The US flag incorporates and has developed from the Union flag
Yes it is called the union jack
the is one star for each union on the flag
Captain Cook's flag was the British flag - The Queen Ann or the first union flag. It was not the Union Jack of Grate Briton
The Union Flag or Union Jack, is Scotlands flag, and the English flag so...the answer is 2
England or U.S.
No, the union flag is the British flag.The very first American flag included a union flag in the upper hoist canton, along with the thirteen stripes, this flag was named the Grand Union Flag. (This flag is the same as the British East India company flag, pre 1801.)There can be some confusion around this topic. In common American English use, the term "the Union" refers to the Northern States (i.e. the states remaining in the United States) during the American Civil War. As such, any reference in that context to a "Union Flag" means the American Flag (as flow at the time). "Union Flag" was not some specific design of flag, but was the American Flag.Outside the context of the American Civil War, the term Union Flag refers to the design of the Union Jack flag, the current flag of the United Kingdom (i.e. Great Britain, or, formally, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland).
The same flag that it flies at other times - the Union Flag - sometimes incorrectly called the Union Jack.
The Union Jack appears on the New Zealand flag because in 1841 New Zealand became a British colony and the union flag is symbolic of this fact.because its the same time and the same Queen xxx
No, the Union Flag is the flag of the United Kingdom. The American flag is sometimes known as the Stars and Stripes
Australia was once a British colony, and so holds the Union Flag within it's flag to represent this. This is the same for all flags which hold the Union Flag as part of their flag. Almost all (with the exception of a small few) countries that were/are part of the Commonwealth were British colonies, and therefore may hold the Union Flag within their own flag.
The Union Jack and the Union Flag are the same thing, both names are acceptable. Some people will say that the term, Union Jack, should only be used when the flag is flown on Royal Navy ships, but this is incorrect. the Flag Institute has a full explanation, see their website, search for 'the flag institute'
the same as now: The Union Jack
The US flag incorporates and has developed from the Union flag
I'm not sure what you mean by 'special name', but the official name for the British flag is: Union Jack
Union Flag, or more casually the Union Jack
The Union Flag is red, white and blue.