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| The Bonnie Blue Flag |

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| The un-official national flag |
| The 1st National Flag |

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| 1861-1863 |
| 2nd National Flag the " Stainless Banner" |

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| 1863-1865 |
| 3rd National Flag |

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| 1865-Present |
| The Battle Flag |

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| The Navy Jack |

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| The Scottish Flag or the Cross of St. Andrew |

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| This is the flag that our nations flag is based upon |
The Story of St. Andrew and the history of the Confederate
Flag.
The Man
While little is known about his life, we do know that he was a fisherman from Galilee, brother to Simon, whom
Jesus would call Peter, and one of the first to be called as a disciple of Christ. Andrew
was believed to have been a missionary to Asia Minor and Greece, and was reportedly crucified by the Romans on an x-shaped
cross at Patras, in 69 AD, as he did not feel worthy to be crucified on a cross like Christ was. His remains were entombed and in 370 AD, taken from Constantinople (where the bones had resided under the
order of the Emperor Constantine) to a Pictish settlement on the Eastern coast of Scotland by Saint Rule, who was told in
a vision to take the bones to the “ends of earth” for safe-keeping, and he removed a tooth, arm bone, kneecap
and some fingers from the tomb in Constantinople. The settlement later became known as St. Andrews, and the relics were placed
first in a small chapel, and then later in the Cathedral of St. Andrews, a center for medieval religious pilgrims (and modern
pilgrims of a another sort travel there for the golf!) It is believed that the relics were destroyed during the Scottish Reformation. The larger part of St. Andrew’s remains were stolen from Constantinople in 1210
and were moved to Amalfi, in southern Italy. In 1879 the local Archbishop sent part of the saint’s shoulder blade to
the Scottish Roman Catholic community, and Pope Paul VI presented further relics of the Saint in 1969, which are currently
on display in St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Cathedral in Edinburgh
The Flag
In 832 AD, a Pictish army under King Angus MacFergus, High King of Alba, along with a force of Scots under Eochaidh,
King of Dalriada (and grandfather of Kenneth MacAlpin), was battling a Northumbrian force in Lothian for control of that region.
The night before battle, Saint Andrew reportedly appeared to Angus in a vision, and on the field of battle the next day, a
saltire, or x-shaped cross, similar to the one that Saint Andrew was crucified on, appeared in the sky, encouraging the Picts
and Scots in their fight and causing the Northumbrians to flee the field, after their
leader, Athelstan, was killed. The site of the battle was and still is known as Athelstanford, or “the ford
of Athelstan”. The colours of the flag are supposed to represent the white of clouds and the azure colour of the sky.
From that time onward, the Saltire became the national emblem of the Scots, not only as a flag, but also worn on tunics and
bonnets of Scottish soldiers as a way to identify themselves on the battlefield. One version of the flag in the National Museum
of Scotland, called the “Douglas Standard”, which reportedly was the personal flag of the Earl of Douglas and
carried at the Battle of Otterburn in 1388. The flag was green, with a saltire and red heart, the symbol of the Douglas family.
The saltire was also seen on the nations’ coinage, being introduced by King David the First in the 13th century. Even
during the days of the Scottish Reformation, when Presbyterian reformers sought to remove all vestiges of the Catholic Church
in Scotland, only the Saltire remained, and it appeared on many flags of the Covenanting forces (Scottish Presbyterians who
supported the National Covenant, which stated their commitment to the Protestant Reformation) during the Scottish Revolution
of 1638-1644 against the English attempt to force the Church of England on the Scots. In fact, one book, The Story of Scotland’s
Flag and the Lion and Thistle, states that the “Covenanters flag” inspired the blue in the new flag of the United
States during the American Revolution.
In 1707, Scotland and England joined in the Act of Union and established the United Kingdom. A new flag representing
the Union was designed, with the Crosses of Saint Andrew and Saint George intertwined, and then later added, the Cross of
Saint Patrick was added to represent Ireland. The Cross of St. Patrick is a red saltire on a white background, and some in
Northern Ireland today who advocate the province’s independence from Britain and the Republic of Ireland have adopted
a flag that combines the Saint Andrew’s and Saint Patrick’s Cross. The Union flag is now commonly (and incorrectly,
as a “jack” is a flag that flies at the bow of ship, and never on land) known as known as “The Union Jack”,
and still represents the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
variations of the Saltire would be used again, this time by supporters of the exiled Stuart family, in the Jacobite
Rebellions of the 1700’s. Some of these featured a gold-coloured cross instead of a white one. The flag also became
the inspiration for the flags of two Canadian provinces, Nova Scotia (which also features the Lion Rampant) and Newfoundland.
Russia uses a blue Saint Andrew’s Cross on a white field as a naval flag, as Andrew is also one of the patron saints
of that country.
Today, at Athelstaneford, there stands a memorial to the “Battle of the Saltire” in the kirkyard
of Althelstaneford Parish Kirk. It was built in 1965 by the later Dr. F.R. Stevenson, and restored in 1993. It depicts the
battle with the two armies facing each other and in the sky above them, the saltire of St. Andrew. Above the monument on a
flagpole permanently flies a Saint Andrew’s Cross flag, which is lit even during the hours of darkness. The inscription
of the memorial states:
Tradition says that near this place in times remote
Pictish and Scottish warriors about to defeat
an army
of Northumbrians saw against a blue sky a great white
cross like St. Andrew’s,
and in it’s image made a banner
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The first official flag adopted by the Confederate Congress
was known as the Stars and Bars. It consisted of two broad stripes (or bars) with a broad white stripe between them,
with a blue canton in the upper left hand corner having seven white stars in a circle. Even though it was proudly accepted
by all the people of the southern nation, it soon proved to be fatally faulty on the field of battle.
At the first Battle of Manassas in July 1861, it was mistaken
for the U.S. flag by Confederate forces because of the smoke and haze in the confusion of battle. It was then decided
by General Pierre G.T. Beauregard that a flag of different design would have to be made.
A square flag consisting of a blue St. Andrew's Cross emblazoned
with thirteen stars on a field of red and bordered by a narrow band of white was proposed and adopted as the unofficial battle
flag of the Confederate forces. This magnificent flag was formally accepted with military ceremonies by Generals Beauregard,
Joseph E. Johnston and others at Centreville, Virginia in October 1861.
THE FLAG AND ITS MEANING
At Appomattox, Virginia on Sunday April 9, 1865 General Robert
E. Lee surrendered the Army of Northern Virginia. This was the beginning of many subsequent surrenders which brought
an end to the War for Southern Independence. Tens of thousands of brave southern soldiers had spilled their blood and
given their lives on the field of battle in defense of their beloved country. This band of noble dead along with their
brave surviving fellow soldiers fought valiantly in battle for the defense of their homes and firesides under this glorious
banner. This brave army of war-weary, under-fed and grief-stricken men was forced to furl their beloved banner that
became the symbol of their struggle against northern tyranny.
The Confederate Battle Flag now waves as a testimonial to southern
heroes who yearned and fought for limited constitutional government and individual freedom. It stands as a true symbol
of patriotism, dedication to family and a willingness to suffer and even die in defense of the South and its Christian culture. |
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Source:
and
Scottish FAQ: The Saltire (Scotland’s
Flag) http://www.scotweb.co.uk/scottishfaq/browse/the_saltire_scotland_s_flag1.html
The Legend of
the Saltire http://www.electrum.co.uk/cc/legend.htm
Scotland’s
Source: The Saltire Memorial http://www.scotlandsource.com/about/ctva2a.htm
The Scottish
Flag http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/home/Scotland/saltire.html
Saint Andrew
http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/home/Scotland/standrew.html
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