(Redirected from Flag of St. Patrick)
Saint Patrick's Flag: a red saltire on a field of white
'Saint Patrick's Flag' is a
flag of Ireland that features in the
flag of the United Kingdom. In
heraldic language, it may be
blazoned ''
Argent, a saltire
gules'', meaning that it is drawn as a red
saltire (a ''crux decussata'' or X-shaped cross) on a white field. It is said to represent
Saint Patrick, the
patron saint of
Ireland. It is also known as the 'Saint Patrick's Cross' or 'Saint Patrick's Saltire'.
The Saltire served unofficially to represent
Ireland from the foundation of the
Order of Saint Patrick in
1783 until the creation of the
Irish Free State in
1922. However, it never gained truly popular support and is seen my many as a
British invention.
Origins

A
cross pattée considered to be the true Cross of St. Patrick.
The
Most Illustrious Order of Saint Patrick, the
British order of chivalry associated with
Ireland, was created in 1783 to mark the grant of
substantial autonomy to Ireland, as a means of rewarding (or obtaining) political support in the
Irish Parliament.
[1] In creating the order, a badge for those accepted into it was also created. This is the official description of the badge that the
lord lieutenant, Lord Temple, forwarded to his superiors in London in January 1783:
The origin of the cross used in the badge is unclear and was condemned by contemporary Irish opinion. A press report published in February 1783 complained that "the breasts of Irishmen were to be decorated by the bloody
Cross of St Andrew, and not that of the tutelar Saint of their natural isle".
[2] Another article claimed that "the Cross of St Andrew the Scotch saint is to honour the Irish order of St Patrick, by being inserted within the star of the order" and described this as "a manifest insult to common sense and to national propriety."
[2] Despite this, the red saltire was incorporated into the
Union Flag in 1801 following
the union of Great Britain and Ireland, representing Ireland within the Union alongside the
St George's Cross for
England and Saint Andrew's Flag for
Scotland. The use of the cross for this purpose is often suspected to have been based on a desire to create a new Union Flag that complimented the already existent one, rather than as a genuine symbol of Ireland.
[4] Earlier union flags, such as the
Commonwealth Flag (England and Ireland) or the
Protectorate Jack (England, Ireland and Scotland), represented Ireland with its
coat of arms of Ireland.
Strictly speaking, "Saint Patrick's Cross" is a misnomer, as Saint Patrick was not a
martyr, unlike Sts. George and Andrew. St. Patrick's Cross has nothing to do with any tradition about the Saint.
[5] It may originte from the arms of the FitzGerald dynasty, a
Old English family long resident in Ireland, however, contemporary sources provide nothing to support this. Another theory is that the symbol is an old but uncommon symbol of Ireland.
[6] Support for this include a various sources showing saltires in use earlier that 1783 in Ireland (e.g. an Irish coin from the
1480s, a map of the
1601 battle of Kinsale showing combined Irish-Spanish forces under a red saltire, or the seal of
Trinity College, Dublin). However, these examples can be explained as either the St. Andrew's Cross, the
Cross of Burgundy, or similar. A third theory is that it was a common custom, from at least the early 17th century, to wear a cross made of paper or ribbon on
St Patrick's Day and that the Saint Patrick's Cross in the regalia of the Order may have been inspired by these popular badges. However, surviving examples of such badges come in many colours and they were invariably worn upright rather than as saltires.
[6]
The motto of the order ''
Quis separabit?'', or
Latin for "Who will separate us?" (today the motto of
Northern Ireland) was borrowed from the
Order of the Friendly Brothers of St Patrick, but was also appropriate politically in expressing a desire for unity. The Borthers', for their part, recorded a
cross pattée as Saint Patrick's Cross and used one on their badge. An open letter to Lord Temple, to whom the design of the Order of St. Patrick's badges were entrusted, supports this view, explaining why the saltire was rejected by the Irish public:
[8]
The cross pattée was used on 15th century Irish coins and is today used as a symbol by the
Church of Ireland. It is also uniquely used by Irish
Roman Catholics and Anglicans (Church of Ireland), being pressed onto thier foreheads during
Ash Wednesday services.
Modern use

St. Patrick's flag is used in the
PSNI badge.
Today, Saint Patrick's Flag is often seen during Saint Patrick's Day parades in
Northern Ireland. It is one of the components of the Union Flag of the United Kingdom, used to represent Ireland as part of the union after 1801. This is often in contrast to the
Irish tricolour, the flag of the
Republic of Ireland, which, although seen by
nationalists as a flag of the entire island of Ireland, is rejected by
unionists. It is one of a few flags (probably only second to the
Four Provinces Flag) which is considered a relatively neutral in terms of the symbolism of Ireland and is used by some all-island bodies, as well as being the national flag authorised to be flow in Church grounds by the
Church of Ireland.
[9] For similar motives, it is the basis of the police badge of the new
Police Service of Northern Ireland and that of the
Commissioners of Irish Lights. The flag is used by the pro-Unionist
Reform Movement in the Republic.
Variants
In the
1930s, a variation of the flag with a blue background was adopted as the badge and flag of the
Blueshirts. This militant group incorporated right-wing, conservative and some former-unionist elements in opposition to the then left-wing
republican Fianna Fáil party.
Various flags representing Northern Ireland also incormporate the saltire. One is used by
Ulster separatists who wish to see Northern Ireland leave the United Kingdom and become an independent state, not joining together with the Republic of Ireland. The flag is made up of St Andrew's cross (below), St Patrick's Cross (above) and the red hand and star from the Northern Ireland flag (above), with the star coloured yellow (instead of white as in the Ulster Banner) based on the colours of the flag of the Irish province of Ulster. Another, a proposed new flag for Northern Ireland, is a hybrid between the
St. Patrick's Cross and the
Ulster Banner. It adds the
Red Hand of Ulster and the six-pointed star to the St. Patrick's Flag, but does not add the crown and dispenses with the
St. Georges' Cross found on the Ulster Banner.
See also
★
List of British flags
★
List of Irish flags
★
Northern Ireland flags issue
External links
★
Ireland: St Patrick's Flag from
Flags of the World
References
1. Monarchy Today: Queen and Public: Honours: Order of St Patrick
2. Vincent Morley, 30 May - 1 June 1999, History of the St Patrick's Cross
3. Vincent Morley, 30 May - 1 June 1999, History of the St Patrick's Cross
4. O'Shea, M.J., 1986, James Joyce and Heraldry, SUNY Press, p.169: "Saint Patrick Cross. Argent, a saltire gules. A cross of obscure origin; it has been suggested (cynically, and probably correctly) that when a cross was needed to complement those of Sts. George and Andrew in the Union Jack, St. Patrick's Cross came into being on the spot. Hayes-McCoy gives this subject its most comprehensive treatment to date (36-41), and suggests that the device was simply appropriated from the arms of Fitzgerald, which are identical to the blazon above. Its dubious origins notwithstanding, the red saltire was used on the flag of the Irish Volunteers from Down in 1916 (Heyes-McCoy 200)."
5. Tim Healey, 1977, The Symbolism of the Cross in Sacred and Secular Art, Leonardo, Vol. 10, No. 4 (Autumn, 1977)
6. Flags of the World: Ireland: St Patrick's Cross
7. Flags of the World: Ireland: St Patrick's Cross
8. St. Patrick's Cross
9. Flags of the World: St. Patrick's Flag as flag of Church of Ireland: "The General Synod of the Church of Ireland recognises that from time to time confusion and controversy have attended the flying of flags on church buildings or within the grounds of church buildings. This Synod therefore resolves that the only flags specifically authorised to be flown on church buildings or within the church grounds of the Church of Ireland are the cross of St Patrick or, alternatively, the flag of the Anglican Communion bearing the emblem of the Compassrose. Such flags are authorised to be flown only on Holy Days and during the Octaves of Christmas, Easter, the Ascension of Our Lord and Pentecost, and on any other such day as may be recognised locally as the Dedication Day of the particular church building. Any other flag flown at any other time is not specifically authorised by this Church. ...."