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Union Jack


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"The term 'Union Jack' possibly dates from Queen Anne's time (r. 1702-14), but its origin is uncertain.

"It may come from the 'jack-et' of the English or Scottish soldiers, or from the name of James I who originated the first union in 1603.

"Another alternative is that the name may be derived from a proclamation by Charles II that the Union Flag should be flown only by ships of the Royal Navy as a jack, a small flag at the bowsprit; the term 'jack' once meant small."

The preceeding is from the official web site of the British Monarchy and can found here.

1801 is when the flag in its present form was adopted.

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My occupational hazard bein' my occupation's just not around...

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A tricky question... as pointed out already by these other Gents.

I don't know when it was first used, but the term Union Jack wasn't used during the American Rev War. Mostly to my knowledge was called the King's Colours. Or the British Colours. If I be mistaken, during that time I believe their were 3 types of King's Colours. And I am not talking about seperate Regimentals.

But it is possible that the term Union Jack was 1800+ after another British Isle conflict.

Again, pardon for my poor memory. ;)

~Lady B

:lol:

Tempt Fate! an' toss 't all t' Hell!"

"I'm completely innocent of whatever crime I've committed."

The one, the only,... the infamous!

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  • 2 weeks later...

The first Union flag (if we're talking vexillology rather than etymology) was, as Enigma pointed out, adopted in the early 17thC when the Kingdoms of England and Scotland shared a monarch. The flag was specifically associated with the monarch, not the country, and so was only supposed to be used in a royal connection. Naval warships, for example, flew the Union flag, but privateers did not (or should not have...). This first flag was more or less the same as the modern version of the flag, but only bore the flags of England and Scotland (ie. the red saltire of Ireland was not included).

The current Union flag (including the Irish saltire) dates to the early 19thC, and belongs to the nation rather than the monarch, and can thus be used by anyone.

The use of the Union flag by non-official people was a bit of a headache for the authorities, and several acts and bills were passed during the 17thC to try to prevent it. By flying a Union flag a privateer gave the impression of being part of the Navy, which they were not. Woodes Rogers himself got into trouble for it when he arrived in Kinsale harbour flying a Union flag in about 1708.

Foxe

"With this Fore-Staff he fansies he does Wonders, when, God knows, it amounts to no more but only to solve that simple Question, Where are we? Which every chi'd in London can tell you." - Ned Ward The Wooden World Dissected, 1707


ETFox.co.uk

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  • 5 years later...

The first Union flag (if we're talking vexillology rather than etymology) was, as Enigma pointed out, adopted in the early 17thC when the Kingdoms of England and Scotland shared a monarch. The flag was specifically associated with the monarch, not the country, and so was only supposed to be used in a royal connection. Naval warships, for example, flew the Union flag, but privateers did not (or should not have...). This first flag was more or less the same as the modern version of the flag, but only bore the flags of England and Scotland (ie. the red saltire of Ireland was not included).

The current Union flag (including the Irish saltire) dates to the early 19thC, and belongs to the nation rather than the monarch, and can thus be used by anyone.

The use of the Union flag by non-official people was a bit of a headache for the authorities, and several acts and bills were passed during the 17thC to try to prevent it. By flying a Union flag a privateer gave the impression of being part of the Navy, which they were not. Woodes Rogers himself got into trouble for it when he arrived in Kinsale harbour flying a Union flag in about 1708.

Interesting that union jack was not privateer flag (they had bloody flags but what other flags they used? personal?)

The fact that modern one is different than the 1700s one is forgotten in many movies e.g in Potc 4 :rolleyes:

Barbossa_and_gillette_hmsprovidence.jpg

Edited by Swashbuckler 1700

"I have not yet Begun To Fight!"
John Paul Jones

flag-christopher-condent.gif

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The first Union flag (if we're talking vexillology rather than etymology) was, as Enigma pointed out, adopted in the early 17thC when the Kingdoms of England and Scotland shared a monarch. The flag was specifically associated with the monarch, not the country, and so was only supposed to be used in a royal connection. Naval warships, for example, flew the Union flag, but privateers did not (or should not have...). This first flag was more or less the same as the modern version of the flag, but only bore the flags of England and Scotland (ie. the red saltire of Ireland was not included).

The current Union flag (including the Irish saltire) dates to the early 19thC, and belongs to the nation rather than the monarch, and can thus be used by anyone.

The use of the Union flag by non-official people was a bit of a headache for the authorities, and several acts and bills were passed during the 17thC to try to prevent it. By flying a Union flag a privateer gave the impression of being part of the Navy, which they were not. Woodes Rogers himself got into trouble for it when he arrived in Kinsale harbour flying a Union flag in about 1708.

Interesting that union jack was not privateer flag (they had bloody flags but what other flags they used? personal?)

The fact that modern one is different than the 1700s one is forgotten in many movies e.g in Potc 4 :rolleyes:

Barbossa_and_gillette_hmsprovidence.jpg

Here I am answering to myself

Foxe said this is one flag tread

" Many European privateers used their municipal or civic flags as identification."

"I have not yet Begun To Fight!"
John Paul Jones

flag-christopher-condent.gif

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It was OFFICIALLY adopted to replace the separate national flags completely in 1707 with the Act of Union. Previously, t had been used in connection to Royal stuff that was part of both nations. Up till 1707, English ships and Englishmen use the white flag with the red Latin cross, centered vertically and horizontally as the St George Flag, while the Scottish ships and Scots used the blue flag with a large white "X" which is a St Andrew's Cross (AKA St Andrews Flag). After 1707, All ships of England and Scotland would use the Union flag rather than their former national flags.

The Union Flag of 1707 looked like:

500px-Union_flag_1606_%28Kings_Colors%29.svg.png

The modern variation added the "red cross of St Patrick" for Ireland, based on a white flag with a red "X" claimed to have been used by the Irish, The origin of the white/red "St Patrick Flag" is hotly debated. The Irish cross is offset to let Scotland's white cross have the "place of prominence" of being on the top of the canton corner. So, the top hoist-side corner should have the red on the bottom of the white.

Also, of interest, is that the original Union flag description was vague as to which cross was on top, so many Scots had the Scottish white cross over the English red cross . . .

It remains a point of contention to some Scots. The percentage is also a matter of debate.

On that matter, one is reminded that MUCH involving England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales is hotly debated. Even simple stuff can be debated more than those outside it think makes any sense. History is revised and rewritten by all sides for each's own advantage. Unfortunately, such hides and make the truth (what really happened) harder and harder to decipher.

Edited by Tartan Jack

-John "Tartan Jack" Wages, of South Carolina

 

178804A2-CB54-4706-8CD9-7B8196F1CBD4.jpeg

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It was OFFICIALLY adopted to replace the separate national flags completely in 1707 with the Act of Union. Previously, t had been used in connection to Royal stuff that was part of both nations. Up till 1707, English ships and Englishmen use the white flag with the red Latin cross, centered vertically and horizontally as the St George Flag, while the Scottish ships and Scots used the blue flag with a large white "X" which is a St Andrew's Cross (AKA St Andrews Flag). After 1707, All ships of England and Scotland would use the Union flag rather than their former national flags.

The Union Flag of 1707 looked like:

500px-Union_flag_1606_%28Kings_Colors%29.svg.png

The modern variation added the "red cross of St Patrick" for Ireland, based on a white flag with a red "X" claimed to have been used by the Irish, The origin of the white/red "St Patrick Flag" is hotly debated. The Irish cross is offset to let Scotland's white cross have the "place of prominence" of being on the top of the canton corner. So, the top hoist-side corner should have the red on the bottom of the white.

Also, of interest, is that the original Union flag description was vague as to which cross was on top, so many Scots had the Scottish white cross over the English red cross . . .

It remains a point of contention to some Scots. The percentage is also a matter of debate.

On that matter, one is reminded that MUCH involving England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales is hotly debated. Even simple stuff can be debated more than those outside it think makes any sense. History is revised and rewritten by all sides for each's own advantage. Unfortunately, such hides and make the truth (what really happened) harder and harder to decipher.

Interesting

I have known for a long tine that 1707 flag was different than modern ones but I hate when in movies etc there is the wrong flag like in potc 4 ......

"I have not yet Begun To Fight!"
John Paul Jones

flag-christopher-condent.gif

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I figured you did. But, I posted in case some of the other folks didn't.

First, the English and Scottish flags separately:

saints.jpg

And the combining:

500px-Union_Flag_Component_Flags2.PNG

While watching the 2012 Monaco GP, I'm trying to find some on-line shots of the Scot version of the Union Flag:

220px-BeaumontScottishUnionFlag.png

220px-Union_Jack_1606_Scotland.svg.png

It is also discussed within the Wikipedia article on the Scottish flag: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Scotland

In the present political situation in Scotland, regarding Scottish autonomy (whether semi-autonomous rule or independence), the "Scot on top" flag is making a reappearance.

-John "Tartan Jack" Wages, of South Carolina

 

178804A2-CB54-4706-8CD9-7B8196F1CBD4.jpeg

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