Last modified: 2004-12-29 by zeljko heimer
Keywords: saint helena | atlantic ocean | ascension | tristan da cunha |
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by Blas Delgado Ortiz, 11 September 2000
Flag adopted 4 October 1984, coat of arms adopted 4 October 1984.
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Saint Helena is an Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom. It has two dependencies; Ascension Island 700 miles to the north, and a group of islands 1300 miles to the south, of which Tristan da Cunha is the only one with a settled population. Gough Island has a meteorological station maintained by the government of South African. Inaccessible Island and the three Nightingale Islands are uninhabited.
St Helena was discovered in 1502 by the Portuguese navigator Juan da Nova Castella, probably on St Helena's Day. It was settled by the English East India Company in 1659, and used by its ships as a port of call, mainly on the return journey from India to England. Between 1815 and 1821 the island was lent to the British Government as a place of exile for the Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte, who died there on 5th May 1821. It was ceded to the British Crown in 1834.
The first flags associated with the island would have been the Union Jack, the Red Ensign, and the East India Company's red and white striped ensign. This striped ensign could be used by company ships until 1824, but only when south of St Helena.
In the early 1870s defacements for the Union Jack and Blue Ensign were introduced into British colonies. The defaced Union Jack was hoisted on any vessel carrying the governor within the waters of the colony, and the defaced Blue Ensign was for vessels operated by the government of the colony. The undefaced Union Jack flew over Government House.
The badge for St Helena was derived from the Public Seal of the colony; the Royal Arms above an ornamental frame surrounding a picture of a three-masted ship near the base of steep cliffs. Its sails are furled and a flag flies at the stern. As originally drawn, when the badge was introduced in 1874, the flag was a White Ensign, but in later copies the canton was often left blank so that it appeared to be the English flag. It is