The flag traditions of the many independent states now united in Malaysia emphasized white, red, yellow, and black; a horizontally striped flag in those colours served as the naval ensign for the Federated Malay States, which came into existence on July 1, 1896. The traditional royal Malay tiger appeared on a white oval in the centre. Some of the larger states resisted federation and maintained their own national symbols, however. After the Japanese occupied the peninsula during World War II, efforts toward unification eventually gained support.
On April 1, 1946, the Malayan Union was founded, followed on February 1, 1948, by the Federation of Malaya. A competition for a national flag led to the design first hoisted on May 26, 1950. It consisted of 11 horizontal stripes of red and white, the colours favoured by the dominant United Malays National Organization and found in the flags of neighbouring Indonesia and Thailand. The canton of the flag was blue with a yellow star of 11 points, symbolizing Malaya’s 11 states, and a yellow crescent. When additional states joined on September 16, 1963, the flag was modified. The current version has 14 stripes and a 14-pointed star. Yellow is a royal colour in Malaysia, and red, white, and blue indicate the close association of the country with the Commonwealth. The flag design was also influenced by the flag of the United States. The crescent and star symbolize the nation’s majority Muslim population.