Feb 13, 2013
Article: The British art of merger
Royal badges of England
From 1455 and 1485, the then Kingdom of England lived a dynastic
indecision between two rival branches of Plantagenet dynasty: the House
of York and the House of Lancaster. The symbol of the House of York was a
white rose pointing the bottom, while the House of Lancaster used a red
rose pointing the top as insignia. When Henry Tudor (future king Henry
VII) unified the two factions and achieved the peace, a new rose was
created: the Tudor rose, still used as the royal badge of England.
York rose
|
Lancaster rose
|
Tudor rose
|
Royal badges of United Kingdom
The two kingdoms had particular pre-Union histories and, although the capital of new kingdom would be on London (England), the Scots wanted equal representation. A new badge was created, merging the Tudor rose, royal badge of England, and the thistle, the royal badge of Scotland.
Tudor rose (England) | Thistle (Scotland) | Royal badge of United Kingdom of Great Britain |
In 1800, a similar merge occurred: the Kingdom of Ireland, that was in personal union with Kingdom of England since the Crown of Ireland Act (1572) and, after the Union Act, with the United Kingdom of Great Britain, was unified with the United Kingdom, by acts also name Acts of Union. The badge of the two kingdoms were also merged.
Royal badge of United Kingdom of Great Britain | Shamrock (Ireland) | Royal badge of United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |
The badge didn't change after the independence of Irish Free State
(current Republic of Ireland) or the power devolution to Wales, that has
its own badges.
Flags of United Kingdom
And the same things that occurred on the royal badges occurred on flags:
the St. George's cross, the flag of England, was merged to the St.
Andrew's cross, the flag of Scotland, to create the flag of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain, that was merged to St. Patrick's cross, the
cross-flag of Ireland, to create the flag of United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland. There are many proposals to add Welsh
representation under the badge, but none approved.
St. George's cross (England) | St. Andrew's cross (Scotland) | Flag of United Kingdom of Great Britain |
Flag of United Kingdom of Great Britain | St. Patrick's cross (Ireland) | Flag of United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |
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