Last modified: 2010-05-28 by rob raeside
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Members of the royal family without their own specific standards use the
royal standard with a bordure of ermine. This was for instance used by
the late Diana, Princess of Wales.
Marcus Schmöger, 12 November 2001
Royal Standard for members of the Royal Family who did not have a personal
version of the Royal Standard, after 1917 when the escutcheon of Saxony was
removed.
Royal Standard with an ermine border. The Royal
Standard has proportions of 1:2, and the whole flag including border
proportions of 9:16. There may have been versions made between
1937 and 1957, which had crimson instead of
red, and at some point after 1957 this Standard was produced with the
revised Royal Standard of that year.
David
Prothero, 20 April 2007
image by Martin Grieve, 15 April 2007
Royal Standard for members of the Royal Family without a personal version of
the Royal Standard.
Royal Standard having an escutcheon of the shield of
Saxony, and an ermine bordure (border), arranged with one at each
corner, two, top and bottom and one, hoist and fly. The Royal Standard retained
its proportions of 1:2, and the border gave over-all proportions of 9:16.
On 5 November 1907 an Admiralty Circular was published in The Times. It
stated that the King had approved the design of a Standard to be flown at sea by
members of the Royal Family other than the King, Queen, Prince of Wales, Duke of
Connaught, and Prince of Connaught. Unlike the Royal Standard, and unlike
quartered, impaled and differenced versions of the Royal Standard, this flag is
not, strictly speaking, a Banner of Arms since there is no Armorial Achievement
which has a shield consisting of the Royal Arms with an ermine border. It is
similar to a flag that had been first proposed in 1833. An Order in Council of
12 October 1832 stated that the Royal Standard was to be worn on board any of HM
Ships and vessels in which HM or any member of the Royal Family was embarked.
This was followed by another Order in Council of 3 July 1833, which gave the
King and Queen a ceremonial distinction from other members of the Royal Family.
The final draft which was issued by Admiralty Circular of 4 July 1833 instituted
the Admiralty Flag, Royal Standard, Union Jack combination for a ship carrying
the King or Queen but the first draft had proposed that a ship carrying the King
and Queen should wear a Royal Standard alone, while one carrying only any other
member of the Royal Family should wear a white-bordered Royal Standard.
[National Archives (PRO) ADM 1/8765/311]
David Prothero, 15 April
2007