 22, 2024 |magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |volume=96 |issue=18 |issn=0040-781X}}</ref>

==Rainbow flag==
{{Main|Peace flag}}
[[File:Bandiera pace.jpg|thumb|The [[peace flag]] flown from a balcony in Italy]]

The international peace flag in the colours of the rainbow was first used in Italy on a 1961 peace march from [[Perugia]] to [[Assisi]] organized by the pacifist and social philosopher [[Aldo Capitini]] (1899–1968). Inspired by the peace flags used on British peace marches, Capitini got some women of Perugia hurriedly to sew together coloured strips of material.<ref name="peaceflag">[http://www.comitatopace.it/materiali/bandieradellapace.htm The Story of the Peace Flag] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303194527/http://www.comitatopace.it/materiali/bandieradellapace.htm |date=3 March 2016 }} (Italian)</ref> The march has been repeated many times since 1961, including in 2010.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rassegna.it/articoli/2010/05/14/62433/marcia-perugia-assisi-la-pace-anche-a-casa-nostra |title="The Perugia-Assisi Peace March", Paolo Andruciolli, ''rassegna.it'', 14 May 2010 (Italian) |language=it |publisher=Rassegna.it |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120315012141/http://www.rassegna.it/articoli/2010/05/14/62433/marcia-perugia-assisi-la-pace-anche-a-casa-nostra |archive-date=15 March 2012 }}</ref> The original flag was kept by Capitini's collaborator, Lanfranco Mencaroni, at Collevalenza, near [[Todi]].<ref name=peaceflag/> In 2011, plans were announced to transfer it to the [[Palazzo dei Priori]] in Perugia.<ref>[http://www.perugiatoday.it/cronaca/bandiera-della-pace-di-aldo-capitini-a-palazzo-priori-perugia.html ''Perugia Today''] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150626115420/http://www.perugiatoday.it/cronaca/bandiera-della-pace-di-aldo-capitini-a-palazzo-priori-perugia.html |date=26 June 2015 }} (In Italian)</ref>

The flag commonly has seven [[rainbow]]-colored stripes with the word {{Lang|it|PACE}} ([[Italian language|Italian]] for {{Gloss|peace}}) in the center. It has been explained as follows:
<blockquote>In the account of the Great Flood, God set the rainbow to a seal the alliance with man and nature, promising that there will never be another Flood. The rainbow thus became a symbol of Peace across the earth and the sky, and, by extension, among all men.<ref name=peaceflag/></blockquote>

The flag usually has the colours violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and red from top to bottom, but some have the violet stripe below the blue one (as in the picture at the right) or a white one at the top.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.scuoleingioco.it/pacif_new/MANZONI/5A/OGGI/index_oggi_m.html |title=Pace Oggi (Peace Today) (Italian) |publisher=Scuoleingioco.it |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120119053206/http://www.scuoleingioco.it/pacif_new/MANZONI/5A/OGGI/index_oggi_m.html |archive-date=19 January 2012 }}</ref> A picture of Capitini's first peace flag, carried by Anna Capitini and Silvana Mencaroni, shows the colours red, orange, white, green, violet, indigo, and lavender.<ref name=peaceflag/>

In 2002, renewed display of the flag was widespread with the {{Lang|it|Pace da tutti i balconi}} ({{Gloss|Peace from every balcony}}) campaign, a protest against the impending [[war in Iraq]] planned by the United States and its allies. In 2003, the Italian newspaper {{Lang|it|[[Corriere della Sera]]}} reported leading advertising executives saying that the peace flag had become more popular than the Italian national flag.<ref>{{cite web |author=RCS Corriere della Sera |url=http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Cronache/2003/02_Febbraio/20/bandierepace.shtml |title="Bandiera della pace più popolare del tricolore", ''Corriere della Sera'', 20 February 2003 (Italian) |work=Corriere della Sera |language=it |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113080014/http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Cronache/2003/02_Febbraio/20/bandierepace.shtml |archive-date=13 January 2012 }}</ref> In November 2009, a huge peace flag, 21m wide by 40m long, was made in [[Lecce]], [[Salento]], by young members of "GPACE – Youth for Peace – Give Peace a Chance Everywhere".<ref>{{Dead link|date=May 2015}}{{cite web |url=http://www.gpace.net/gpace1411.html |title=Youth for Peace |publisher=GPACE |access-date=21 February 2012 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120301061825/http://www.gpace.net/gpace1411.html |archive-date=1 March 2012 }}</ref>

== Predator and prey lie down together ==
[[File:Kroisos BMC 31.jpg|right|thumb|[[Croeseid]] coin of [[Croesus]] {{circa|550 BC}}, depicting the Lion and Bull – partly symbolizing alliance between Lydia and Greece, respectively.]]

The imagery of a predator and prey lying down together in peace is depicted in the Bible:

{{quote|The wolf will live with the lamb, the leopard will lie down with the goat, the calf and the lion and the yearling together; and a little child will lead them.|author=|title=|source=Isaiah 11:6}}

One of the first coins to be minted was the [[croeseid]]. It depicted the Lydian Lion and Hellenic Bull, representing the peaceful alliance between [[Croesus]] and the dynasty of [[Agamemnon]] enthroned in [[Cyme (Aeolis)|Cyme]]. This alliance had been sealed through two royal marriages, [[Hermodike I]] {{circa|800 BC}}<ref>The Cambridge Ancient History, edited by John Boederman, Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 832</ref> to the Phrygian king [[Midas]] and [[Hermodike II]] {{circa|600 BC}}<ref>Mycenaean Origin of Greek Mythology, Martin Nilsson, 1983 Univ of California Press, p. 48.</ref> to [[Alyattes of Lydia]]. Alyattes was Croesus' father and Hermodike II was likely his mother. When he came to power, Croesus minted the first coin depicting two animals. The roaring lion – symbol of [[History of Coins|Lydia]] – and the bull – symbol of Hellenic [[Zeus]]<ref>[http://data.perseus.org/citations/urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0548.tlg001.perseus-eng1:2.7 Perseus 1:2.7] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221231141513/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0548.tlg001.perseus-eng1:2.7 |date=31 December 2022 }}: "[Hercules] had Agelaus, from whom the family of Croesus was descended."</ref> (from the [[Europa (consort of Zeus)|Seduction of Europa]]<ref>Grimal, Pierre, (1991). ''The Penguin Dictionary of Classical Mythology.'' Kershaw, Stephen. ([Abridged ed.] ed.). London, England: Penguin Books. {{ISBN|0140512357}}. OCLC 25246340.</ref>) – are facing each other in truce; Note that hunting lions attack from the rear, not face-to the horns. The imagery of a predator and prey lying down together in peace is reflected in other ancient literature, e.g. "...the calf and the lion and the yearling together..." {{circa|700 BC}} (Isaiah 11:6, see above). The croeseid symbolism of peace between the Greeks of Asia Minor, Lydians and later [[Persians]] (under [[Cyrus the Great]]) persisted long after Croesus' death – until [[Darius the Great]] introduced new coins {{circa|500 BC}}.{{cn|date=February 2021}}

The union of [[Phrygia]] and [[Lydia]] with [[Aeolis|Aeolian Greeks]] resulted in regional peace, which facilitated the transfer of ground-breaking technological skills into Ancient Greece; respectively, the [[Phoenician alphabet|phonetic written script]]{{Dubious|reason=The chronology doesn't work, see [[Midas]]; the alphabet was already introduced early in the 8th century BC|date=April 2022}} and the minting of [[History of coins|coinage]] (to use a token currency, where the value is guaranteed by the state).<ref>Amelia Dowler, Curator, British Museum; A History of the World; http://www.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworld/objects/7cEz771FSeOLptGIElaquA {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100122003748/http://www.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworld/objects/7cEz771FSeOLptGIElaquA |date=22 January 2010 }}</ref> Both inventions were rapidly adopted by surrounding nations through further trade and cooperation and have been of fundamental benefit to the progress of civilization.{{cn|date=February 2021}}

==V sign==
{{Main|V sign}}

[[File:Presidio 27 Sit-Down 14Oct1968 - Image 2.jpg|thumb|US soldiers protest the Vietnam war, 1968]]

The [[V sign]] ({{Unichar|270C|Victory hand}} in [[Unicode]]) is a [[hand gesture]], palm outwards, with the index and middle fingers open and all others closed. It had been used to represent victory during the Second World War.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://postalmuseum.si.edu/symposium2008/DeBlois-Harris-V_for_Victory-paper.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=15 October 2017 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161015225307/http://postalmuseum.si.edu/symposium2008/DeBlois-Harris-V_for_Victory-paper.pdf |archive-date=15 October 2016 }}</ref> During the 1960s in the US, activists against the [[Vietnam War]] and in subsequent anti-war protests adopted the gesture as a sign of peace.<ref name="icons-asian-peace">[http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collection/the-v-sign/a-harvey-smith-to-you/the-asian-v-sign-in-progress "The Japanese Version (the Sign of Peace)"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080621122852/http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collection/the-v-sign/a-harvey-smith-to-you/the-asian-v-sign-in-progress |date=21 June 2008 }}, Icons website. Retrieved 29 July 2007</ref>

==Paper cranes==
{{Further|Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes}}
[[File:Origami - Crane.svg|thumb|right|150px|Japanese peace symbol.]]

The [[crane (bird)|crane]], a traditional symbol of luck in Japan, was popularized as a peace symbol by the story of [[Sadako Sasaki]] (1943–1955), a girl who died as a result of the [[atomic bomb]] exploding over [[Hiroshima]] in 1945. According to the story, popularized through the book ''[[Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes]]'',<ref>Eleanor Coerr, ''[[Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes]]'', 1977</ref> in the last stages of her illness she started folding paper cranes, inspired by the Japanese saying that one who folded a [[thousand origami cranes]] was granted a wish. This made an impression in people's minds. As a result, she is remembered on every 6 August, which is an annual peace day for people all over Japan.{{cn|date=February 2021}}
[[File:Hiroshima senzaburu.jpg|thumb|Japanese school children dedicate [[One thousand origami cranes|Senbazuru]] ({{Lang|ja|千羽鶴}}), or 1000 cranes, to the memorial for [[Sadako Sasaki]] in Hiroshima Peace Park, 1990.]]

== Japanese Peace Bell ==
{{Main|Japanese Peace Bell}}
[[File:Japanese Peace Bell of United Nations.JPG|thumb|right|150px|The [[Japanese Peace Bell]]]]

The [[Japanese Peace Bell]] is a United Nations peace symbol. Cast on 24 November 1952, it was an official gift of the Japanese people to the United Nations on 8 June 1954. The symbolic bell of peace was donated by Japan to the United Nations at a time when Japan had not yet been officially admitted to the United Nations. The Japanese Peace Bell was presented to the United Nations by the United Nations Association of Japan.<ref>{{Cite web|date=21 September 2018|title=7 things you didn't know about the Peace Bell|url=https://www.one.org/international/blog/7-things-you-didnt-know-about-the-peace-bell/|access-date=14 September 2021|website=ONE|language=en-US|archive-date=14 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210914075223/https://www.one.org/international/blog/7-things-you-didnt-know-about-the-peace-bell/|url-status=live}}</ref>

==Shalom/salaam==
{{Main|Shalom|S-L-M}}

A [[wordmark]] of the three words, [[Hebrew]] word ''[[shalom]]'' (Hebrew: {{lang|he|{{Script/Hebrew|שָׁלוֹם}}|rtl=yes}}), together with the [[Arabic]] ''[[S-L-M|salaam]]'' (Arabic: {{lang|ar|{{Script/Arabic|سلام}}|rtl=yes}}) and the English word ''peace'' has been used as a peace symbol in the Middle East. ''Shalom'' and ''salaam'' mean {{Gloss|peace}} and are [[cognate]]s of each other, derived from the [[Semitic root|Semitic]] [[triconsonantal]] of ''S-L-M'' (realized in Hebrew as ''[[Š-L-M]]'' and in Arabic as ''[[S-L-M]]''). The symbol has come to represent [[Israeli–Palestinian peace process|peace in the Middle East]] and an end to the [[Arab–Israeli conflict]]. Wall plaques, signs, T-shirts, and buttons are sold with only those words.<ref name="the music band called emma's revolution">{{cite web|url=http://www.emmasrevolution.com/shop/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080704024414/http://www.emmasrevolution.com/shop/ |url-status=dead|archive-date=4 July 2008|title=Online retail page for the music band called 'emma's revolution'|author=the music band called 'emma's revolution'|access-date=30 December 2010}}</ref>
{{Clear}}
== See also ==
{{Portal|Peace|Society|World
}}
* [[White-blue-white flag]], Russian anti-war flag
* [[Green ribbon (Russia)|Green ribbon]], Russian anti-war symbol
* [[Earth anthem|Earth anthems]], songs celebrating or eulogizing the world

==Notes==
{{notelist}}


==References==
==References==
Line 91: Line 216:


==External links==
==External links==
{{commons category|Peace symbols}}
* [http://www.peacesymbol.com The biography of the Peace Symbol] - PeaceSymbol.com
* [http://www.peacesymbol.org A tribute to the Peace Symbol and the Peace Sign] - PeaceSymbol.org
* [http://www.. Peace ]
*[https://innerpeacezone.com/peace_sign/ Peace Sign]
* [http://www.kolahstudio.com/Underground/?p=71 Peace symbols Part I] - peace signs and images (author: Arash Vahdati)
<!-- * [http://www.peacesymbol.org/ peacesymbol.org] -- broken -->
* [http://www.kolahstudio.com/underground/?p=72 Peace symbols Part II] - peace signs and images (author: Karan Reshad)
* [http://acircleandthreelines.com/ A Circle and Three Lines]
* [http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a2_149.html What is the origin of the peace symbol?] (from [[The Straight Dope]])
* [http://humanpeacesign.org/ International Human Peace Sign]
* [http://. Peace ]
* [http://passionatesceptic.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/on-trail-of-witchs-foot-how-john-birch.html The Hoax of the Witch's foot: How the John Birch Society created a myth about the peace sign]
* [http://www.bekejel.net/index.php?loader=oldal&page=jelek Live peace symbols] - in 30 country, 60 location
* [http://www.happybirthdaypeace.com Happy Birthday Peace] - celebrating 50 years of Gerald Holtom's peace symbol
* [http://www.happybirthdaypeace.com Happy Birthday Peace celebrating 50 years of Gerald Holtom's peace symbol
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7292252.stm World's best-known protest symbol turns 50] - BBC News
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7292252.stm World's best-known protest symbol turns 50]
* [http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a2_149.html What is the origin of the peace symbol?]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcHcCxVKKxs Unveiling of "Peace & Harmony", European Peace Monument – Dedicated to John Lennon]
* [http://www.historyworkshop.org.uk/radical-objects-cnd-badge/ A British Museum expert's view of the CND badge]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110824051131/http://peace-flags-of-pisa.dk/design.html The Different Peace Flags of Pisa]


{{Anti-war}}
[[Category:Peace symbols]]
{{Peace}}
[[Category:1960s fads]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Peace Symbols}}
[[Category:1958 establishments]]
[[Category:Peace symbols| ]]

[[de:Friedenszeichen]]
[[es:Símbolo de paz]]
[[eo:Pacsimbolo]]
[[fr:Symbole de la paix]]
[[id:Lambang perdamaian]]
[[it:Simbolo della pace]]
[[ja:ピースマーク]]
[[pt:Símbolo da paz]]
[[ru:Пацифик]]
[[fi:Rauhanmerkki]]

Latest revision as of 09:52, 22 September 2024

The symbol designed for the British nuclear disarmament movement in 1958 is now widely known as the "peace sign".

A number of peace symbols have been used many ways in various cultures and contexts. The dove and olive branch was used symbolically by early Christians and then eventually became a secular peace symbol, popularized by a Dove lithograph by Pablo Picasso after World War II. In the 1950s, the "peace sign", as it is known today (also known as "peace and love"), was designed by Gerald Holtom as the logo for the British Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND),[1] a group at the forefront of the peace movement in the UK, and adopted by anti-war and counterculture activists in the US and elsewhere. The symbol is a superposition of the semaphore signals for the letters "N" and "D", taken to stand for "nuclear disarmament",[2] while simultaneously acting as a reference to Goya's The Third of May 1808 (1814) (aka "Peasant Before the Firing Squad").[3]

The V hand signal and the peace flag also became international peace symbols.

Olive branch

[edit]

Classical antiquity

[edit]
An engraving from The London Magazine, January 1775, showing the Goddess of Peace bringing an olive branch to America and Britannia.

The use of the olive branch as a symbol of peace in Western civilization dates at least to 5th century BC Greece. The olive branch, which the Greeks believed represented plenty and drove away evil spirits,[4] was one of the attributes of Eirene,[5] the Greek goddess of peace. Eirene (whom the Romans called Pax), appeared on Roman Imperial coins[6] with an olive branch.

The Roman poet Virgil (70–10 BC) associated "the plump olive"[7] with Pax and he used the olive branch as a symbol of peace in his Aeneid:[8]

High on the stern Aeneas his stand,
And held a branch of olive in his hand,
While thus he spoke: "The Phrygians' arms you see,
Expelled from Troy, provoked in Italy
By Latian foes, with war unjustly made;
At first affianced, and at last betrayed.
This message bear: The Trojans and their chief
Bring holy peace, and beg the king's relief."

The Romans believed there was an intimate relationship between war and peace. Mars, the god of war, had another aspect, Mars Pacifer, Mars the bringer of Peace, who is shown on coins of the later Roman Empire bearing an olive branch.[9][10] Appian describes the use of the olive-branch as a gesture of peace by the enemies of the Roman general Scipio Aemilianus in the Numantine War[11] and by Hasdrubal of Carthage.[12]

Later representations

[edit]
James Thornhill, Peace and Liberty Triumphing Over Tyranny

Poets of the 17th century associated the olive branch with peace.[13] A Charles I gold coin of 1644 shows the monarch with sword and olive branch.[14] Throughout the 18th century, English coins show Britannia with a spear and olive branch.

The Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich, contains an allegorical painting by James Thornhill, Peace and Liberty Triumphing Over Tyranny (1708–1716), depicting King William III and Queen Mary (who had enacted the English Bill of Rights) enthroned in heaven with the Virtues behind them. Peace, with her doves and lambs, hands an olive branch to William, who in turn hands the cap of liberty to Europe, where absolute monarchy prevails. Below William is the defeated French king, Louis XIV.[15]

In January 1775, the frontispiece of the London Magazine published an engraving of Peace descending on a cloud from the Temple of Commerce, bringing an olive branch to America and Britannia. In July that year, the American Continental Congress adopted the "Olive Branch Petition" in the hope of avoiding a full-blown war with Great Britain.[8]

On the Great Seal of the United States (1782), the olive branch denotes peace, as explained by Charles Thomson, Secretary to Congress: "The Olive branch and arrows denote the power of peace & war which is exclusively vested in Congress."[8]

Dove and olive branch

[edit]

Christianity

[edit]
Diagram showing the relationship between the Flood, baptism, water, peace and the dove in early Christian thinking.
Wall painting from the early Christian Catacombs of Marcellinus and Peter in Rome, showing Noah, in the orante attitude of prayer, the dove and an olive branch
The descent of Holy Spirit in the Christian Trinity depicted as a dove of peace in a church memorial stained glass window.

The use of a dove as a symbol of peace originated with early Christians, who portrayed baptism accompanied by a dove, often on their sepulchres.[10][16]

The New Testament compared the dove to the Spirit of God that descended on Jesus during his baptism.[17][18] Christians saw similarities between baptism and Noah's Flood. The First Epistle of Peter (composed around the end of the first century AD[19]) said that the Flood, which brought salvation through water, prefigured baptism.[20] Tertullian (c. 160 – c. 220) compared the dove, who "announced to the world the assuagement of divine wrath, when she had been sent out of the ark and returned with the olive branch, to the Holy Spirit who descends in baptism in the form of a dove that brings the peace of God, sent out from the heavens".[21]

At first the dove represented the subjective personal experience of peace, the peace of the soul, and in the earliest Christian art it accompanies representations of baptism. By the end of the second century (for example in the writing of Tertullian)[22] it also represented social and political peace, "peace unto the nations", and from the third century it began to appear in depictions of conflict, such as Noah and the Ark, Daniel and the lions, the three young men in the furnace, and Susannah and the Elders.[23][24]

The dove appears in Christian inscriptions in the Roman catacombs, sometimes accompanied by the words in pace (Latin for in peace). For example, in the Catacomb of Callixtus, a dove and branch are drawn next to a Latin inscription NICELLA VIRCO DEI OVE VI XIT ANNOS P M XXXV DE POSITA XV KAL MAIAS BENE MERENTI IN PACE, meaning 'Nicella, God's virgin, who lived for more or less 35 years. She was placed [here] 15 days before the Kalends of May [17 April]. For the well deserving one in peace.'[25] In another example, a shallow relief sculpture shows a dove with a branch flying to a figure marked in Greek as ΕΙΡΗΝΗ (Eirene, or 'Peace').[26] The symbol has also been found in the Christian catacombs of Sousse, Tunisia (ancient Carthage), which date from the end of the first century AD.[27][28][29]

The Christian symbolism of the olive branch, invariably carried by the dove, derives from Greek usage and the story of Noah in the Hebrew Bible.[30] The story of Noah ends with a dove bringing a freshly plucked olive leaf (Hebrew: עלה זית alay zayit),[31] a sign of life after the Flood and of God's bringing Noah, his family and the animals to land. Rabbinic literature interpreted the olive leaf as "the young shoots of the Land of Israel"[32] or the dove's preference for bitter food in God's service, rather than sweet food in the service of men.[33][34][35] Neither represented peace in Jewish thought, but the dove and olive branch acquired that meaning in Christianity.[36]

Before the Peace of Constantine (313 AD), in which Rome ceased its persecution of Christians following Constantine's conversion, Noah was normally shown in an attitude of prayer, a dove flying toward him or alighting on his outstretched hand. According to Graydon Snyder, "The Noah story afforded the early Christian community an opportunity to express piety and peace in a vessel that withstood the threatening environment" of Roman persecution.[23] According to Ludwig Budde and Pierre Prigent, the dove referred to the descending of the Holy Spirit rather than the peace associated with Noah. After the Peace of Constantine, when persecution ceased, Noah appeared less frequently in Christian art.[23]

In the fourth century, St. Jerome's Latin Bible translated the Hebrew alay zayit in the Noah story as ramum olivae, ('olive branch'), possibly reflecting the Christian equivalence between the peace brought by baptism and peace brought by the ending of the Flood. By the fifth century, St Augustine confirmed the Christian adoption of the olive branch as a symbol of peace, writing that, "perpetual peace is indicated by the olive branch (Latin: oleae ramusculo) that the dove brought with it when it returned to the ark."[37]

Medieval illuminated manuscripts, such as the Holkham Bible, showed the dove returning to Noah with a branch.[38] Wycliffe's Bible, which translated the Vulgate into English in the 14th century, uses "a braunche of olyue tre with greene leeuys" ("a branch of olive tree with green leaves") in Gen. 8:11.[39] In the Middle Ages, some Jewish manuscripts, which were often illustrated by Christians,[40] also showed Noah's dove with an olive branch, for example, the Golden Haggadah (about 1420).[41][42]

English Bibles from the 17th-century King James Bible onwards, which translated the story of Noah direct from Hebrew, render the Hebrew aleh zayit as 'olive leaf' rather than 'olive branch', but by this time the association of the dove with an olive branch as a symbol of peace in the story of Noah was firmly established.[citation needed]

Secular representations

[edit]
Adaption of Picasso's La Colombe
  • Late 15th century In the late 15th century, a dove with an olive branch was used on the seal of Dieci di Balia, the Florentine committee known as The Ten of Liberty and Peace,[43] whose secretary was Machiavelli; it bore the motto Pax et Defencio Libertatis (Peace and the Defence of Liberty).[44]
  • Late 18th century In 18th-century America, a £2 note of North Carolina (1771) depicted the dove and olive with a motto meaning: "Peace restored". Georgia's $40 note of 1778 portrayed the dove and olive and a hand holding a dagger, with a motto meaning "Either war or peace, prepared for both."[8]
  • Early 19th century The Society for the Promotion of Permanent and Universal Peace, also known as The London Peace Society, formed on a Quaker initiative in 1816, used the symbol of a dove and olive branch.[45]
  • Early 20th century A German war loan poster of 1917 showed the head of an eagle over a dove of peace in flight, with the text, "Subscribe to the War Loan".[citation needed]
  • Mid 20th century Picasso's lithograph, La Colombe (The Dove), a traditional, realistic picture of a pigeon, without an olive branch, was chosen as the emblem for the World Peace Council in Paris in April 1949.[46] The dove became a symbol for the peace movement and the ideals of the Communist Party and was used in Communist demonstrations of the period. At the 1950 World Peace Council in Sheffield, Picasso said that his father had taught him to paint doves, concluding, "I stand for life against death; I stand for peace against war."[47][48] At the 1952 World Peace Council in Berlin, Picasso's Dove was depicted in a banner above the stage. The dove symbol was used extensively in the post-war peace movement.[citation needed] Anti-communists had their own take on the peace dove: the group Paix et Liberté distributed posters titled La colombe qui fait BOUM ('the dove that goes BOOM'), showing the peace dove metamorphosing into a Soviet tank.[49]

Broken rifle

[edit]
The broken rifle symbol of War Resisters' International

The broken rifle symbol is used by War Resisters' International (WRI) and its affiliates but predates the foundation of WRI in 1921. The first known example of the symbol is in the masthead of the January 1909 issue of De Wapens Neder (Down with Weapons), the monthly paper of the International Antimilitarist Union in the Netherlands. In 1915 it appeared on the cover of a pamphlet, Under det brukne Gevær (Under the Broken Rifle), published by the Norwegian Social Democratic Youth Association. The (German) League for War Victims, founded in 1917, used the broken rifle on a 1919 banner.[citation needed]

In 1921, Belgian workers marching through La Louvrière on 16 October 1921, carried flags showing a soldier breaking his rifle. Ernst Friedrich, a German who had refused military service, founded the Anti-Kriegs Museum in Berlin, which featured a bas-relief broken rifle over the door. The museum distributed broken-rifle badges, girls' and women's brooches, boys' belt buckles, and men's tie pins.[50]

White poppy

[edit]

In 1933, during a period in which there was widespread fear of war in Europe, the Women's Co-operative Guild began the practice of distributing white poppies[51] as an alternative to the red poppies distributed by the Royal British Legion in commemoration of servicemen who died in the First World War.[51] In 1934 the newly formed Peace Pledge Union (PPU), which was the largest British peace organization in the inter-war years, joined in distributing white poppies and laying white poppy wreaths "as a pledge to peace that war must not happen again". In 1980, the PPU revived the symbol as a way of remembering the victims of war without glorifying militarism.[citation needed]

Roerich's peace banner

[edit]
The Pax Cultura emblem of the Roerich Pact or Treaty on the Protection of Artistic and Scientific Institutions and Historic Monuments of 1935

Nicholas Roerich (1874–1947), a Russian artist, cultural activist, and philosopher, founded a movement to protect cultural artifacts. Its symbol was a maroon-on-white emblem consisting of three solid circles in a surrounding circle. It has also been used as a peace banner. In 1935 a pact initiated by Roerich was signed by the United States and Latin American nations, agreeing that "historic monuments, museums, scientific, artistic, educational and cultural institutions" should be protected both in times of peace and war.

According to the Roerich Museum,

The Banner of Peace symbol has ancient origins. Perhaps its earliest known example appears on Stone Age amulets: three dots, without the enclosing circle. Roerich came across numerous later examples in various parts of the world, and knew that it represented a deep and sophisticated understanding of the triune nature of existence. But for the purposes of the Banner and the Pact, Roerich described the circle as representing the totality of culture, with the three dots being Art, Science, and Religion, three of the most embracing of human cultural activities. He also described the circle as representing the eternity of time, encompassing the past, present, and future. The sacred origins of the symbol, as an illustration of the trinities fundamental to all religions, remain central to the meaning of the Pact and the Banner today.[52]

Peace symbol

[edit]
Peace symbol
In UnicodeU+262E PEACE SYMBOL
Different from
Different fromMercedes-Benz logo
Related
See alsoU+1F54A 🕊 DOVE OF PEACE
U+270C VICTORY HAND

The symbol now known internationally as the "peace symbol" or "peace sign", was created in 1958 as a symbol for Britain's campaign for nuclear disarmament.[53] It went on to be widely adopted in the American anti-war movement in the 1960s and was re-interpreted as generically representing world peace. It was also used by activists opposing nuclear power in the 1980s,[citation needed] although the Smiling Sun image () ["Nuclear power? No thanks!]" predominated.

Origin

[edit]

The symbol was designed by Gerald Holtom (1914–1985), who presented it to Direct Action Committee on 21 February 1958.[1] It was "immediately accepted" as a symbol for the movement and used for a march from Trafalgar Square, London, to the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment at Aldermaston in Berkshire on 4 April.[54][53][55][56] Holtom's design was adapted by Eric Austen (1922–1999) to ceramic lapel badges.[57][58][59] The original design is in the Peace Museum in Bradford, England.[57]

The symbol is a super-imposition of the flag semaphore for the characters "N" and "D", taken to stand for "nuclear disarmament".[2] This observation was made as early as 5 April 1958 in the Manchester Guardian.[60][61] In addition to this primary genesis, Holtom additionally cited as inspiration Francisco Goya's painting The Third of May 1808 :[a]

I was in despair. Deep despair. I drew myself: the representative of an individual in despair, with hands palm outstretched outwards and downwards in the manner of Goya's peasant before the firing squad. I formalised the drawing into a line and put a circle round it.[62]

Ken Kolsbun, a correspondent of Holtom's, says that the designer came to regret the symbolism of despair, as he felt that peace was something to be celebrated and wanted the symbol to be inverted.[63] Eric Austen is said to have "discovered that the 'gesture of despair' motif had long been associated with 'the death of man', and the circle with 'the unborn child'".[57]

The symbol became the badge of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and wearing it became a sign of support for the campaign that argued for British unilateral nuclear disarmament. An account of CND's early history described the image as "a visual adhesive to bind the [Aldermaston] March and later the whole Campaign together ... probably the most powerful, memorable and adaptable image ever designed for a secular cause".[57]

International reception

[edit]
Nuclear disarmament activist in Wellington handing out peace cranes and holding a peace symbol commemorating the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (6 August 2014)).

Not copyrighted, trademarked or restricted, the symbol spread beyond CND and was adopted by the wider disarmament and anti-war movements. It became widely known in the United States in 1958 when Albert Bigelow, a pacifist protester, sailed a small boat fitted with the CND banner into the vicinity of a nuclear test.[64] Buttons with the symbol were imported into the United States in 1960 by Philip Altbach, a freshman at the University of Chicago. Altbach had traveled to England to meet with British peace groups as a delegate from the Student Peace Union (SPU) and, on his return, he persuaded the SPU to adopt the symbol.[citation needed]

Between 1960 and 1964, they sold thousands of the buttons on college campuses. By 1968, the symbol had been adopted as a generic peace sign,[65] associated especially with the hippie movement and opposition to the Vietnam War.[66]

In 1970, two US private companies tried to register the peace symbol as a trade mark: the Intercontinental Shoe Corporation of New York and Luv, Inc. of Miami. Commissioner of Patents William E. Schuyler Jr, said that the symbol "could not properly function as a trade mark subject to registration by the Patent Office".[67]

In 1973, the South African government tried to ban its use by opponents of apartheid.[68]

Interpretations

[edit]

Gerald Holtom had originally considered using a Christian cross symbol within a circle, but he was dissuaded by several priests who expressed reservations towards using the cross on a protest march.[69] Holtom's symbol was nevertheless compared to the Christian cross symbol, as well as to the death rune (the inverted rune associated with death in early 20th century esotericism).[70]

In 1968, the anti-Communist evangelist Billy James Hargis described the symbol as a "broken cross", which he claimed represented the antichrist. Hargis' interpretation was taken up by a member of the John Birch Society, Marjorie Jensen, who wrote a pamphlet claiming the symbol was equivalent to "a symbol of the devil, with the cross reversed and broken" supposedly known as "the crow's foot or witch's foot".[71] In June 1970, American Opinion, the journal of the John Birch Society, published an article which compared the symbol to a supposed "broken cross" claimed to have been "carried by the Moors when they invaded Spain in the 8th century". The newsletter of the National Republican Congressional Committee of 28 September 1970 on its question page made the comparison to a design of a "death rune" in a wreath published by the German Nazi party as representing (heroic) death, in 1942.[72] Time magazine in its 2 November 1970 issue made note of these comparisons, pointing out that any such resemblance was "probably coincidental".[73]

Rainbow flag

[edit]
The peace flag flown from a balcony in Italy

The international peace flag in the colours of the rainbow was first used in Italy on a 1961 peace march from Perugia to Assisi organized by the pacifist and social philosopher Aldo Capitini (1899–1968). Inspired by the peace flags used on British peace marches, Capitini got some women of Perugia hurriedly to sew together coloured strips of material.[74] The march has been repeated many times since 1961, including in 2010.[75] The original flag was kept by Capitini's collaborator, Lanfranco Mencaroni, at Collevalenza, near Todi.[74] In 2011, plans were announced to transfer it to the Palazzo dei Priori in Perugia.[76]

The flag commonly has seven rainbow-colored stripes with the word PACE (Italian for 'peace') in the center. It has been explained as follows:

In the account of the Great Flood, God set the rainbow to a seal the alliance with man and nature, promising that there will never be another Flood. The rainbow thus became a symbol of Peace across the earth and the sky, and, by extension, among all men.[74]

The flag usually has the colours violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange and red from top to bottom, but some have the violet stripe below the blue one (as in the picture at the right) or a white one at the top.[77] A picture of Capitini's first peace flag, carried by Anna Capitini and Silvana Mencaroni, shows the colours red, orange, white, green, violet, indigo, and lavender.[74]

In 2002, renewed display of the flag was widespread with the Pace da tutti i balconi ('Peace from every balcony') campaign, a protest against the impending war in Iraq planned by the United States and its allies. In 2003, the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reported leading advertising executives saying that the peace flag had become more popular than the Italian national flag.[78] In November 2009, a huge peace flag, 21m wide by 40m long, was made in Lecce, Salento, by young members of "GPACE – Youth for Peace – Give Peace a Chance Everywhere".[79]

Predator and prey lie down together

[edit]
Croeseid coin of Croesus c. 550 BC, depicting the Lion and Bull – partly symbolizing alliance between Lydia and Greece, respectively.

The imagery of a predator and prey lying down together in peace is depicted in the Bible:

The wolf will live with the lamb, the leopard will lie down with the goat, the calf and the lion and the yearling together; and a little child will lead them.

— Isaiah 11:6

One of the first coins to be minted was the croeseid. It depicted the Lydian Lion and Hellenic Bull, representing the peaceful alliance between Croesus and the dynasty of Agamemnon enthroned in Cyme. This alliance had been sealed through two royal marriages, Hermodike I c. 800 BC[80] to the Phrygian king Midas and Hermodike II c. 600 BC[81] to Alyattes of Lydia. Alyattes was Croesus' father and Hermodike II was likely his mother. When he came to power, Croesus minted the first coin depicting two animals. The roaring lion – symbol of Lydia – and the bull – symbol of Hellenic Zeus[82] (from the Seduction of Europa[83]) – are facing each other in truce; Note that hunting lions attack from the rear, not face-to the horns. The imagery of a predator and prey lying down together in peace is reflected in other ancient literature, e.g. "...the calf and the lion and the yearling together..." c. 700 BC (Isaiah 11:6, see above). The croeseid symbolism of peace between the Greeks of Asia Minor, Lydians and later Persians (under Cyrus the Great) persisted long after Croesus' death – until Darius the Great introduced new coins c. 500 BC.[citation needed]

The union of Phrygia and Lydia with Aeolian Greeks resulted in regional peace, which facilitated the transfer of ground-breaking technological skills into Ancient Greece; respectively, the phonetic written script[dubiousdiscuss] and the minting of coinage (to use a token currency, where the value is guaranteed by the state).[84] Both inventions were rapidly adopted by surrounding nations through further trade and cooperation and have been of fundamental benefit to the progress of civilization.[citation needed]

V sign

[edit]
US soldiers protest the Vietnam war, 1968

The V sign (U+270C VICTORY HAND in Unicode) is a hand gesture, palm outwards, with the index and middle fingers open and all others closed. It had been used to represent victory during the Second World War.[85] During the 1960s in the US, activists against the Vietnam War and in subsequent anti-war protests adopted the gesture as a sign of peace.[86]

Paper cranes

[edit]
Japanese peace symbol.

The crane, a traditional symbol of luck in Japan, was popularized as a peace symbol by the story of Sadako Sasaki (1943–1955), a girl who died as a result of the atomic bomb exploding over Hiroshima in 1945. According to the story, popularized through the book Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes,[87] in the last stages of her illness she started folding paper cranes, inspired by the Japanese saying that one who folded a thousand origami cranes was granted a wish. This made an impression in people's minds. As a result, she is remembered on every 6 August, which is an annual peace day for people all over Japan.[citation needed]

Japanese school children dedicate Senbazuru (千羽鶴), or 1000 cranes, to the memorial for Sadako Sasaki in Hiroshima Peace Park, 1990.

Japanese Peace Bell

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The Japanese Peace Bell

The Japanese Peace Bell is a United Nations peace symbol. Cast on 24 November 1952, it was an official gift of the Japanese people to the United Nations on 8 June 1954. The symbolic bell of peace was donated by Japan to the United Nations at a time when Japan had not yet been officially admitted to the United Nations. The Japanese Peace Bell was presented to the United Nations by the United Nations Association of Japan.[88]

Shalom/salaam

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A wordmark of the three words, Hebrew word shalom (Hebrew: שָׁלוֹם), together with the Arabic salaam (Arabic: سلام) and the English word peace has been used as a peace symbol in the Middle East. Shalom and salaam mean 'peace' and are cognates of each other, derived from the Semitic triconsonantal of S-L-M (realized in Hebrew as Š-L-M and in Arabic as S-L-M). The symbol has come to represent peace in the Middle East and an end to the Arab–Israeli conflict. Wall plaques, signs, T-shirts, and buttons are sold with only those words.[89]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ in the painting, the peasant shown has his arms stretched upwards, not downwards.

References

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