Last modified: 2016-11-03 by rob raeside
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Perrin (1922) wrote in "British Flags", page 40:
"When the Prayer Book was revised under Edward VI (1547-1553), the festival of
St. George was abolished, with many others. Under the influence of the
Reformation the banners of his former rivals,
St. Edward and St. Edmund, together with all
other religious flags in public use, except that of St. George, entirely
disappeared, and their place was taken by banners containing royal badges."
In connection with flags ordered for ships in the 15th century he mentions,
the gittons of Holy Trinity, Holy Ghost, St. Mary, St. Edward, St. George;
the streamers of Holy Ghost, St. Katherine, St. Nicholas;
banners of St. Peter, St. Katherine, St. George, St. Edward, St. Anne;
standards of St. Mary, St. George, Holy Ghost, St. Edward;
plus non-religious flags in various forms bearing,
royal arms, ostrich feather, swan, antelope, pomegranate and rose,
rose of white and green, dragon, lion, greyhound, portcullis and red lion.
David Prothero, 3 July 2002
by Vincent Morley
The St. George's flag is also the flag of England.
Although St. George was known
in England in the 5C and his legend was brought back to England by stories
from the 1st crusade, there is no mention of the "Cross of St. George" if as
I am led to believe that Richard the Lionheart saw a vision of St. George
with a red cross banner, I can only assume that Richard brought back the red
cross. But this seems to be at odds with the history of the Genoa flag where
one correspondent gives information that English ships bore the cross so as
to have safe passage into the port of Genoa, subsequently paying the King
for this safe passage, the correspondent gives the year 1190 some 9 years
before Richard returned, so if our Italian correspondent is correct then the
"Cross of St. George" would have been seen in England before the second
crusade.
Barry Hamblin, 1 July 2002
There is a chapter on this subject in British Flags by W.G. Perrin who was
Admiralty Librarian in the early 1900's. He wrote that although St. George
was popular among crusaders there was no particular connection with England
at that time. St. George was a foreign saint and it was many years before he
came to be regarded as similar in importance to the English saints Edward
and Edmund.
Briefly he wrote that:
Plate 6 from Perrin (1922)
Plate 7 from Perrin (1922)
image by Tomislav Todorovic, 17 September 2016
With white cross on red field, this flag looks like having been derived from
the flag of St George by reversing its colours [1].
While this influence may not be completely excluded, it is in fact described as
being derived from the coat of arms of Sherborne Abbey: gules a cross argent
pierced through its dexter arm by a crosier Or [2, 3, 4]. The abbey church was
originally the cathedral church of the Diocese of Sherborne, whose first bishop
was St Aldhelm himself, hence the connection [5, 6]. The flag is used by local
religious communities [7] and is also promoted by the Wessex Regionalists, the
political party seeking devolution for the Wessex region, as an alternative to
the Wyvern Flag [8, 9].
Sources:
[1] Hapmshire Flag Company website:
http://www.hampshireflag.co.uk/flags.asp?search=ST.%20ALDHELMS
[2] The
Wessex Society at the Internet Archive - Wessex Flag Flying Days (captured on
2011-08-15):
http://wessexsociety.org/wessex_flag_flying_days.html
[3] Sherborne Abbey
website: http://sherborneabbey.com/
(coat of arms image:
http://sherborneabbey.com/.../abbey-website-logo1.png)
[4] Sherborne
Abbey Insight Programme website:
http://insight.sherborneabbey.com/event/my-brothers-keeper/ (large image:
http://insight.sherborneabbey.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Sister.jpg)
(larger image, in PDF format:
http://insight.sherborneabbey.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Sister.pdf)
[5] Wikipedia page about the Sherborne Abbey:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherborne_Abbey
[6] Wikipedia page about
St Aldhelm:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldhelm
[7] Saint Aldhelm Orthodox Mission
in Wessex website:
http://wessexorthodox.blogspot.rs/
[8] Wessex Regionalists website:
http://www.wessexregionalists.info/newslink (photo:
http://www.wessexregionalists.info/uploads/1/2/1/4/12145464/4953687_orig.jpg)
[9] The Wall Street Journal website:
http://www.wsj.com/articles/in-u-k-election-ancient-kingdom-eyes-political-comeback-1430948605
(photo:
https://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/BN-IH023_WESSEX_M_20150506132408.jpg)
About St Aldhelm
St Aldhelm (Ealdhelm) is patron saint
of the towns of Malmesbury, Wiltshire and Sherborne, Dorset. Unofficially, he is
also considered the patron of Wessex region. He was born c. 639 in the royal
family of Wessex. A monk in the Malmesbury Abbey since the unknown date, he was
made its abbot in 675, making it an important centre of learning. His fame as a
scholar spread to other countries as well, reaching even Rome, which he visited
after the invitation by Pope Sergius I. When the Diocese of Sherborne was
founded c. 705, he was made its first bishop, but kept his position as the Abbot
of Malmesbury, too, at the request of the brethren, holding them both until his
death in 709. He was revered as a saint after his death, his feast day being
celebrated on May 25th (the day of his death).
Sources:
[1] Wikipedia
page about St Aldhelm:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldhelm
[2] The Wessex Society at the
Internet Archive - Wessex Flag Flying Days (captured on 2011-08-15):
http://wessexsociety.org/wessex_flag_flying_days.html
Tomislav
Todorovic, 17 September 2016
See also: