- Flag of Jersey
The flag of Jersey was adopted by the
States of Jersey onJune 12 ,1979 , proclaimed by the Queen onDecember 10 ,1980 and first officially hoisted onApril 1 ,1981 .It is white with a diagonal red cross extending to the corners of the flag and in the upper quadrant, surmounted by a yellow
Plantagenet crown , the badge of Jersey (a red shield holding the three leopards ofNormandy in yellow).History of the flag
The new
flag used officially since 1981 has the arms ofJersey surmounted by a Plantagenet crown. Prior to this, the flag was a plain redsaltire on a white field.Historical research has failed to ascertain the origin of this flag. Among the legends are a story that a mistranslation from Dutch of the word "Erse" ("Irish") in a Dutch chart endowed "Ierse" (Jersey) with a
cross of St. Patrick by mistake. However, French Admiralty charts show that Jersey was using the red saltire before the adoption of that symbol for theOrder of St. Patrick and its incorporation into the modern Union Flag.Some claim that the red saltire has a Norman origin. The red saltire of the Order of St. Patrick was derived at the end of the 18th century from the heraldry of the
Hiberno-Norman Fitzgerald family. If it is an old Norman symbol, then Jersey's saltire may derive from the same origin. Little evidence can be adduced to support this theory.A traditional belief is as follows: Jersey, along with the other
Channel Islands , was granted neutrality byPapal Bull during periods of warfare betweenEngland andFrance . Since they were able to trade freely with both sides, Jersey ships required a way of differentiating themselves from English ships. They therefore rotated the St. George's Cross of the English Crown to form a saltire.As Jersey gained a higher profile on the international stage in the second half of the 20th century, it was felt by many in Jersey that the flag was insufficiently distinctive to represent the island, that there was too much confusion with the cross of St. Patrick as an Irish symbol, and that the red saltire had been taken as one of the
international maritime signal flags .Others, though, wanted to keep the traditional red saltire that had been used since time immemorial.
A third influential body of opinion campaigned for the adoption of a banner of the three leopards, the island's heraldic device.
The current flag can therefore be seen as a compromise between the various strands of opinion.
Although the flag is flown in Jersey, the three leopards are much more widely used as a national symbol by the authorities and civil population alike.
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