An updated (technically overhauled) version of the flag I made two years ago for my nation of Greek wolfmen to make it a bit less...Middle-Eastern, as the old version looked a bit too much like it could be an Arabic/Islamic design.
The symbolism of the colors is just as simple now as it was then, though they have changed a bit - there's green for the land (and the various deities associated with it), blue for the water, black for everything above and below (space, the underworld, etc.), and the white crescent moon for their most important deity, Artemis (Yes, Zeus got supplanted as the Big Cheese in the Lycadian version of the pantheon), goddess of the hunt and the moon, which all Lykocephali feel a pull towards (though, they later realized it was a compulsion woven into the same retrovirus that made them calling them toward space in general, not specifically the moon).
Aside from the change in color symbolism, all other information provided in the description of the old flag should still be correct (except maybe the currency names - I might be changing those).
And the flag actually isn't fully finished yet - I also eventually want to get some heraldry to put in the upper-left section, but if I have to wait on that (since I can't currently afford to have any made), I'll be waiting for several more years before I can upload this, so screw it.
Also included is the banner version of Lycadia's flag, and actually what preceded it by a good 1200 or so years, as they borrowed the rough design (though not the dimensions, as the Lycadian version is much longer) of the Roman Vexillum - though, unlike the Roman Vexillum, their version was never carried into battle...not much point in having something identifying what army you belong to when you are a wolfman and not a human. It was used to mark Lycadian settlements, and smaller versions were used for trading caravans instead - the latter especially coming in handy against bandit attacks, as most groups learned VERY quickly not to attack traders flying those banners.
Also, the triangle at the bottom is actually an area of transparency.