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Five Rings, Five Continents: The Meaning Behind the Olympic Symbol

March 28, 2026 ยท 4 min read

The Fact

The Olympic flag's five interlocking rings represent the five continents united by the Olympic movement.

Coubertin's Design and Its Logic

Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympic movement, designed the five-ring symbol in 1912 as a visual representation of the Olympic movement's universalist aspiration. He presented the design at the 1914 Olympic Congress in Paris, marking the twentieth anniversary of the IOC's founding. The symbol was intended to represent the five inhabited continents of the world โ€” Africa, the Americas (counted as a single continent), Asia, Europe, and Oceania โ€” linked together through the shared pursuit of athletic excellence.

The interlocking design was deliberate. The rings do not simply sit beside each other but connect and overlap, symbolizing the bonds formed between nations through athletic competition. Each ring passes through at least two others, creating a unified whole that is more than the sum of its parts โ€” a visual metaphor for international cooperation and mutual engagement.

The six colors โ€” blue, yellow, black, green, and red rings on a white background โ€” were chosen because when Coubertin designed the flag, every nation participating in the Olympic movement had at least one of these colors in their national flag. The flag was therefore intended to be inclusive of all nations by design, carrying within its palette the colors of every country in the world.

A Common Misconception About the Colors

One of the most persistent myths about the Olympic rings is that each color represents a specific continent. Many people believe blue represents Europe, yellow represents Asia, black represents Africa, green represents Oceania, and red represents the Americas. This is not true, and was not part of Coubertin's original intention.

The IOC has clarified this misconception on multiple occasions. The colors were chosen collectively because they appeared in the flags of all participating nations, not to individually symbolize specific continents. The rings collectively represent the five continents; no individual ring is assigned to any particular region. The misconception appears to have originated from a misreading of a 1951 IOC publication and has proven stubbornly resistant to correction despite the IOC's clarifications.

The Flag's First Appearance

The Olympic flag was first flown at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics, chosen as the host city partly in recognition of Belgium's suffering during World War I. The flag's debut at Antwerp was also significant because the 1920 Games included several rules and ceremonies that would become permanent Olympic traditions โ€” including the Olympic oath, taken by an athlete on behalf of all competitors at the opening ceremony.

The flag has appeared at every subsequent Olympics, carried into the opening ceremony stadium as part of a formal protocol involving eight athletes from the host nation. At the closing ceremony, the flag is formally transferred to the mayor of the next host city, a visual handover that symbolizes the continuity of the Olympic movement from Games to Games.

The Most Recognized Symbol in Sport

The Olympic rings have achieved a level of global recognition that is arguably unique among sporting symbols โ€” and perhaps among symbols in general. They are recognized by significant majorities of the global population, according to various surveys, including in countries and communities with limited connection to Olympic competition. The combination of the clean geometric design, the bold colors, and the decades of television broadcast from Olympic ceremonies has embedded the symbol in global visual culture.

Commercial rights to the Olympic rings are strictly controlled by the IOC under trademark law in most countries. The use of the rings for commercial purposes without IOC authorization is prohibited, and the organization enforces these rights vigorously during Olympic years when commercial interest is highest. The value of the symbol, built over more than a century of Olympic broadcasts and global participation, is one of the IOC's most significant institutional assets.

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FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 ยท 4 min read

The FactOTD editorial team researches and verifies every fact before publication. Our mission is to make learning effortless and accurate. Learn about our process โ†’

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