The Southern Cross. It is represented on the New Zealand Flag The Southern Cross. It is represented on the New Zealand Flag
By a large 'plus' cross in the foreground.
Scotland is represented by the St.Andrew cross (white saltire cross on blue background). Ireland is represented by the St.Patrick cross (red saltire cross on white background). England is represented by the St. George cross (red on white background)
The Union Flag is an amalgamation of a St. Georges Cross representing England, a St. Andrews Cross representing Scotland and a St. Patricks Cross representing Ireland. Wales isn't represented on the Union Flag.
There several patron saints of England:Augustine of CanterburyCuthbertGeorgeGregory the GreatMichael the ArchangelOur Lady of Mount Carmel at AylesfordOur Lady of Walsingham
The Red Cross symbol was derived from the symbol of a red cross on a white background on the reverse of the Swiss flag. It represented neutrality.
his flag is what he country he represented he represented spain
In the top left corner is a representation of the Union Flag, which is a composite of the flags of St George, St Patrick, and St Andrew, which each are crosses.The fourth cross on the flag is the Southern Cross, of the constellation CRUX.In the NZ flag, the stars of the Southern Cross are each "red stars with a white background".
It is Saint Patrick's cross and it represented Ireland, but now only Northern Ireland.
yes, each of the 50 states are represented by 1 star on the US flag
There wasn't one. This is because there was no nation of Austalia until Federation in 1901, which is the year the flag was designed. Each of the colonies had adopted their own flag prior to Federation. The Australian flag has always had its current design, with the Southern Cross constellation and the Union Jack in the top left hand corner. The only changes have been minor changes to the stars of the Southern Cross, and the Federation Star.
Great Britain has not had a flag since 1800. The flag comprised St George's cross (a centred red cross on a white background representing England and Wales, which had been unified in the sixteenth century) and the Saltire (the flag of Scotland; a diagonal white cross on a blue background). The Union Flag (the flag of the United Kingdom) which came into being on 1 January 1801, added to the above St Patrick's cross, a diagonal red cross on a white background. Until 1922 St Patrick's cross represented Ireland. It now represents Northern Ireland as the fourth part of the United Kingdom.