The Marquesas Islands – as a part of French Polynesia – have officially no own flag. It must be hoisted the French tricolor or additionally, the flag of French Polynesia. However, there exists for local purposes an unofficial flag.
This flag is unofficial and was created by Bishop Herve-Marie Le Cleac'h in the year 1984.
The flag shows two horizontal stripes in yellow and red and an isosceles white triangle at the leech. In the middle of the triangle the "Head of Tiki". White stands for peace, red stands for the feathers of the holy bird Kua. Yellow is an important local dye.
Map of the Islands: Landkarte/map, Source: By Demis (Own work, based on PD map from Demis) [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons, click to enlarge
Subdivisions of French Polynesia:
Landkarte/map, Source: By L. Claudel (Sardon - fr:Sardon) [GFDL or CC BY-SA 3.0], via Wikimedia Commons, click to enlarge
1595 · the Spanish seafarer Álvaro de Mendaña de Neira discoveres the archipelago and names it after Marques de Mendoza, the viceroy of Peru
1774 · the British seafarer James Cook travels through the archipelago
1791 · the US-american seafarer Joseph Ingraham discovers the northwestern group of the Marquesas
1792 · the British Lieutenant Richard Hergest of the SMS Daedalus mappes the Marquesas Islands
1804 · The Russian seafarer Adam Johann von Krusenstern travels through the archipelago and spends a few days on Nuku Hiva
1813 · the US-american Commodore David Porter anchors with the frigate USS Essex before Nuku Hiva, and takes the island for the United States in possession on 19th of November, and names it "Madison Iceland", but the US Congress did not ratify the seizure
1838 · the Frenchman Abel Aubert Dupetit-Thouars lands with Catholic missionaries on the islands
1838 · the French navigator Jules Dumont d'Urville travels through the archipelago
1842 · France declares the Marquesas Islands to a French Protectorate
As the Spaniard Alvaro de Mendaña de Neyra in 1595 discovered the archipelago during a trip from Peru to the Solomon Islands, he named the islands after Marques de Mendoza, the viceroy of Peru: "Las Islas Marquesas Don García Hurtado de Mendoza y Canete", from what arised the short version "Marquesas Islands". However, in the 18th/19th century the archipelago was also called after its discoverer: Mendaña Islands