The flag of Easter Island ( or , ) consists of a white banner with a red reimiro. In addition to the island itself, the flag is also used to symbolize the indigenous Rapa Nui people. It was first flown in public alongside the national flag of Chile on 9 May 2006.
The flag of Rapa Nui is white and features in its center a reimiro painted in red (), a symbol of power, with two anthropomorphic figures at its edges, representing the ariki .
French missionaries in the 1866 described the Rapa Nui flag as white, and they mentioned that the SSCC mission used a flag with a red cross on the island:
In 1869, the most powerful person on the island became the sheep farmer Jean-Baptiste Dutrou-Bornier. When Dutrou-Bornier came into conflict with the missionaries, he formed the Rapa Nui militia, which he allowed to return to traditional beliefs. Shortly thereafter, Dutrou-Bornier declared himself king of the island and ruled despotically until his sudden death in 1876. During this period, a new flag was made for the island, which depicted the outline of a Tangata manu on an orange background.
In 1880, the heavily depopulated Rapa Nui community began using a new white flag with a red reimiro. According to later oral traditions, black Tangata manu also appeared on the flag of that time. This flag was created when the business after Dutrou-Bornier was taken over by Tahitian Prince Alexander Ariûipaea Salmon and some of the exiled Catholics returned.
In 1888, Chile annexed the island and Policarpo Toro raised the Chilean flag. The Rapa Nui continued to consider themselves a self-governing protectorate and used their own flag, although the island's lessor, Enrique Merlet, forbade its display.
After the arrival of the training ship General Baquedano in 1902, the islanders raised a modified version of the Chilean flag. This version, with inverted colors, depicted a cross above a mitre and the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary in the canton, flanked by pair of vertical red reimiros. After the visit, the Chilean national flags were flown again. The Rapa Nui flag was taken to the ValparaÃÂso Museum, but a fire at the museum destroyed it in 1906.
For many years, the reimiro flag was unofficially used by the island's Rapa Nui to represent their island. However, the official flag was the white and gold flag of the Municipality of Easter Island. In 2006, it was upgraded to a Special Territory and optional use of the Rapa Nui name was allowed in government documents for the first time, with the reimiro flag adopted as the entity's flag.