Flag of Staffordshire

From Wikishire
Revision as of 16:35, 28 March 2016 by Owain (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Flag of Staffordshire
Proportion 3:5
Adopted 28 March 2016
Designed by Staffordshire Heritage Group
Staffordshire
Banner of the arms of Staffordshire Council

The Staffordshire flag is the flag of the county of Stafford. It was registered with the Flag Institute on 28 March 2016.[1]

Design

The flag incorporates the Stafford knot in gold on the de Stafford coat of arms. This symbol is unique to the county with a venerable tradition and widespread usage. It is incorporated into the logo of the Staffordshire County Cricket Club and of Staffordshire Fire and Rescue Service amongst others. The colour scheme of gold and red is similarly included on many of the arms found in the county as well as on the arms used by the Staffordshire Council.

Armorial Banner

An alternate flag offered for sale commercially is a banner of the arms of Staffordshire County Council and as such is the property of the council and only represents it, not the wider county.

Before the flag was adopted, the council flag had been flown alongside the Union Flag above the Department for Communities and Local Government.[2] It was also adopted by the crew of the RFA Wave Ruler in 2010, as its captain is from Stafford.[3]

References

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