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Flying Heraldry |
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adapted from various articles by the late Dr Patrick Barden |
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National
Flags:
The Union flag is the correct flag flown by citizens and corporate bodies wishing
to show their loyalty to the United Kingdom. This should not be flown upside
down. The broader white diagonals are uppermost in the hoist.
The Scottish Saltire, blue with its white diagonal cross, is the flag of St
Andrew, patron saint of Scotland. It is the correct flag for Scots or Scottish
corporate bodies to fly to demonstrate their loyalty and nationality. It is
quite correct to fly it alone or together with the Union flag. Since the Royal Navy
introduced flags of a length twice their height it has become common to use
British national flags of these proportions. However it is not necessary to
fly these national flags in these proportions. Regimental colours for instance,
are in a length to height ratio of 5 to 4, a much more comfortable shape to
carry on a banner staff and where national flags are to be flown alongside square
heraldic banners, they may also be square. |
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The St Andrews flag, Scotland |
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The flag of the Heraldry Society of Scotland |
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The Union Jack flag of the United Kingdom |
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The Heraldic Banner:
This is the personal flag of an armiger which shows the arms, as depicted on
the shield, and nothing else. Conventionally, the design is placed on the flag
as if the flagstaff were to the left of a drawing of the shield. Thus, a rampant
animal is said to 'respect' the staff, an eagle displayed looks towards the
staff and so on. The design should go through the fabric so that on the reverse
side all the devices will be turned about but will still respect the staff.
It is quite wrong to use a banner of a plain colour with the owners arms on
a shield in the middle. This implies that the arms are of that colour with a
small inescutcheon in the centre. It is equally wrong to show the helmet, crest,
motto and supporters on a banner.
The purpose of a banner
is to locate and identify its owner and it is the visual equivalent of his name.
Flown over his house, it identifies his property, elsewhere, it indicates his
presence. The size of a house banner will depend on the height of the building
and the pole. It should be large enough to be identified from a reasonable distance.
The best shape for a heraldic house flag is square, regardless of its size.
A smaller banner or Parade banner is designed to be carried in processions,
either by its owner or by his appointed banner bearer. Such a banner is usually
made in fine fabric and may be fringed. Its proportions should be those of an
upright rectangle about five wide by six deep. |
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The Pipe Banner
When an armiger has appointed a personal piper, he may provide him with a banner
to be attached to the base drone of the pipes. The same applies to an armigerous
corporation. and where such a body has a pipe band, the pipe major attaches
the banner to his pipes. The pipe banner may take various forms but is always
shaped with an angle at the top corresponding approximately to the angle of
the drone on the piper shoulder. It then hangs down behind him and may end in
a swallow tail, a double rounded end or any other way suited to the arms. The
arms themselves are shown in the same manner as on a personal banner but are
commonly turned so that they are right way up when the pipes are being played.
A certain amount of distortion is allowed to enable the artist to fit the arms
into the odd shape
Pipe banners are also
much used in the Highland regiments, where each company commanders' arms are
borne on the pipes of the regimental band. Each regiment has its own tradition
for the display of the arms and the regimental badge and these traditions are
so well established as to have become acceptable even when they do not conform
to the strict rules of heraldry. A pipe banner may have a different design on
either side and in this case it needs to be rendered opaque by including a layer
of black fabric between the two sides. A fringe may be added to any pipe banner,
either plain or of the appropriate tartan.
The Trumpet Banner
Rarely now called for, the trumpet banner consists of an approximately square
banner of the arms, usually in very rich materials, fringed and tasselled according
to taste and suspended from the trumpet by ribbons or straps. The arms are placed
in such a way that the charges are right way up and facing away from the trumpeter
when he is playing.
The Street Banner
Where the only available flagstaff is attached to the facade of a building,
the usual house flag is sometimes unsuitable The design is often obscured due to
its being at an angle or the flag is partly furled when there is no wind or
blown over the staff when the wind eddies round the building. The street banner
can be adapted to overcome these difficulties. In shape, the street banner is
very like a large pipe banner. The charges upon it however should look outwards
away from the buildings. The heaviest fabric which is practical should be
employed and stiffeners may be sewn into the hems or fringes attached to the
staff. A smaller form of the street banner may also be used for internal
decoration as for example, in the great hall of a castle.
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Street Banner of Alistair
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Campbell of Airds, right |
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Street Banner of Alistair
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Campbell of Airds, left |
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Hall Banners of |
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John & Eilean Malden |
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The Gonfannon
Also known as a gonfalon, this is the form of banner often associated with the
church where it is used in processions. It's essential feature is that it hangs
from a horizontal bar which may in turn be suspended from a carrying staff.
Not all church gonfannons are heraldic and many have highly decorated pictorial
designs. Heraldic gonfannons are particularly suited to the internal decoration
of historic buildings with arms appropriate to the people and events associated
with them. The gonfannon is capable of a variety of interpretations, the simpler
the better. A rectangular upright banner of the arms with long tails of the
livery colours is recommended. |
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Gonfannon of Robert Lindsay |
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Earl of Crawford & Balcarres |
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Glenfannon of Roman Catholic |
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Diocese of Argyll and the Isles |
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The Livery Pennon
The livery pennon is a very simple flag consisting of the tinctures of the field
and principal charge in the arms arranged on a long streamer parted horizontally
and tapering to a point. Such a pennon has a practical value as a storm flag
when, in high winds and rain, an expensive heraldic flag might quickly torn
to ribbons. A number livery pennons spaced along an avenue or around a games
ground is an economical means of heraldically based decoration. |
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