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Flags of the English Interregnum
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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
[edit]-
A flag used by the Commonwealth Parliamentary Navy and privateers beginning on 22 February 1649.[6]
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Flag described as "the Parliament Jack", following a decision of the State Council on 23 February 1649: "And that upon the Sterne of the Shipps there shall be the Red Crosse in one Escotcheon, and the Harpe in one other, being the Armes of England and Ireland, both Escotcheons joyned according to the pattern herewith sent unto you.", replaced in 1658.[4][7]
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An Ordinance of 12 April 1654 ordered: "That the arms of Scotland viz: a Cross commonly called the St Andrew's Cross be received onto and borne from henceforth in the Arms of this Commonwealth ... etc".[8]
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Standard of the Lord Protector from 1653 to 1659.[9]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ "Commonwealth Standard | Royal Museums Greenwich".
- ^ cited after Dave Martucci, 29 September 1999
- ^ United Kingdom: Flags of the Interregnum, 1649-1660 (crwflags.com). 3 May 2010
- ^ a b c Perrin, British Flags (1922), p. 64-65
- ^ Wilson, Flags at Sea (1986), p. 19: "In 1658 Cromwell's standard as Lord Protector, in which the cross of St. George was quartered with the cross of St. Andrew and the Irish Harp, and surmounted by an escutcheon with Cromwell's personal coat of arms, became the 'Standard for the General of his Highnesse fleet' and the Cross and Harp jack was replaced by the old Union Jack with the addition of a harp in the centre."
- ^ The parliamentary navy was ordered by the Council of State on 22 February 1649 as follows: "that the ships at sea in service of the State shall onely beare the red Crosse in a white flag"
- ^ Hulme, The Flags of The World: Their History, Blazonry and Associations (1897), p.49
- ^ "United Kingdom: Flags of the Interregnum, 1649-1660".
- ^ a b Timothy Wilson, Flags at Sea (1986)
References
[edit]- Dave Martucci, Christopher Southworth, Vincent Morley, Jarig Bakker, United Kingdom: Flags of the Interregnum, 1649–1660. Flags of the World (1999, 2010). Retrieved 30 March 2011.
External links
[edit]Flags of the English Interregnum
View on GrokipediaHistorical 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.[3] 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.[4] 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.[1] 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.[5] This St George's Cross appeared on regimental colors for infantry and as jacks or ensigns for naval vessels, promoting unity under English parliamentary authority and simplifying identification in battle.[6] Parliament's seizure of the naval fleet 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 royal navy traditions or red for broader use—to excise royalist connotations while maintaining maritime precedence.[7] 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.[8] This wartime divergence eroded the Union Flag's unchallenged status, paving the way for republican symbolism devoid of monarchical composites.[1]Abolition of the Monarchy and Formation of the Commonwealth
Following the execution of King Charles I on 30 January 1649, the Rump Parliament advanced measures to dismantle monarchical institutions.[9] 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.[10] The House of Lords was similarly abolished on 19 March 1649 as useless and pernicious.[11] These steps culminated in the declaration of England as a Commonwealth on 19 May 1649, establishing a republican government under parliamentary authority and a Council of State, rejecting hereditary rule in favor of governance by elected representatives and military oversight.[12] 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.[3] Parliament ordered its removal from state vessels as early as 22 February 1649, explicitly to sever associations with the Stuart dynasty and royal heraldry.[13] Royalist vessels persisted with the older design, but Commonwealth ships transitioned away from it to affirm the new regime's break from monarchical traditions.[14] In its place, the St. George's Cross was adopted as the naval jack from March 1649, as directed by the Council of State on 5 March for admirals' flags, emphasizing England's preeminent position amid the fragmented British Isles.[14] This plain red cross on white field, longstanding as England's banner, underscored republican prioritization of national identity over unionist pomp. Rump Parliament ordinances in 1649 and 1650 regulated naval flags with a focus on operational clarity and military discipline, subordinating elaborate heraldry to practical signaling for fleet coordination and enemy identification.[15]Flags of the Commonwealth (1649–1653)
Naval Jacks and Ensigns
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.[2] The plain cross design prioritized simplicity for maritime signaling and identification amid ongoing naval engagements.[2] 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 Ireland under Commonwealth authority after the 1649 invasion and subsequent campaigns.[2] [14] 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.[14]