|
| |||||||||||||||||||
|
Saltire
From: "John S. Quarterman" <jsq@quarterman.org> | ||||||||||||||||||
|
In the British flag, if you look there is the St. Andrews cross as well ... Richard F. Sinclair |
That's the Union Jack [when it flies from a ship; the Union Flag otherwise].
The third flag that was combined in it was the
St. Patrick's Saltire of Ireland;
Wales was considered part of England.
The blue of the Union Flag was darkened about 1801 and again in
1869, and is much darker than the blue color of the Saltire.
http://fotw.vexillum.com/flags/gb.html
What blue the Saltire should be is a subject of much debate. The best answer I've seen is to wait to see what flies outside the new Scottish Parliament House when it opens; the color of that flag will have been pedanted to death.
The Saltire also appears in many other flags, including those of
Nova Scotia,
Hawaii, and
Georgia, all of which may be seen in
http://sinclair.quarterman.org/
There is also the flag of the Army of Northern Virginia,
http://fotw.vexillum.com/flags/us-anv.html
and its derivative the Confederate battle flag.
All of these Saltires are derived by various historical processes
from the Scottish Saltire. The Hawaii flag, for example, incorporates
a Union Jack. And if you count all the other flags that do the same,
such as Australia and New Zealand, the total number is probably rather large.
There are other Saltire flags that are probably not related, such as the red on white St. Patrick's Saltire Irish flag, and the green historical Polish flag.
Added 30 March 2000:
Another saltire flag is that of
Jamaica.
Others include historical flags of Russia and Greece.
Scotland was perhaps the first country to use a saltire in its flag,
but not all saltire flags are derived from the Scottish Saltire.
Thanks,
John
--
John Sinclair Quarterman <jsq@quarterman.org>