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Flags of the English Interregnum
Flags of the English Interregnum
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Command flag used by generals at sea, dating to 1652–54.[1]

There were a variety of flags flown by ships of the Commonwealth during the Interregnum of 1649–1660.

At sea, royalist ships continued to fly the Union Jack of 1606, while on 22 February 1649 the Council of State decided to send the parliamentary navy an order (signed by Oliver Cromwell on 23 February) that "the ships at sea in service of the State shall onely beare the red Crosse in a white flag" (viz., the flag of England). On 5 March 1649 the Council further ordered "that the Flagg that is to be borne by the Admiral, Vice-Admiral, and Rere-Admiral be that now presented, viz., the Armes of England and Ireland in two severall Escotcheons in a Red Flagg, within a compartment."[2] A sole surviving example of a naval flag following this description is kept by the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich, others having fallen victim to the destruction of Commonwealth symbols at the Restoration of Charles II.[3] Scotland was formally united with England in 1654. According to Perrin (1922), the saltire of Scotland did not reappear on naval flags of the Commonwealth until 1658.[4]

In 1658 Cromwell's personal standard as Lord Protector became the "Standard for the General of his Highnesse fleet", while the Cross-and-Harp jack was replaced by the "Protectorate Jack", consisting of the royal Union Flag with the addition of the Irish Harp at the centre.[5]

Flags of the Commonwealth

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See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The flags of the English Interregnum comprised the naval jacks, ensigns, command flags, and military standards employed by the , , and during the republican period from 1649 to 1660, following the and prior to the . These symbols, designed to repudiate monarchical emblems while asserting governance over the , lacked a singular national banner but prominently incorporated the arms of (St. George's Cross), (St. Andrew's Cross), and (harp), as evidenced by orders and surviving artifacts. In naval service, the red St. George's Cross on white became the primary jack from February 1649, with admiralty flags featuring quartered or escutcheoned arms on red fields for distinction at sea. Under the established by in 1653, standards integrated his personal arms—a crowned lion rampant argent on —with the composite national escutcheons, blending republican ideology with heraldic tradition derived from familial precedents. regimental colors, such as those with English and Irish shields on blue fields encircled by laurels and the motto Floreat , underscored the regime's martial foundations and aspirational unity. The era's , informed by primary documents like seals and naval dispatches rather than retrospective idealizations, highlights pragmatic adaptations amid political flux, devoid of enduring conventions.

Historical Background

Origins in the English Civil Wars

The Union Flag, proclaimed by King James VI and I on 12 April 1606, superimposed the red Cross of Saint George (England) over the white saltire of Saint Andrew (Scotland) to symbolize the personal union of the crowns. This design served as the jack for royal vessels and was flown by Stuart forces, embodying the monarch's authority over the composite realms. By 1634, it had become the official jack of the Royal Navy, reinforcing its association with centralized royal command. As the English Civil Wars erupted in 1642, Royalist armies and ships adhered to this Union Flag, viewing it as an emblem of legitimate Stuart sovereignty amid conflicts with Parliament. Parliamentary forces, however, increasingly rejected the union design, which evoked Scottish alliances and the king's divided loyalties, in favor of the ancient English banner: the red Cross of Saint George on a white field. This St George's Cross appeared on regimental colors for and as jacks or ensigns for naval vessels, promoting unity under English parliamentary authority and simplifying identification in battle. Parliament's seizure of the in August 1642 marked a pivotal shift, with commandeered ships transitioning to English ensigns featuring the St George's Cross—often on white fields for traditions or red for broader use—to excise royalist connotations while maintaining maritime precedence. During the 1648 naval revolt, when Vice-Admiral William Batten's squadron mutinied in support of King Charles I, loyal Parliamentary ships under Robert Blake and others upheld these simplified crosses, aiding in the suppression of defectors and underscoring the cross's role in factional distinction. This wartime divergence eroded the Union Flag's unchallenged status, paving the way for republican symbolism devoid of monarchical composites.

Abolition of the Monarchy and Formation of the

Following the execution of King Charles I on 30 January 1649, the advanced measures to dismantle institutions. On 7 February 1649, Parliament resolved to abolish the office of king, formalizing this through an act passed on 17 March 1649, which declared the position unnecessary, burdensome, and dangerous to the liberty, safety, and public interest of the people. The was similarly abolished on 19 March 1649 as useless and pernicious. These steps culminated in the declaration of as a on 19 May 1649, establishing a republican government under parliamentary authority and a , rejecting hereditary rule in favor of governance by elected representatives and military oversight. This political rupture extended to symbolic representations, particularly in naval usage where flags embodied sovereignty. The Union Flag, combining the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew to signify the Stuart union of crowns, was rendered obsolete with the monarchy's end and the temporary dissolution of Anglo-Scottish ties under republican rule. ordered its removal from state vessels as early as 22 February 1649, explicitly to sever associations with the Stuart dynasty and royal . vessels persisted with the older design, but ships transitioned away from it to affirm the new regime's break from monarchical traditions. In its place, the St. George's Cross was adopted as the naval jack from March 1649, as directed by the on 5 March for admirals' flags, emphasizing England's preeminent position amid the fragmented . This plain red cross on white field, longstanding as England's banner, underscored republican prioritization of over unionist pomp. Rump Parliament ordinances in 1649 and 1650 regulated naval flags with a focus on operational clarity and military discipline, subordinating elaborate to practical signaling for fleet coordination and enemy identification.

Flags of the Commonwealth (1649–1653)


The naval jack employed by ships of the Commonwealth of England from 1649 to 1653 was a white field charged with a red St. George's Cross, flown from the jackstaff at the bow to signify national affiliation and distinguish vessels from royalist counterparts. This design was mandated by an order of the Council of State on 23 February 1649 for all state-owned ships, effectively supplanting the Union Jack linked to the Stuart monarchy following its abolition after the execution of Charles I. The plain cross design prioritized simplicity for maritime signaling and identification amid ongoing naval engagements.
The standard ensign, displayed from the stern on both warships and cooperating merchant vessels, consisted of a red field with a white canton bearing the St. George's Cross for continuity with pre-Interregnum English naval tradition. Adopted around 1651, variants incorporated the Irish harp within the canton to symbolize the subjugation of under authority after the invasion and subsequent campaigns. These flags facilitated fleet cohesion and deterrence against privateers, though exact specifications like dimensions—such as jacks measuring approximately 6 feet 6 inches square with 2 feet 2 inches cantons—varied by ship size and were detailed in contemporary naval inventories for practical hoisting.

Command and Distinction Flags

During the early years of the (1649–1653), the English navy employed command flags to denote the presence of generals at sea, the highest rank in the parliamentary fleet, amid the escalating that commenced in July 1652. These flags were hoisted at the main topmast to signal authority and facilitate coordination in fleet operations. On 22 February 1649, the mandated that parliamentary navy vessels bear a with a St. George's Cross, serving as a foundational element for subsequent distinction flags. The primary command flag for generals at sea, used from 1652 to 1654, consisted of a red field bearing escutcheons of the arms of —a white shield with red St. George's Cross—and —a gold on blue—arranged within a compartment or garter-like enclosure. A surviving example at the , measuring approximately 464 by 625 cm and made of red wool bunting, features these escutcheons in a distinctive "tombstone" shape, potentially a prototype from the Dutch War era; senior generals may have added a green wreath for further distinction. This design replaced earlier royal connotations while retaining heraldic elements for recognizability at sea, with the St. George's Cross element echoed in topmast hoistings depicted in contemporary battle paintings. Generals such as Robert Blake, who commanded key squadrons, flew these flags on vessels during engagements, including the Battle of Portland from 18 to 20 February 1653 (Old Style), where the English fleet under Blake and George Monck intercepted a Dutch convoy under . The flags aided in maintaining order among divided squadrons—red, white, and blue—despite the absence of a standardized union device, enabling tactical maneuvers like breaking the Dutch line without reliance on monarchical symbols. By March 1653, some variants shifted toward a simplified cross-and-harp jack for junior generals, aligning with evolving naval ordinances, though the escutcheon design persisted for primary command until transition.

Flags of the Protectorate (1653–1659)

Adoption of New Designs under

Following the dissolution of the on 12 December 1653 and the subsequent adoption of the on 16 December 1653, which established and unified , , and under 's military authority, flag designs were reformed to embody this consolidated republican structure. These changes emphasized practical naval usage while incorporating symbols of the three nations, departing from the simpler St. George's Cross and harp jack of the prior era (1649–1653). The primary innovation was the replacement of the earlier Commonwealth jack with a new design uniting the red St. George's Cross of —extending throughout a white field—and the white saltire of St. Andrew on blue, forming a proto-union flag that served as the naval jack from approximately 1654 onward. This combined emblem, often quartered on a blue ground with the crosses superimposed, reflected the political incorporation of via the Tender of Union in 1652, prioritizing military cohesion over monarchical . Naval instructions issued in the mid-1650s mandated its use on state vessels to distinguish ships during conflicts like the (1652–1654), where uniformity aided command and identification. Ensigns were similarly updated, featuring quartered fields on red backgrounds that included the gold Irish harp in one quarter, symbolizing Ireland's subjugation after Cromwell's campaigns from 1649 to 1653, which culminated in the Cromwellian conquest and the establishment of . This harp element, drawn from pre-existing Irish provincial arms but repurposed without royal strings to denote republican control, appeared in the lower hoist or as a distinct quarter alongside English and Scottish symbols, reinforcing the narrative of unified dominion under military governance. The , as the executive body under , issued orders to standardize these designs across the fleet and army, addressing the ad hoc variations and local inconsistencies that had arisen under the Rump Parliament's fragmented authority. Such directives, enforced through Admiralty regulations, aimed to instill discipline and prevent confusion in signaling, though full uniformity remained challenged by ongoing wartime improvisation until Cromwell's death in 1658.

Lord Protector's Personal Standard and Variants

![Commonwealth Standard at the Royal Museums Greenwich][float-right] The personal standard of as featured a quartered design symbolizing the realms under the : the first and fourth quarters displayed the white field with red St. George's Cross of , the second quarter the blue field with white St. Andrew's of , and the third quarter the blue field with golden harp of . This flag served to distinguish Cromwell's personal command, particularly at sea, where it flew on vessels under his direct authority or those of appointed generals during naval operations. In some representations, the fourth quarter incorporated the golden lion rampant of on a red field, emphasizing the dominant English element within the union, though primary naval usage adhered to the cross motif for simplicity in distinction flags. Historical records, including ship logs from the Anglo-Spanish War (1655–1660), confirm its deployment to signal the presence of high command, aiding in fleet coordination amid engagements in the and Atlantic. A variant adopted in 1658 integrated elements of united British arms more prominently, with the standard repurposed as the "Standard for the General of his Highnesse fleet," coinciding with intensified Mediterranean campaigns against Spanish and Barbary forces under Admiral Robert Blake. This version retained the quartered layout but aligned with broader Protectorate heraldry, including occasional escutcheons bearing Cromwell's personal arms—a silver lion rampant on black—to denote sovereignty without monarchical connotations. Evidence from contemporary naval documentation, as analyzed in vexillological studies, underscores its role in republican military symbolism, flown during operations like the blockade of Cádiz and pursuits into southern waters. Surviving exemplars, such as the large ensign held by the Royal Museums Greenwich (catalogue L4481), provide tangible verification of the design's execution in crimson silk with embroidered charges.

Flags in the Second Commonwealth and Transition (1659–1660)

Return to Earlier Commonwealth Designs

Following the death of on September 3, 1658, his son succeeded as and retained the Protectorate jack—featuring the quartered crosses of St. George and St. Andrew overlaid with the Irish harp shield—for naval use during his brief tenure from September 1658 to May 1659. This design, formalized by Council order on May 18, 1658, emphasized the three-nation union under but proved short-lived amid mounting political opposition. Richard's regime collapsed with his resignation on May 25, 1659, prompting the recall of the Rump of the on May 7, 1659, and a reversion to the simpler flag designs of the original period (1649–1653). Naval authorities prioritized the Commonwealth jack—a white field with the red St. George's Cross impaled alongside the gold Irish harp on a field—as the standard jack, restoring pre-Protectorate republican symbolism to signal continuity with the pre-1653 era. This fallback to the 1649 design, ordered initially by the in February 1649 for ships to bear only the St. George's Cross on white, reflected practical needs for naval cohesion during heightened tensions with the Dutch, where elaborate quarterings risked confusion in signaling. The reinstated issued no major new flag ordinances, minimally altering usage beyond endorsing the pre-1653 simplicity to avoid associations with the discredited innovations. Ensigns and jacks thus emphasized the St. George's Cross for distinction—often on white for jacks and integrated into red or white ensigns—ensuring operational functionality in fleet maneuvers and fleet readiness through early , as evidenced by contemporary naval records prioritizing unambiguous English republican identifiers over union elements. This conservative approach bridged the Protectorate's experimental phase with emerging restoration pressures, maintaining flag discipline without introducing novel variants.

Royalist Counter-Flags and Continued Usage

Royalist forces and exiles during the late Interregnum maintained traditional monarchical symbols as counter-flags to official republican designs, particularly amid the instability of 1659–1660. Ships loyal to Charles II, operating from exile in the Dutch Republic, continued to display the 1606 Union Jack—featuring the red cross of St. George superimposed on the white saltire of St. Andrew—as a jack and in ensigns, rejecting Commonwealth modifications that emphasized English elements alone. This flag's use by royalist privateers and naval vessels underscored claims of legitimate Stuart sovereignty, with commissions issued by Charles II authorizing its display on approximately a dozen vessels by 1658. In , following the decisive royalist defeat at the on September 3, 1651, where Charles II commanded around 16,000 troops against Oliver Cromwell's 28,000, surviving royalist factions employed variants of the blue on white, the ancient , in sporadic resistance and exile activities. These flags, often quartered with English lions for combined forces, appeared on captured standards and among émigré units, symbolizing persistent Covenanter-royalist alliances against English occupation. Irish Confederate holdouts, opposing forces after , adapted the golden on green or azure fields—emblems dating to the 1642 Kilkenny assembly—as anti-republican banners until Cromwell's campaigns subdued major resistance by 1652. These devices, sometimes combined with crosses, flew over guerrilla outposts and sails, with records noting their use in naval skirmishes off Ireland's coast into the mid-1650s. Naval defections in 1659–1660 further highlighted flag-based loyalty shifts, as officers like Vice-Admiral John Lawson, commanding about 10 ships in January 1660, renounced the and hoisted pre-Interregnum Union Jacks and royal ensigns to signal alignment with emerging pro-monarchy conventions. Such actions, culminating in the fleet's support for Charles II's return, involved over 20 vessels transitioning flags mid-voyage, empirically demonstrating how older designs facilitated rapid royalist coordination without formal orders.

Symbolism, Usage, and Controversies

Republican Symbolism versus Practical Military Needs

The flags adopted during the English Interregnum deliberately rejected monarchical heraldry, such as crowns and lions passant associated with the Stuart dynasty, in favor of national emblems like the St. George's Cross for and the Irish harp sans crown, symbolizing over divine-right kingship following the monarchy's abolition on 17 March 1649. This shift aligned with the republican emphasis on collective authority, as articulated in the Act declaring the office of king "unnecessary, burthensom and dangerous," and extended to naval usage where ships were ordered in February 1649 to bear only the red cross in a , eschewing the Union Flag that had represented the union of crowns under James I. The plain St. George's Cross, with its plebeian historical resonance, further underscored parliamentary forces' adoption of it as a symbol during the preceding , prioritizing national identity detached from . Despite this ideological austerity, the designs prioritized practical military exigencies, particularly in where bold, simple patterns ensured visibility for ship identification and fleet coordination at distances critical during engagements like the on 31 July 1653 amid the (1652–1654). The Commonwealth jack—featuring the St. George's Cross alongside a gold on a field—and quartered ensigns combining English and Scottish crosses facilitated squadron distinction and command signaling, as mandated by ordinances such as the 12 April 1654 integration of the post-Union with . These flags' high-contrast elements proved effective for operational needs, enabling the republican navy to prosecute aggressive campaigns that expanded English maritime dominance, culminating in the Treaty of Westminster on 15 April 1654, even as symbolic restraint avoided ornate complexity that might obscure function in foul weather or combat haze. Royalists derided these republican ensigns as illegitimate parodies of established heraldry, viewing them as emblems of usurpation that warranted destruction upon Charles II's restoration in 1660, when surviving Commonwealth symbols were systematically effaced to reassert monarchical legitimacy. Nonetheless, the regime's naval achievements under such flags—bolstered by disciplined command structures and tactical innovations—demonstrated that practical utility could outweigh symbolic controversies, as the fleet's victories sustained the republic's projection of power abroad despite domestic ideological purism.

Debates on Standardization and Historical Accuracy

Scholars have long debated the precise configurations of naval ensigns, particularly those adopted around 1651, owing to the absence of binding uniform ordinances akin to those established post-Restoration. Primary records, including fragmentary Admiralty logs and ship manifests, describe a with a canton featuring the St George's Cross augmented by an Irish in the fly, yet discrepancies arise in the harp's orientation and positioning—some logs suggest a forward-facing harp strung from left to right, while others imply variability based on production. These inconsistencies fuel disputes between traditional vexillologists, who favor log-based reconstructions for their contemporaneity, and those prioritizing from period paintings, which often depict stylized or inconsistent details potentially influenced by rather than strict protocol. The integration of Scottish elements into Protectorate jacks post-1651 remains a focal point of contention, given the Commonwealth's incorporation of Scotland via military conquest rather than consensual union. While some secondary reconstructions propose quartered designs combining the St George's Cross with the St Andrew's to symbolize the Tender of Union, primary sources like Admiralty inventories and Pepys' naval manuscripts predominantly attest to jacks emphasizing English and Irish motifs without the saltire, reflecting persistent Anglo-Scottish frictions and the republican regime's prioritization of practical military cohesion over symbolic parity. Revisionist interpretations, drawing on the coercive of Cromwell's campaigns, argue this exclusion highlights the provisional nature of the union, whereas traditional accounts posit limited adoption due to incomplete efforts; unconfirmed depictions in engravings are dismissed by skeptics as retrospective inventions lacking corroboration from verifiable logs or orders, such as the 1658 fleet standard directive. Modern reconstructions thus vary, with vexillological authorities cautioning against over-reliance on visual art absent cross-verification from textual records like Pepys' accounts of hasty flag alterations in , which imply pre-existing but non-uniform designs hastily modified for the Restoration. This evidentiary scarcity underscores broader challenges in assessing historical accuracy, as the Interregnum's turbulent administration yielded no centralized flag registry, leaving debates resolved primarily through comparative of surviving artifacts and documents rather than definitive ordinances.

Legacy and Influence on Later British Flags

Upon the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II ordered the destruction of all flags associated with the period, leading to the swift revival of pre- designs such as the 1606 for royal vessels and the traditional English ensigns featuring the St George's Cross. This purge underscored a deliberate rejection of republican iconography, with royalist vessels having continued flying the even during the Interregnum as a symbol of continuity. The Interregnum's naval flags, which emphasized plain crosses over elaborate royal heraldry, did not alter this restoration but reinforced the practical utility of the St George's Cross in English maritime usage, which persisted in the white and red ensigns without significant modification into the late . The design of the flag established by the Acts of Union in , combining the crosses of St George and St Andrew into an updated Union Flag, drew directly from the precedent rather than Interregnum innovations, as republican experiments like the incorporation of the Irish harp into cross-based flags were discarded without influencing the quartered heraldic approach. This continuity highlights how the Interregnum's flag designs, lacking deep cultural entrenchment, failed to establish precedents for symbolic combination in state unions, with the flag prioritizing monarchical heritage over any temporary republican adaptations. Historians note that the Interregnum flags' inability to endure stemmed from the regime's inherent instability, as the absence of a stable institutional base prevented the development of lasting republican iconography comparable to later national symbols elsewhere. Unlike the French Revolution's tricolor, which benefited from prolonged revolutionary consolidation, the English republican banners were effaced post-1660, serving primarily as a cautionary example that flag legacies require sustained political legitimacy rather than mere novelty in design. This discontinuity extended to subsequent British flags, where Interregnum elements exerted no verifiable causal influence on evolutions like the 1801 addition of the St Patrick's Saltire.

References

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