Flag of Kirkcudbrightshire: Difference between revisions

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==Design==
==Design==
The green and white emblem represents the checked cloth used to count taxes by the Stewards of the Lords of Galloway with the St Cuthbert’s cross sitting on top. The town and county of Kirkcudbright was named after the saint, with an early rendition of the name being Kilcudbrit, derived from the Scots Gaelic ''Cille Chuithbeirt'' (Chapel of Cuthbert). The Anglo-Saxon saint’s remains were kept here for seven years between exhumation at [[Lindisfarne]] and re-interment at [[Chester-le-Street]]. A pectoral cross was found on the saint’s body when his tomb was opened in the nineteenth century. The original is on display in [[Durham Cathedral]] where he was eventually buried. That cross is also depicted on the [[flag of County Durham]].
The green and white emblem represents the checked cloth used to count taxes by the Stewards of the Lords of Galloway with the St Cuthbert's cross sitting on top. The town and county of Kirkcudbright were named after the saint, with an early rendition of the name being Kilcudbrit, derived from the Scots Gaelic ''Cille Chuithbeirt'' (Chapel of Cuthbert). The Anglo-Saxon saint’s remains were kept here for seven years between exhumation at [[Lindisfarne]] and re-interment at [[Chester-le-Street]]. A pectoral cross was found on the saint's body when his tomb was opened in the nineteenth century. The original is on display in [[Durham Cathedral]] where he was eventually buried. That cross is also depicted on the [[flag of County Durham]].


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 10:51, 23 June 2016

Flag of Kirkcudbrightshire
Proportion 3:5
Adopted June 2016
Design The cross of St Cuthbert counterchanged
on a green and white quartered background
Kirkcudbrightshire

The Flag of Kirkcudbrightshire is the flag of the county and stewartry of Kirkcudbright.[1] It was registered with the Flag Institute as the flag of the county in June 2016 after the Lord Lieutenant petitioned the Lord Lyon.

Design

The green and white emblem represents the checked cloth used to count taxes by the Stewards of the Lords of Galloway with the St Cuthbert's cross sitting on top. The town and county of Kirkcudbright were named after the saint, with an early rendition of the name being Kilcudbrit, derived from the Scots Gaelic Cille Chuithbeirt (Chapel of Cuthbert). The Anglo-Saxon saint’s remains were kept here for seven years between exhumation at Lindisfarne and re-interment at Chester-le-Street. A pectoral cross was found on the saint's body when his tomb was opened in the nineteenth century. The original is on display in Durham Cathedral where he was eventually buried. That cross is also depicted on the flag of County Durham.

References

Outside links

County flags of the United Kingdom

Aberdeenshire • Anglesey • Banffshire • Bedfordshire • Berkshire • Berwickshire • Buckinghamshire • Caernarfonshire • Caithness • Cambridgeshire • Cheshire • Cornwall • Cumberland • Derbyshire • Devon • Dorset • Durham • East Lothian • Essex • Flintshire • Glamorgan • Gloucestershire • Hampshire • Herefordshire • Hertfordshire • Huntingdonshire • Kent • Kirkcudbrightshire • Lancashire • Leicestershire • Lincolnshire • Merionethshire • Middlesex • Monmouthshire • Morayshire • Norfolk • Northamptonshire • Northumberland • Nottinghamshire • Orkney • Oxfordshire • Pembrokeshire • Rutland • Shetland • Shropshire • Somerset • Staffordshire • Suffolk • Surrey • Sussex • Sutherland • Warwickshire • Westmorland • Wiltshire • Worcestershire • Yorkshire

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