The royal standard is a banner of arms, slightly different from a flag. It is used by the reigning monarch to denote the prescence of the sovereign in a vehicle, vessel, residence, or other building. When the Queen is in residence at Buckingham Palace, the royal standard is raised to signify that the sovereign in present. This custom follows to all royal residences at home an abroad, on royal yachts and in state buildings when the Queen is inside. The royal standard is never flown unless the monarch is present and is never flown at half mast like other flags in times of observance or national grief.
England's flag has a white background with a red 'plus sign' cross on it which symbolises the cross of St. George.
The Union Jack. On 12 April 1606, a new flag to represent this regal union between England and Scotland was specified in a royal decree, according to which the flag of England (also representing Wales by implication), (a red cross with a white background, known as St. George's Cross), and the flag of Scotland (a white saltire with a blue background, known as the Saltire or St. Andrew's Cross), would be "joined together according to the forme made by our heralds, and sent by Us to our Admerall to be published to our Subjects."[3] forming the flag of Great Britain and first union flag.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean by this question, but here are three possible answers: If you are basically asking "Why is the flag of England a red cross on a white field?", then the answer is because it is the St. George's cross, and St. George is the patron saint of England. If you are asking "Why do they use the flag of England for Britain?" then the answer is they don't. The flag of England is as described above, and the flag of Britain is the Union Flag, a composite of the flags of Scotland, England and Northern Ireland If you are asking "Why does the flag of Britain look the way it does?", and are just mistakenly calling Britain "England", (a thing which, incidentally, really infuriates us Scots), then the answer is as above, it is a composite of three of the constituent nations in the state of the UK.
Its Red, White, And Blue. But It looks like a Cross, and a X Straight down the middle of the Flag.
The flag, the royal standard, flies from the flagpole
The Royal Standard is the Flag of the Coat of Arms insignia of the United Kingdom. The Royal Ensign is flown on Her Majestys' Ships: White for Royal Navy. Red for merchant vessels.
A royal standard is the flag representing the monarch and the rest of the royal family in a given country. An ensign is typically the flag used by a given country to identify military units, particularly naval vessels. In the case of the United Kingdom, for example, the royal standard is divided into four quadrants, two representing England, one representing Scotland, and one representing Ireland. Conversely, there are several British ensigns which feature the Union Jack in the upper left corner on a white, blue, or red background, depending on the nature of the vessel.
The Union Flag was a merger between the flags of England and Scotland, which was created following a Royal Decree on 12-Apr-1606.
The flag of England (St. George's Cross) has been the country's flag since around 1245. Prior to that there were a number of royal standards, depending on who was ruling at the time.
England is a country in the United Kingdom that borders Wales and Scotland. A few things that represent England are the national flag, the Tudor rose, the Royal Arms of England and the Royal Banner of England.
The original designer of the Brazilian flag was Jean-Baptiste Debre. It was created for Pedro I's kingdom that unified the Algarve's, Portugal, and Brazil. This flag was the Royal Standard.
The St. Georges cross is the flag of England, one of the constituent parts of the United Kingdom Of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The Queen is not "Queen of England"; her title is somewhat more complex than that! The national flag of the UK is commonly called the Union Jack, but more correctly is the Union Flag. It is a composite of the cross of St George (England), the cross of St Andrew (Scotland) and the cross of St Patrick (Ireland). The Queen's personal flag is the Red & Yellow "Royal Standard".
The Royal Standard, which is the monarch's personal flag. The flag used to be the Union Flag, however this was changed in 1997 when Diana, Princess of Wales died. As the Queen was not at Buckingham Palace, there was no flag to fly at half-mast, so the flag was changed.
This was the ORIFLAMME - essemtially a blood-red flag, but see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oriflamme
The Royal Navy Flag is called the White Ensign
the England have the cross on it are you smart or what