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Northern Ireland: Political Flags

Last modified: 2005-07-23 by rob raeside
Keywords: northern ireland | uda | uvf | apprentice boys | vanguard movement | orange order |
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Ulster Defence Association
  • Ulster Volunteer Force
  • Orange Order
  • Apprentice Boys of Derry
  • Ulster Separatists
  • Vanguard Movement
  • Miscellaneous flags seen in Northern Ireland
  • See also:


    Ulster Defence Association

    [UDA] by Santiago Tazon

    FLAG: cyan background, with the UDA's emblem of the crown and the red hand at the left side of the flag and the big wordsof the name of the association filling the rest of the flag.

    MOTTO: "Quis separabit?" (Who will set us apart?)

    The UDA born in 1971 as an umbrella body of the vigilante groups which had sprung up in loyalist areas across Belfast against IRA attacks (the largest was the Woodwale Defence Association -WDA-). In 1991 Ulster Volunteers Force (UVF) and UDA formed the Combined Loyalist Military Command (CLMC).

    Source: "Loyalists" by Peter Taylor (1999)

    Santiago Tazon, 10 December 2001

    There is a book on the subject of flags in Northern Ireland: Lucy Bryson and Clem McCartney, Clashing Symbols? A report on the use of flags, anthems and other national symbols in Northern Ireland. Bryson and McCartney say that:

    The Ulster Defence Association has pale blue flags with the UDA shield: The red hand of Ulster on a white background, surmounted by a crown and underneath the words 'Quis Separabit' or 'who will make us separate'. It sometimes includes a Cross of St George in the top corner.
    Because there is no illustration, it is difficult to determine exactly what this flag looks like. Bryson and McCartney also refer to the use of regimental flags in the UDA. Jan Oskar Engene, 3 March 1996

    Ulster Volunteer Force

    [Flag of the UVF] by Jan Oskar Engene

    Bryson and McCartney also mention another flag for the UVF which is 'crimson or maroon in colour and bears the cap badge of the UVF, with the motto 'For God and Ulster':
    Jan Oskar Engene, 3 March 1996

    [Flag of the UVF] by Frank George Valoczy

    This flag was obtained by a mate of mine who was stationed in Northern Ireland when he was in the British Army, and he brought me this flag back, a flag of the Ulster Volunteer Force.
    Frank George Valoczy, 17 April 2003

    On the nationalist and republican side, the tricolour of the Republic of Ireland is probably the most used flag. However, two other flags are worth mentioning. The first is the Starry Plough, a blue field with seven white stars in the pattern of the Starry Plough (Big Dipper, Ursa Major) constellation. This flag originated with the Irish Citizen Army in the Easter rebellion of 1916, originally with a green field and a representation of a plough in addition to the stars. The field was changed to blue and the plough drawing dropped when the flag was adopted by the Irish Transport and General Workers Union in 1934. The other flag is the Sunburst flag, a golden sun bursting from the lower hoist corner. The flag is used by Fianna Éireann, the youth wing of the IRA.

    Jan Oskar Engene, 3 March 1996

    Orange Order

    [Flag of the Orange Order] by Vincent Morley

    The above flag of the Orange Order is depicted in its typical proportions of 2:3 but I don't know if these are official. It is often seen with a gold fringe on three sides.

    Vincent Morley, 24 September 1996

    The Orange Order is a Protestant fraternal association dedicated to maintaining Protestantism. It was founded in Northern Ireland in 1795 and is an important organisation there. It spread throughout the British Empire and was very important in Canada, remains influential in Scotland and Liverpool (in England) and has branches in Togo, Ghana, Australia, NZ, USA, Republic of Ireland, NI, England, Scotland and Canada. The Orangemen parade on 12th July. They are called Orangemen because they commemorate the time in 1690 when King William of Orange (a Dutchman and Protestant) defeated King James II (a Catholic) at the battle of the Boyne thereby ensuring that the British crown was once again Protestant (which it remains today).

    Ian Christopher Taylor, 26 September 1996

    Apprentice Boys of Derry

    [The 'Crimson Flag'] by Jan Oskar Engene

    The Crimson Flag was first used by the Protestant supporters of William of Orange who were besieged in Derry by an Irish Jacobite army in 1688-9. It is currently used by the 'Apprentice Boys of Derry', a loyalist organisation similar to the Orange Order, which holds an annual commemoration every August to mark the lifting of the siege. While Derry is the main focal point of this commemoration, smaller marches are held throughout Northern Ireland on the same day.

    Vincent Morley, 5 November 1997

    [The 'Crimson Flag'] located at www.abod.info by Santiago Tazón

    The general Committee of Apprentice Boys of Derry have recently commissioned a new Apprentice Boys of Derry flag. It is a crimson background with the Apprentice Boys crest in the centre with “APPRENTICE BOYS OF DERRY” across the top and “NO SURRENDER” along  the bottom. Information obtained in the official website: www.abod.info.
    Santiago Tazón, 27 June 2005


    Ulster Separatists

    [Ulster Independence Movement] by Vincent Morley

    I was interested in your articles on flags. In the correspondence there is a mention of a flag used by advocates of Ulster independence. This Ulster national flag is the St Patrick's saltire overlaid on the blue field of the St Andrew's saltire. The device in the centre of the saltire is a golden six-pointed star bearing a red hand of Ulster. The flag's colours, blue, gold and red, feature in ancient Irish and Scottish flags and represent the merging of the Irish and Scottish elements to form the Ulster nation.

    David Kerr, (Chairman, Ulster Independence Movement), 25 October 1998


    Vanguard Movement

    [Vanguard Movement flag] by Mattias Hansson

    This flag can be described as a White Ensign (no