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Flag of Ireland

The national flag of Ireland (Irish: bratach na hÉireann), frequently referred to in Ireland as 'the tricolour' (an trídhathach) and elsewhere as the Irish tricolour is a vertical tricolour of green (at the hoist), white and orange.[1][2] The proportions of the flag are 1:2 (that is to say, flown horizontally, the flag is half as high as it is wide).

Ireland
Bratach na hÉireann, English: flag of Ireland,
'the Tricolour'
UseNational flag and ensign
Proportion1:2
Adopted1922[1] (constitutional status; 1937)
DesignA vertical tricolour of green, white and orange.

Presented as a gift in 1848 to Thomas Francis Meagher from a small group of French women sympathetic to Irish nationalism,[3] it was intended to symbolise the inclusion and hoped-for union between Roman Catholics (symbolised by the green colour) and Protestants (symbolised by the orange colour). The significance of the colours outlined by Meagher was, "The white in the centre signifies a lasting truce between Orange and Green and I trust that beneath its folds the hands of Irish Protestants and Irish Catholics may be clasped in generous and heroic brotherhood".[1]

It was not until the Easter Rising of 1916, when it was raised above Dublin's General Post Office by Gearóid O'Sullivan,[4] that the tricolour came to be regarded as the national flag.[1] The flag was adopted by the Irish Republic during the Irish War of Independence (1919–1921). The flag's use was continued by the Irish Free State (1922–1937) and it was later given constitutional status under the 1937 Constitution of Ireland. The tricolour is used by nationalists on both sides of the border as the national flag of the whole island of Ireland since 1916.[5] Thus it is flown by many nationalists in Northern Ireland as well as by the Gaelic Athletic Association.[6]

Design and symbolism

In relation to the national flag of Ireland, the Constitution of Ireland simply states in Article 7:

The national flag is the tricolour of green, white and orange.[7]

As there are no further statutory requirements in relation to the flag, the Department of the Taoiseach takes general responsibility for matters relating to the flag. In its advisory role, the department has issued guidelines to assist persons in their use of the national flag.[8] The flag should be rectangular in shape and its length should be two times its width, translating into an aspect ratio of 1:2. The three coloured pales – green, white and orange – should be of equal size, and vertically disposed. The precise colours of the flag as set by the Department of the Taoiseach since at least 2001 are:[8][9]

Scheme Green White Orange Sources
Pantone 347 U Safe 151 U [8][10]
Hex triplet #169B62 #FFFFFF #FF883E [11][12]
RGB 22–155–98 255–255–255 255–136–62 [11][12]
CMYK 71–0–72–0 0–0–0–0 0–43–91–0 [11][12]

The flag should normally be displayed on a flagstaff, with the green pale positioned next to the flagstaff, at the hoist. Provided that the correct proportions are observed, the flag may be made to any convenient size.[8]

Symbolism

The green pale of the flag symbolises Roman Catholics, the orange represents the minority Protestants who were supporters of William of Orange. His title came from the Principality of Orange but his power from his leadership as Stadtholder of the Netherlands, a Protestant bastion from the 16th century. The white in the centre signifies a lasting peace and hope for union between Protestants and Catholics in Ireland.[8] The flag, as a whole, is intended to symbolise the inclusion and hoped-for union of the people of different traditions on the island of Ireland, which is expressed in the Constitution as the entitlement of every person born in Ireland to be part of the independent Irish nation, regardless of ethnic origin, religion or political conviction.[8][13] (Green was also used as the colour of such Irish bodies as the mainly-Protestant and nonsectarian Friendly Brothers of St. Patrick, established in 1751.)

Occasionally, differing shades of yellow, instead of orange, are seen at civilian functions. However the Department of the Taoiseach stated that is a misrepresentation that "should be actively discouraged"[8] and that worn-out flags should be replaced.[14] In songs and poems, the colours are sometimes enumerated as "green, white and gold" by using poetic licence.[15][16] Variants of different guises are utilised to include, for example, various emblems of Ireland, such as the presidential harp, the four provinces or county arms.[17][18]

History

A green flag featuring a harp is described as being used by Eoghan Ruadh Ó Néill in 1642.[19]

 
The green harp flag, first used by Eoghan Ruadh Ó Néill in 1642

The colour green became associated with Ireland from the 1640s, when the green harp flag was used by the Irish Catholic Confederation. Likewise Green ribbons have been worn on St Patrick's Day since at least the 1680s.[20] suggesting that green was already a national colour at this time, The Friendly Brothers of St Patrick, an Irish nationalistic fraternity founded in about 1750[21] adopted green as its colour. Green was for centuries associated with rebellion and was the unofficial colour of Ireland. In the late 18th century green had again become associated as the colour of nationalism.[22][23][24] The United Irishmen, founded in the 1790s, were inspired by the French revolution, and used a green flag, to which they had a harp emblazoned.[19] A rival organisation, the Orange Order, whose main strength was in Ulster, and which was exclusively for Protestants, especially members of the Anglican Church of Ireland, was founded in 1795 in memory of King William of Orange and the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Following the Irish Rebellion of 1798, which pitted the "green" tradition of the republican United Irishmen against the "orange" tradition of Anglican Protestant Ascendancy loyal to the British Crown, the ideal of a later nationalist generation in the mid-19th century was to make peace between the two traditions and, if possible, to found a self-governing Ireland on such peace and union.[citation needed]

 
Blessing of the Colours by John Lavery

The oldest known reference to the use of the three colours of green, white and orange as a nationalist emblem dates from September 1830 when tricolour cockades were worn at a meeting held to celebrate the French Revolution of that year – a revolution which restored the use of the French tricolour.[25] The colours were also used in the same period for rosettes and badges, and on the banners of trade guilds.[25] However, widespread recognition was not accorded to the flag until 1848. At a meeting in his native city of Waterford on 7 March 1848, Thomas Francis Meagher, the Young Ireland leader, first publicly unveiled the flag from a second-floor window of the Wolfe Tone Club as he addressed a gathered crowd on the street below who were present to celebrate another revolution that had just taken place in France.[25][26] It was inspired by the tricolour of France. Speeches made at that time by Meagher suggest that it was regarded as an innovation and not as the revival of an older flag.[25] From March of that year Irish tricolours appeared side by side with French ones at meetings held all over the country.[8] John Mitchel, referring to the tricolour of green, white and orange that Meagher had presented from Paris at a later meeting in Dublin on 15 April 1848, said: "I hope to see that flag one day waving, as our national banner".[8]

Although the tricolour was not forgotten as a symbol of the ideal of union and a banner associated with the Young Irelanders and revolution, it was rarely used between 1848 and 1916. Even up to the eve of the Easter Rising of 1916, the green flag featuring a harp held undisputed sway.[8] Neither the colours nor the arrangement of the early tricolours were standardised. All of the 1848 tricolours showed green, white and orange, but orange was sometimes put next to the staff, and in at least one flag the order was orange, green and white.[8] In 1850 a flag of green for the Roman Catholics, orange for the Protestants of the Established Church and blue for the Presbyterians was proposed.[8] In 1883, a Parnellite tricolour of yellow, white and green, arranged horizontally, was recorded. Down to modern times, yellow has occasionally been used instead of orange, but by this substitution the fundamental symbolism is destroyed.[8]

 
The Irish flag is always flown with the green at the hoist.

Associated with separatism in the past, flown during the Easter Rising of 1916 and capturing the national imagination as the banner of the new revolutionary Ireland,[27] the tricolour came to be acclaimed throughout the country as somewhat of a national flag. To many Irish people, though, it was considered to be a "Sinn Féin flag".[28]

In the Irish Free State which existed between 1922 and 1937, the flag was adopted by the Executive Council. The Free State constitution did not specify national symbols; the decision to use the flag was made without recourse to statute. When the Free State joined the League of Nations in September 1923, the new flag "created a good deal of interest amongst the general public" in Geneva.[29] The defeated republicans who had fought the Free State's forces in the 1922–23 Civil War regarded the tricolour as the flag of the self-proclaimed Irish Republic, and condemned its appropriation by the new state, as expressed in the song "Take It Down From The Mast". The Executive Council's decision was a provisional one.[25] A 1928 British document said:

The government in Ireland have taken over the so called Free State Flag in order to forestall its use by republican element and avoid legislative regulation, to leave them free to adopt a more suitable emblem later.[30]

In 1937, the tricolour's position as the national flag was formally confirmed by the new Constitution of Ireland.[1]

Marine

 
    The Red Ensign, used by some Irish merchant vessels until 1939

The pre-independence Merchant Shipping Act 1894 was not repealed, and so the Free State's mercantile marine was technically required to fly the Red Ensign.[31] The collier Glenageary may have been the first to arrive in a British port flying the tricolour on 8 December 1921 (two days after the treaty). This flag along with a model of the Glenageary is on display in the National Maritime Museum of Ireland. While some ships, such as the cross-channel ferries flew the red ensign, others sailed under the tricolour.[32][33][34] Some masters of Irish ships were charged by the British Customs and fined by courts for flying an "improper ensign".[35] The tricolour was flown by the fisheries patrol vessel Muirchú, precursor to the Irish Naval Service; Frank Carney alleged in the Dáil in 1930 that a trespassing French trawler had refused to surrender to because it did not recognise Muirchú's flag.[33]

Irish-register ships could fly the Red Ensign until September 1939, after the outbreak of World War II, when a decree under the state of emergency was made, to ensure neutral Irish ships were not mistaken for British ships.[31] Some ships flying the tricolour were nevertheless sunk by Germans.[36] When the tricolour was hoisted over the passenger ferries in Holyhead their British crews went on strike. Five days later their owners transferred the ferries to the British register and the Red Ensign was restored.[37] On the other hand, the Belfast to Liverpool ferry, British owned and British crewed, used the tricolour as a flag of convenience;[38] so did the whalers of Christian Salvesen Shipping, to take advantage of the Irish whale quota.[39]

The tricolour's marine status was formalised by the Merchant Shipping Act, 1947.[31][40]

Use in Northern Ireland

 
A large tricolour flying from Cuchulainn House in the New Lodge, Belfast

In 1921, Ireland was partitioned, with the unionist-dominated north-east becoming Northern Ireland, while later, in 1922, the remainder of Ireland left the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland to form the Irish Free State.[41] Northern Ireland continued to use the UK's Union Flag and created its Ulster Banner derivation of the flag of Ulster with a crown on top of a six-pointed star.[42] Furthermore, for many years the tricolour was effectively banned in Northern Ireland under the Flags and Emblems (Display) Act (Northern Ireland) 1954 which empowered the police to remove any flag that could cause a breach of the peace but specified, rather controversially, that a Union Flag could never have such an effect.[43] In 1964, the enforcement of this law by the Royal Ulster Constabulary at the behest of Ian Paisley, involving the removal of a single tricolour from the offices of Sinn Féin in Belfast, led to two days of rioting. The tricolour was immediately replaced, highlighting the difficulty of enforcing the law.[44]

 
Tricolours have been burned on Loyalist bonfires during twelfth of July celebrations.[45]

Despite its original symbolism, in Northern Ireland the tricolour, along with most other markers of either British or Irish identity, has come to be a symbol of division.[42] The Ulster Unionist Party Government of Northern Ireland adopted the Ulster Banner (based on the flag of Ulster) in 1953.[46] Thus it is this flag and the Union Flag that are flown by unionists and loyalists, while the tricolour is flown by nationalists and republicans.[42] In Northern Ireland, each community uses its own flags, murals and other symbols to declare its allegiance and mark its territory, often in a manner that is deliberately provocative.[47] Kerb-stones in unionist and loyalist areas are often painted red, white and blue,[48] while in nationalist and republican areas kerb-stones may be painted green, white and orange, although this is a much less frequent occurrence.[49] Elements of both communities fly "their" flag from chimneys, tall buildings and lamp-posts on roads.[50]

Under the 1998 Good Friday or Belfast Agreement, it was recognised that flags continue to be a source of disagreement in Northern Ireland. The Agreement stated that:

All participants acknowledge the sensitivity of the use of symbols and emblems for public purposes, and the need in particular in creating the new institutions to ensure that such symbols and emblems are used in a manner which promotes mutual respect rather than division.[51]

Unionists argue that the recognition of the principle of consent in the Agreement – that Northern Ireland's constitutional status cannot change without a majority favouring it – by the signatories amounts to recognising that the Union Flag is the only legitimate official flag in Northern Ireland.[52][53][54] Nationalists maintain that the Agreement means that the use of the Union Flag for official purposes should be restricted, or that the tricolour should be flown alongside the UK's flag on government buildings.[55] However the tricolour is never flown from official buildings, alone or alongside the UK's flag. A Sinn Féin Lord Mayor of Belfast, Alex Maskey, displayed both flags in his own offices causing some controversy.[56][57]

Protocol

The Department of the Taoiseach has issued guidelines to assist persons in giving due respect to the national flag. Observance of the guidelines is a matter for each individual as there are no statutory requirements. It is expected, however, that the national flag will be treated at all times with appropriate respect by those who use it. The department has general responsibility in relation to the national flag and this is primarily concerned with the protocol for the flying of the flag. The Department's role, therefore, is an advisory one.[58]

With respect to the display, placing and precedence of the national flag by both itself and in relation to other flags, the department has made a number of suggestions. No flag or pennant should be flown above the national flag. When the flag is carried with another flag, or flags, it should be carried in the place of honour – that is on the marching right, or on the left of an observer towards whom the flags are approaching. Where one of these flags is that of the European Union, the European Union flag should be carried on the immediate left of the national flag, or, as seen by an observer when the flags are approaching, on the immediate right of the national flag. In the event of a display of crossed staffs, the national flag should be to the right and to the fore – that is to the left of the observer who is facing the flag. Its staff should be in front of the other flag or flags.[59]

 
Flag flown in the place of honour to the left, accompanied to the right by the flags of the European Union and Canada.

When the group of flags of the European Union are flown, the sequence is alphabetical, based on the first letter of the country's name. The flags should be flown from left to right with the European Union flag flown from the first flagstaff before the group. An alternative order of flags is to begin on the left with the national flag and place the European Union flag on the far right of the group, as seen by an observer.[59] With regard to international flags; where either an even or an odd number of flags are flown in line on staffs of equal height, the national flag should be first on the right of the line – that is on the observer's left as he or she faces the flags. Where one of these flags is that of the European Union, the European Union flag should be flown on the immediate left of the national flag, or as seen by an observer, on the immediate right of the national flag. Where, however, an odd number of flags are displayed from staffs grouped so that there is one staff in the centre and higher than the others, the national flag should be displayed from the staff so placed. Where one of these flags is that of the European Union, the European Union flag should be flown from the first flagstaff on the right, or as seen by an observer, on the first flagstaff on the left. Only one national flag should be displayed in each group of flags or at each location. In all cases, the national flag should be in the place of honour. When the national flag is displayed either horizontally or vertically against a wall or other background, the green should be on the right (an observer's left) in the horizontal position or uppermost in the vertical position. When displayed on a platform, the national flag should be above and behind the speaker's desk. While being carried, the flag should not be dipped by way of salute or compliment except to the dead during memorial ceremonies.[59]

 
Michael Collins lying in state by John Lavery showing the green of the flag towards the head

In raising or lowering, the national flag should not be allowed to touch the ground. When being hoisted to half-mast, the flag should first be brought to the peak of the staff and then lowered to the half-mast position.[60] It should again be brought to the peak of the staff before it is finally lowered.[61] On ceremonial occasions when the national flag is being hoisted or lowered, or when it is passing by in a parade, all present should face it, stand to attention and salute. Persons in uniform who normally salute with the hand should give the hand salute. Persons in civilian attire should salute by standing to attention. The salute to the flag when it is being borne past in a parade is rendered when the flag is six paces away and the salute is held until the flag has passed by. Where more than one national flag is carried, the salute should be given only to the leading flag.[62] When the national anthem is played in the presence of the national flag, all present should face the national flag, stand to attention and salute it, remaining at the salute until the last note of the music.[62]

When the national flag has become worn or frayed it is no longer fit for display, and should not be used in any manner implying disrespect.[63] The national flag, when used as a decoration, should always be treated with due respect. It may be used as a discreet lapel button or rosette or as part of a centrepiece for a table. When used in the latter context with the flags of other nations, the national flag should also be displayed in the place of honour on a nearby flag staff. Where multiple national flags are flown on festive occasions these should be of uniform dimensions. Bunting of the national colours may also be used on festive occasions.[64]

 
The Irish flag flying from the General Post Office in Dublin

The national flag should be displayed in the open only between sunrise and sunset, except on the occasion of public meetings, processions, or funerals, when it may be displayed for the duration of such functions.[64][65] When displayed on a platform, the national flag should not be used to cover the speaker's desk, nor should it be draped over the platform. The national flag should never be defaced by placing slogans, logos, lettering or pictures of any kind on it, for example at sporting events. The flag should not be draped on cars, trains, boats or other modes of transport; it should not be carried flat, but should always be carried aloft and free, except when used to drape a coffin; on such an occasion, the green should be at the head of the coffin. The tricolour is draped across the coffins of Presidents of Ireland (including former presidents), soldiers and Garda Síochána personnel killed in the line of duty, and other notables accorded state funerals, such as Roger Casement in 1965, or Kevin Barry in 2001. Care should be taken at all times to ensure that the national flag does not touch the ground, trail in water or become entangled in trees or other obstacles.[66] It is the normal practice to fly the national flag daily at all military posts and from a limited number of important State buildings. The European flag is flown alongside the national flag on all official buildings, and in most places where the Irish flag is flown over buildings. The national flag is flown over buildings including: the residence of the President of Ireland, Áras an Uachtaráin; Leinster House, the seat of the Irish parliament, when parliament is in session; Irish courts and state buildings; Irish military installations, at home and abroad; Irish embassies and consulates; and Garda Síochána (police) stations. The national flag is also flown on Saint Patrick's Day (the national holiday), Easter Sunday and Easter Monday (in commemoration of the Easter Rising of 1916), and the National Day of Commemoration on the Sunday closest to 11 July. On these occasions the national flag is flown from all State buildings throughout the country which are equipped with flagpoles, and many private individuals and concerns also fly it. The national flag is flown on the occasion of other significant national and local events such as festivals and commemorations. The national flag is frequently flown at half-mast on the death of a national or international figure on all prominent government buildings equipped with a flag pole. The death of a prominent local figure may be marked locally by the national flag being flown at half-mast. Where the national flag is flown at half-mast no other flag should be half-masted.[67]

Similar flags

 
Contrasting flags: the Irish flag on the left and Ivory Coast flag on the right

The Flag of Ivory Coast has a similar colour layout to the Irish one, but with the orange on the hoist side and a shorter proportion (2:3 instead of 1:2). When Murielle Ahouré celebrated winning the 2018 world indoor 60-metre dash, she borrowed an Irish flag from a spectator and reversed it.[68] Due to this similarity, in Northern Ireland, Ulster loyalists have sometimes desecrated the Ivorian flag, mistaking it for the Irish one.[69][70] In 2014, Linfield F.C.'s shop on the predominantly-loyalist Shankill Road attracted media coverage, after a window display marking the World Cup included a sign clarifying that one of the flags on display was an Ivory Coast flag, not an Irish one.[71] A Dublin pub also mistakenly flew the Ivorian flag in 2016.[72]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "The National Flag". gov.ie. Department of the Taoiseach. 1 November 2018. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  2. ^ "Constitution of Ireland – Article 7". Irish Statute Book. Government of Ireland. 1937. Retrieved 19 August 2018. The national flag is the tricolour of green, white and orange
  3. ^ Sean Duffy, The Concise History of Ireland, 2005
  4. ^ . Irish Examiner. 4 April 2016. Archived from the original on 19 August 2019. Retrieved 10 February 2018.
  5. ^ Symbols in Northern Ireland – Flags Used in the Region CAIN Web Service. Retrieved 8 November 2011
  6. ^ Sugden, John & Harvie, Scott (1995). Sport and Community Relations in Northern Ireland 2 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Centre for the Study of Conflict, School of History, Philosophy and Politics, Faculty of Humanities, University of Ulster. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  7. ^ Article 7 of the Constitution of Ireland (1 July 1937).
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m (PDF). assets.gov.ie. 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 February 2020. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  9. ^ (PDF). Ireland. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 June 2007.
  10. ^ "Colour of the Flag – Ireland". flagspot.net. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  11. ^ a b c PANTONE. "PANTONE 347 U – Find a Pantone Color | Quick Online Color Tool". www.pantone.com. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  12. ^ a b c PANTONE. "PANTONE 151 U – Find a Pantone Color | Quick Online Color Tool". www.pantone.com. Retrieved 27 December 2017.
  13. ^ Subject to the Twenty-seventh Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland, 2004.
  14. ^ The national Flag Department of the Taoiseach
  15. ^ See, for example, Long Journey Home 2 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine by Elvis Costello and Paddy Moloney.
  16. ^ See, for example, the lyrics and commentary on the following Irish rebel songs: Green White and Gold 14 April 2005 at the Wayback Machine; The Dying Rebel.
  17. ^ others, The Zen Cart™ Team and. "County Coat of Arms Irish Flag buy discounted Irish flags with family crest for Irish family reunion [] – $24.00 : A Bit O Blarney.com Celtic Jewelry Shop, serving online since 1999". Abitoblarney.com. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  18. ^ "Photographic image" (PNG). S1.thejournal.ie. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
  19. ^ a b Andries Burgers (21 May 2006). "Ireland: Green Flag". Flags of the World. Citing G. A. Hayes-McCoy, A History of Irish Flags from earliest times (1979)
  20. ^ Cronin & Adair (2002)
  21. ^ [Kelly, James. That Damn'd Thing Called Honour: Duelling in Ireland, 1570–1860. Cork University Press, 1995. p.65]
  22. ^ "How Green Became Associated With St. Patrick's Day and All Things Irish". Time. 16 March 2017. Retrieved 25 October 2018. The color green cropped up again during an effort in the 1790s to bring nonsectarian, republican ideas to Ireland, inspired by the American revolution and the French revolution
  23. ^ Brian Ó Cuív (1977). "The Wearing of the Green". Studia Hibernica (17, 18): 107–119. JSTOR 20496123. As early as 1803 many of those who attended the execution of Robert Emmet are described as wearing green favours to display their sympath with the young patriot, and it would seem that the Uniter Irishmen first promoted the colour
  24. ^ "So you know Ireland's national colour might not be green, right?". TheJournal. 17 March 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2018. The most prominent use of green emerged during the wave of Irish nationalism and republican feeling in the 19th century, when the colour was adopted as a more striking way of separating Ireland from the various reds or blues that were now associated with England, Scotland and Wales
  25. ^ a b c d e Ireland, Flags of the World, 2001. Retrieved 11 June 2007.
  26. ^ , Your Irish Culture, 2007. Retrieved 11 June 2007.Archived 2008
  27. ^ Contrary to popular belief, the tricolour was not the actual flag of the Easter Rising, although it had been flown from the General Post Office; that flag was a green flag featuring in gold a harp and the words "Irish Republic".
  28. ^ Hayes-McCoy, Gerard Anthony (1979). A History of Irish flags from Earliest Times. Academy Press, Dublin. ISBN 978-0-906187-01-2.
  29. ^ "NAI DFA 26/102: Extracts from the report of the Irish delegation to the Fourth Assembly of the League of Nations (September 1923)". Documents on Irish Foreign Policy. Vol. 2. Royal Irish Academy. September 2000. No. 134. ISBN 1-874045-83-6. Retrieved 21 March 2011.
  30. ^ Public Record Office document DO 117/100, written in 1928.
  31. ^ a b c Merchant Shipping Bill, 1947—Second Stage. 5 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine (20 November 1947) Dáil debates Vol.108 No.15 p.23
  32. ^ Forde, Frank (2000). The Long Watch. Island Books. p. 108. ISBN 1-902602-42-0.
  33. ^ a b Dáil debates Vol. 33 No. 17 p.7 cc.2290–95 23 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 20 March 1930
  34. ^ Dáil debates Vol. 53 No. 7 p.4 23 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 21 June 1934
  35. ^ Sweeney, Pat (2010). Liffey Ships. Mercier Press. p. 202. ISBN 978-1-85635-685-5.
  36. ^ Dáil debates Vol.81 No.14 p.23 20 February 1941
  37. ^ Forde, Frank (2000). The Long Watch. Island Books. p. 2. ISBN 1-902602-42-0.
  38. ^ McRonald, Malcolm (2007). The Irish Boats. Vol. 3, Liverpool to Belfast. Tempus. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-7524-4235-8.
  39. ^ Share, Bernard (1978). The Emergency. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. p. 99. ISBN 0-71710-916-X.
  40. ^ Sections 2 and 14, Merchant Shipping Act, 1947 Irish Statute Book
  41. ^ FitzGerald, Garret. Ireland, Partition of, Encarta, 2007. Retrieved 14 June 2007. 9 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine 31 October 2009.
  42. ^ a b c Flags Used in Northern Ireland, Conflict Archive on the Internet, 1 April 2007. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  43. ^ Flags and Emblems (Display) Act (Northern Ireland) 1954, Conflict Archive on the Internet, 1 April 2007. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  44. ^ Boyd, Andrew (1969). Holy War in Belfast – "1964: The Tricolour Riots". Anvil Press. ISBN 0-900068-10-8.
  45. ^ "Eleventh Night: Tricolours, SF posters, Celtic and Palestine flags burned". irishtimes.com. Irish Times. 12 July 2019. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  46. ^ Northern Ireland (United Kingdom), Flags of the World, 2007. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  47. ^ Ewart, Shirley & Schubotz, Dirk (2004). Voices behind the Statistics: Young People’s Views of Sectarianism in Northern Ireland, National Children's Bureau, p. 7.
  48. ^ "Loyalist paramilitary flags explosion", BBC News, 21 June 2000. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  49. ^ Brown, Kris. & MacGinty, Roger (2003). "Public Attitudes toward Partisan and Neutral Symbols in Post-Agreement Northern Ireland", Identities: Global Studies in Power and Culture. Vol. 10, No. 1, pp. 83–108.
  50. ^ Bryan, Dr. Dominic & Stevenson, Dr. Clifford (2006). Flags Monitoring Project 2006: Preliminary Findings, Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University, Belfast. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  51. ^ The Belfast Agreement 1998, Conflict Archive on the Internet. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  52. ^ Wilson, Robin (July 2000). Flagging concern: The Controversy over Flags and Emblems, Democratic Dialogue. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  53. ^ Northern Ireland Assembly Official Report of Tuesday 6 June 2000 6 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Northern Ireland Assembly, 6 June 2000. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  54. ^ Report on Draft Regulations proposed under Article 3 of the Flags (Northern Ireland) Order 2000 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Northern Ireland Assembly, 17 October 2000. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  55. ^ Alex Maskey Motion 39 – flags and emblems 19 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine, SinnFein.ie, 17 February 2006. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  56. ^ "Tricolour raised in City Hall", BBC News, 4 September 2002. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  57. ^ Should Belfast have its own flag?, BBC News Talking Point, 5 September 2002. Retrieved 14 June 2007.
  58. ^ , Department of the Taoiseach.
  59. ^ a b c , Department of the Taoiseach.
  60. ^ A flag is at half-mast in any position below the top of the staff but never below the middle point of the staff. As a general guide, the half-mast position may be taken as that where the top of the flag is the depth of the flag below the top of the staff.
  61. ^ , Department of the Taoiseach.
  62. ^ a b , Department of the Taoiseach.
  63. ^ , Department of the Taoiseach.
  64. ^ a b , Department of the Taoiseach.
  65. ^ For military purposes, sunrise occurs at 8:00 a.m. between March and October, and at 8:30 a.m. between November and February. Sunset is deemed to occur at: 3:30 p.m. in January and December; 4:30 p.m. in February and November; 5:30 p.m. in March and October; 6:00 p.m. in April; 7:00 p.m. in May and September; and 8:00 p.m. between June and August.
  66. ^ , Department of the Taoiseach.
  67. ^ , Department of the Taoiseach.
  68. ^ "Quick-thinking Irish fans come to the rescue of victorious Ivory Coast star at World Indoor Athletics Championships". Irish Independent. 5 March 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  69. ^ "What have the Ivory Coast ever done to deserve this?". JOE.ie.
  70. ^ "Loyalists ask us to respect their flag as they burn everyone else's?". IrishCentral.com. 12 July 2013.
  71. ^ McLysaght, Emer. "Belfast shop insists it's displaying Ivory Coast flag, NOT Ireland flag". The Daily Edge.
  72. ^ "This Dublin pub was caught rapid flying the Ivory Coast flag". www.dailyedge.ie. Retrieved 27 December 2022.

External links

  •   Quotations related to Flag of Ireland at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to National flag of Ireland at Wikimedia Commons
  • Ireland at Flags of the World
  • (archived)

flag, ireland, this, article, about, flag, state, called, ireland, flags, associated, with, island, ireland, list, flags, ireland, flags, used, northern, ireland, list, flags, used, northern, ireland, confused, with, flag, ivory, coast, national, flag, ireland. This article is about the flag of the state called Ireland For flags associated with the island of Ireland see List of flags of Ireland For flags used in Northern Ireland see List of flags used in Northern Ireland Not to be confused with the Flag of Ivory Coast The national flag of Ireland Irish bratach na hEireann frequently referred to in Ireland as the tricolour an tridhathach and elsewhere as the Irish tricolour is a vertical tricolour of green at the hoist white and orange 1 2 The proportions of the flag are 1 2 that is to say flown horizontally the flag is half as high as it is wide IrelandBratach na hEireann English flag of Ireland the Tricolour UseNational flag and ensignProportion1 2Adopted1922 1 constitutional status 1937 DesignA vertical tricolour of green white and orange Presented as a gift in 1848 to Thomas Francis Meagher from a small group of French women sympathetic to Irish nationalism 3 it was intended to symbolise the inclusion and hoped for union between Roman Catholics symbolised by the green colour and Protestants symbolised by the orange colour The significance of the colours outlined by Meagher was The white in the centre signifies a lasting truce between Orange and Green and I trust that beneath its folds the hands of Irish Protestants and Irish Catholics may be clasped in generous and heroic brotherhood 1 It was not until the Easter Rising of 1916 when it was raised above Dublin s General Post Office by Gearoid O Sullivan 4 that the tricolour came to be regarded as the national flag 1 The flag was adopted by the Irish Republic during the Irish War of Independence 1919 1921 The flag s use was continued by the Irish Free State 1922 1937 and it was later given constitutional status under the 1937 Constitution of Ireland The tricolour is used by nationalists on both sides of the border as the national flag of the whole island of Ireland since 1916 5 Thus it is flown by many nationalists in Northern Ireland as well as by the Gaelic Athletic Association 6 Contents 1 Design and symbolism 1 1 Symbolism 2 History 2 1 Marine 2 2 Use in Northern Ireland 3 Protocol 4 Similar flags 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDesign and symbolism EditIn relation to the national flag of Ireland the Constitution of Ireland simply states in Article 7 The national flag is the tricolour of green white and orange 7 As there are no further statutory requirements in relation to the flag the Department of the Taoiseach takes general responsibility for matters relating to the flag In its advisory role the department has issued guidelines to assist persons in their use of the national flag 8 The flag should be rectangular in shape and its length should be two times its width translating into an aspect ratio of 1 2 The three coloured pales green white and orange should be of equal size and vertically disposed The precise colours of the flag as set by the Department of the Taoiseach since at least 2001 are 8 9 Scheme Green White Orange SourcesPantone 347 U Safe 151 U 8 10 Hex triplet 169B62 FFFFFF FF883E 11 12 RGB 22 155 98 255 255 255 255 136 62 11 12 CMYK 71 0 72 0 0 0 0 0 0 43 91 0 11 12 The flag should normally be displayed on a flagstaff with the green pale positioned next to the flagstaff at the hoist Provided that the correct proportions are observed the flag may be made to any convenient size 8 Symbolism Edit The green pale of the flag symbolises Roman Catholics the orange represents the minority Protestants who were supporters of William of Orange His title came from the Principality of Orange but his power from his leadership as Stadtholder of the Netherlands a Protestant bastion from the 16th century The white in the centre signifies a lasting peace and hope for union between Protestants and Catholics in Ireland 8 The flag as a whole is intended to symbolise the inclusion and hoped for union of the people of different traditions on the island of Ireland which is expressed in the Constitution as the entitlement of every person born in Ireland to be part of the independent Irish nation regardless of ethnic origin religion or political conviction 8 13 Green was also used as the colour of such Irish bodies as the mainly Protestant and nonsectarian Friendly Brothers of St Patrick established in 1751 Occasionally differing shades of yellow instead of orange are seen at civilian functions However the Department of the Taoiseach stated that is a misrepresentation that should be actively discouraged 8 and that worn out flags should be replaced 14 In songs and poems the colours are sometimes enumerated as green white and gold by using poetic licence 15 16 Variants of different guises are utilised to include for example various emblems of Ireland such as the presidential harp the four provinces or county arms 17 18 History EditA green flag featuring a harp is described as being used by Eoghan Ruadh o Neill in 1642 19 The green harp flag first used by Eoghan Ruadh o Neill in 1642 The colour green became associated with Ireland from the 1640s when the green harp flag was used by the Irish Catholic Confederation Likewise Green ribbons have been worn on St Patrick s Day since at least the 1680s 20 suggesting that green was already a national colour at this time The Friendly Brothers of St Patrick an Irish nationalistic fraternity founded in about 1750 21 adopted green as its colour Green was for centuries associated with rebellion and was the unofficial colour of Ireland In the late 18th century green had again become associated as the colour of nationalism 22 23 24 The United Irishmen founded in the 1790s were inspired by the French revolution and used a green flag to which they had a harp emblazoned 19 A rival organisation the Orange Order whose main strength was in Ulster and which was exclusively for Protestants especially members of the Anglican Church of Ireland was founded in 1795 in memory of King William of Orange and the Glorious Revolution of 1688 Following the Irish Rebellion of 1798 which pitted the green tradition of the republican United Irishmen against the orange tradition of Anglican Protestant Ascendancy loyal to the British Crown the ideal of a later nationalist generation in the mid 19th century was to make peace between the two traditions and if possible to found a self governing Ireland on such peace and union citation needed Blessing of the Colours by John Lavery The oldest known reference to the use of the three colours of green white and orange as a nationalist emblem dates from September 1830 when tricolour cockades were worn at a meeting held to celebrate the French Revolution of that year a revolution which restored the use of the French tricolour 25 The colours were also used in the same period for rosettes and badges and on the banners of trade guilds 25 However widespread recognition was not accorded to the flag until 1848 At a meeting in his native city of Waterford on 7 March 1848 Thomas Francis Meagher the Young Ireland leader first publicly unveiled the flag from a second floor window of the Wolfe Tone Club as he addressed a gathered crowd on the street below who were present to celebrate another revolution that had just taken place in France 25 26 It was inspired by the tricolour of France Speeches made at that time by Meagher suggest that it was regarded as an innovation and not as the revival of an older flag 25 From March of that year Irish tricolours appeared side by side with French ones at meetings held all over the country 8 John Mitchel referring to the tricolour of green white and orange that Meagher had presented from Paris at a later meeting in Dublin on 15 April 1848 said I hope to see that flag one day waving as our national banner 8 Although the tricolour was not forgotten as a symbol of the ideal of union and a banner associated with the Young Irelanders and revolution it was rarely used between 1848 and 1916 Even up to the eve of the Easter Rising of 1916 the green flag featuring a harp held undisputed sway 8 Neither the colours nor the arrangement of the early tricolours were standardised All of the 1848 tricolours showed green white and orange but orange was sometimes put next to the staff and in at least one flag the order was orange green and white 8 In 1850 a flag of green for the Roman Catholics orange for the Protestants of the Established Church and blue for the Presbyterians was proposed 8 In 1883 a Parnellite tricolour of yellow white and green arranged horizontally was recorded Down to modern times yellow has occasionally been used instead of orange but by this substitution the fundamental symbolism is destroyed 8 The Irish flag is always flown with the green at the hoist Associated with separatism in the past flown during the Easter Rising of 1916 and capturing the national imagination as the banner of the new revolutionary Ireland 27 the tricolour came to be acclaimed throughout the country as somewhat of a national flag To many Irish people though it was considered to be a Sinn Fein flag 28 In the Irish Free State which existed between 1922 and 1937 the flag was adopted by the Executive Council The Free State constitution did not specify national symbols the decision to use the flag was made without recourse to statute When the Free State joined the League of Nations in September 1923 the new flag created a good deal of interest amongst the general public in Geneva 29 The defeated republicans who had fought the Free State s forces in the 1922 23 Civil War regarded the tricolour as the flag of the self proclaimed Irish Republic and condemned its appropriation by the new state as expressed in the song Take It Down From The Mast The Executive Council s decision was a provisional one 25 A 1928 British document said The government in Ireland have taken over the so called Free State Flag in order to forestall its use by republican element and avoid legislative regulation to leave them free to adopt a more suitable emblem later 30 In 1937 the tricolour s position as the national flag was formally confirmed by the new Constitution of Ireland 1 Marine Edit The Red Ensign used by some Irish merchant vessels until 1939 The pre independence Merchant Shipping Act 1894 was not repealed and so the Free State s mercantile marine was technically required to fly the Red Ensign 31 The collier Glenageary may have been the first to arrive in a British port flying the tricolour on 8 December 1921 two days after the treaty This flag along with a model of the Glenageary is on display in the National Maritime Museum of Ireland While some ships such as the cross channel ferries flew the red ensign others sailed under the tricolour 32 33 34 Some masters of Irish ships were charged by the British Customs and fined by courts for flying an improper ensign 35 The tricolour was flown by the fisheries patrol vessel Muirchu precursor to the Irish Naval Service Frank Carney alleged in the Dail in 1930 that a trespassing French trawler had refused to surrender to because it did not recognise Muirchu s flag 33 See also Irish Mercantile Marine during World War II Irish register ships could fly the Red Ensign until September 1939 after the outbreak of World War II when a decree under the state of emergency was made to ensure neutral Irish ships were not mistaken for British ships 31 Some ships flying the tricolour were nevertheless sunk by Germans 36 When the tricolour was hoisted over the passenger ferries in Holyhead their British crews went on strike Five days later their owners transferred the ferries to the British register and the Red Ensign was restored 37 On the other hand the Belfast to Liverpool ferry British owned and British crewed used the tricolour as a flag of convenience 38 so did the whalers of Christian Salvesen Shipping to take advantage of the Irish whale quota 39 The tricolour s marine status was formalised by the Merchant Shipping Act 1947 31 40 Use in Northern Ireland Edit See also Northern Ireland flags issue A large tricolour flying from Cuchulainn House in the New Lodge Belfast In 1921 Ireland was partitioned with the unionist dominated north east becoming Northern Ireland while later in 1922 the remainder of Ireland left the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland to form the Irish Free State 41 Northern Ireland continued to use the UK s Union Flag and created its Ulster Banner derivation of the flag of Ulster with a crown on top of a six pointed star 42 Furthermore for many years the tricolour was effectively banned in Northern Ireland under the Flags and Emblems Display Act Northern Ireland 1954 which empowered the police to remove any flag that could cause a breach of the peace but specified rather controversially that a Union Flag could never have such an effect 43 In 1964 the enforcement of this law by the Royal Ulster Constabulary at the behest of Ian Paisley involving the removal of a single tricolour from the offices of Sinn Fein in Belfast led to two days of rioting The tricolour was immediately replaced highlighting the difficulty of enforcing the law 44 Tricolours have been burned on Loyalist bonfires during twelfth of July celebrations 45 Despite its original symbolism in Northern Ireland the tricolour along with most other markers of either British or Irish identity has come to be a symbol of division 42 The Ulster Unionist Party Government of Northern Ireland adopted the Ulster Banner based on the flag of Ulster in 1953 46 Thus it is this flag and the Union Flag that are flown by unionists and loyalists while the tricolour is flown by nationalists and republicans 42 In Northern Ireland each community uses its own flags murals and other symbols to declare its allegiance and mark its territory often in a manner that is deliberately provocative 47 Kerb stones in unionist and loyalist areas are often painted red white and blue 48 while in nationalist and republican areas kerb stones may be painted green white and orange although this is a much less frequent occurrence 49 Elements of both communities fly their flag from chimneys tall buildings and lamp posts on roads 50 Under the 1998 Good Friday or Belfast Agreement it was recognised that flags continue to be a source of disagreement in Northern Ireland The Agreement stated that All participants acknowledge the sensitivity of the use of symbols and emblems for public purposes and the need in particular in creating the new institutions to ensure that such symbols and emblems are used in a manner which promotes mutual respect rather than division 51 Unionists argue that the recognition of the principle of consent in the Agreement that Northern Ireland s constitutional status cannot change without a majority favouring it by the signatories amounts to recognising that the Union Flag is the only legitimate official flag in Northern Ireland 52 53 54 Nationalists maintain that the Agreement means that the use of the Union Flag for official purposes should be restricted or that the tricolour should be flown alongside the UK s flag on government buildings 55 However the tricolour is never flown from official buildings alone or alongside the UK s flag A Sinn Fein Lord Mayor of Belfast Alex Maskey displayed both flags in his own offices causing some controversy 56 57 Protocol EditThe Department of the Taoiseach has issued guidelines to assist persons in giving due respect to the national flag Observance of the guidelines is a matter for each individual as there are no statutory requirements It is expected however that the national flag will be treated at all times with appropriate respect by those who use it The department has general responsibility in relation to the national flag and this is primarily concerned with the protocol for the flying of the flag The Department s role therefore is an advisory one 58 With respect to the display placing and precedence of the national flag by both itself and in relation to other flags the department has made a number of suggestions No flag or pennant should be flown above the national flag When the flag is carried with another flag or flags it should be carried in the place of honour that is on the marching right or on the left of an observer towards whom the flags are approaching Where one of these flags is that of the European Union the European Union flag should be carried on the immediate left of the national flag or as seen by an observer when the flags are approaching on the immediate right of the national flag In the event of a display of crossed staffs the national flag should be to the right and to the fore that is to the left of the observer who is facing the flag Its staff should be in front of the other flag or flags 59 Flag flown in the place of honour to the left accompanied to the right by the flags of the European Union and Canada When the group of flags of the European Union are flown the sequence is alphabetical based on the first letter of the country s name The flags should be flown from left to right with the European Union flag flown from the first flagstaff before the group An alternative order of flags is to begin on the left with the national flag and place the European Union flag on the far right of the group as seen by an observer 59 With regard to international flags where either an even or an odd number of flags are flown in line on staffs of equal height the national flag should be first on the right of the line that is on the observer s left as he or she faces the flags Where one of these flags is that of the European Union the European Union flag should be flown on the immediate left of the national flag or as seen by an observer on the immediate right of the national flag Where however an odd number of flags are displayed from staffs grouped so that there is one staff in the centre and higher than the others the national flag should be displayed from the staff so placed Where one of these flags is that of the European Union the European Union flag should be flown from the first flagstaff on the right or as seen by an observer on the first flagstaff on the left Only one national flag should be displayed in each group of flags or at each location In all cases the national flag should be in the place of honour When the national flag is displayed either horizontally or vertically against a wall or other background the green should be on the right an observer s left in the horizontal position or uppermost in the vertical position When displayed on a platform the national flag should be above and behind the speaker s desk While being carried the flag should not be dipped by way of salute or compliment except to the dead during memorial ceremonies 59 Michael Collins lying in state by John Lavery showing the green of the flag towards the head In raising or lowering the national flag should not be allowed to touch the ground When being hoisted to half mast the flag should first be brought to the peak of the staff and then lowered to the half mast position 60 It should again be brought to the peak of the staff before it is finally lowered 61 On ceremonial occasions when the national flag is being hoisted or lowered or when it is passing by in a parade all present should face it stand to attention and salute Persons in uniform who normally salute with the hand should give the hand salute Persons in civilian attire should salute by standing to attention The salute to the flag when it is being borne past in a parade is rendered when the flag is six paces away and the salute is held until the flag has passed by Where more than one national flag is carried the salute should be given only to the leading flag 62 When the national anthem is played in the presence of the national flag all present should face the national flag stand to attention and salute it remaining at the salute until the last note of the music 62 When the national flag has become worn or frayed it is no longer fit for display and should not be used in any manner implying disrespect 63 The national flag when used as a decoration should always be treated with due respect It may be used as a discreet lapel button or rosette or as part of a centrepiece for a table When used in the latter context with the flags of other nations the national flag should also be displayed in the place of honour on a nearby flag staff Where multiple national flags are flown on festive occasions these should be of uniform dimensions Bunting of the national colours may also be used on festive occasions 64 The Irish flag flying from the General Post Office in Dublin The national flag should be displayed in the open only between sunrise and sunset except on the occasion of public meetings processions or funerals when it may be displayed for the duration of such functions 64 65 When displayed on a platform the national flag should not be used to cover the speaker s desk nor should it be draped over the platform The national flag should never be defaced by placing slogans logos lettering or pictures of any kind on it for example at sporting events The flag should not be draped on cars trains boats or other modes of transport it should not be carried flat but should always be carried aloft and free except when used to drape a coffin on such an occasion the green should be at the head of the coffin The tricolour is draped across the coffins of Presidents of Ireland including former presidents soldiers and Garda Siochana personnel killed in the line of duty and other notables accorded state funerals such as Roger Casement in 1965 or Kevin Barry in 2001 Care should be taken at all times to ensure that the national flag does not touch the ground trail in water or become entangled in trees or other obstacles 66 It is the normal practice to fly the national flag daily at all military posts and from a limited number of important State buildings The European flag is flown alongside the national flag on all official buildings and in most places where the Irish flag is flown over buildings The national flag is flown over buildings including the residence of the President of Ireland Aras an Uachtarain Leinster House the seat of the Irish parliament when parliament is in session Irish courts and state buildings Irish military installations at home and abroad Irish embassies and consulates and Garda Siochana police stations The national flag is also flown on Saint Patrick s Day the national holiday Easter Sunday and Easter Monday in commemoration of the Easter Rising of 1916 and the National Day of Commemoration on the Sunday closest to 11 July On these occasions the national flag is flown from all State buildings throughout the country which are equipped with flagpoles and many private individuals and concerns also fly it The national flag is flown on the occasion of other significant national and local events such as festivals and commemorations The national flag is frequently flown at half mast on the death of a national or international figure on all prominent government buildings equipped with a flag pole The death of a prominent local figure may be marked locally by the national flag being flown at half mast Where the national flag is flown at half mast no other flag should be half masted 67 Similar flags Edit Contrasting flags the Irish flag on the left and Ivory Coast flag on the right The Flag of Ivory Coast has a similar colour layout to the Irish one but with the orange on the hoist side and a shorter proportion 2 3 instead of 1 2 When Murielle Ahoure celebrated winning the 2018 world indoor 60 metre dash she borrowed an Irish flag from a spectator and reversed it 68 Due to this similarity in Northern Ireland Ulster loyalists have sometimes desecrated the Ivorian flag mistaking it for the Irish one 69 70 In 2014 Linfield F C s shop on the predominantly loyalist Shankill Road attracted media coverage after a window display marking the World Cup included a sign clarifying that one of the flags on display was an Ivory Coast flag not an Irish one 71 A Dublin pub also mistakenly flew the Ivorian flag in 2016 72 See also Edit Ireland portalCoat of arms of Ireland Cross border flag for Ireland List of flags of Ireland Flag of Northern IrelandReferences Edit a b c d e The National Flag gov ie Department of the Taoiseach 1 November 2018 Retrieved 13 February 2020 Constitution of Ireland Article 7 Irish Statute Book Government of Ireland 1937 Retrieved 19 August 2018 The national flag is the tricolour of green white and orange Sean Duffy The Concise History of Ireland 2005 West Cork man raised Tricolour on historic day Irish Examiner 4 April 2016 Archived from the original on 19 August 2019 Retrieved 10 February 2018 Symbols in Northern Ireland Flags Used in the Region CAIN Web Service Retrieved 8 November 2011 Sugden John amp Harvie Scott 1995 Sport and Community Relations in Northern Ireland Archived 2 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Centre for the Study of Conflict School of History Philosophy and Politics Faculty of Humanities University of Ulster Retrieved 14 June 2007 Article 7 of the Constitution of Ireland 1 July 1937 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Department of the Taoiseach The National Flag Guidelines PDF assets gov ie 2019 Archived from the original PDF on 13 February 2020 Retrieved 13 February 2020 An Bhratach Naisiunta PDF Ireland 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 15 June 2007 Colour of the Flag Ireland flagspot net Retrieved 27 December 2017 a b c PANTONE PANTONE 347 U Find a Pantone Color Quick Online Color Tool www pantone com Retrieved 27 December 2017 a b c PANTONE PANTONE 151 U Find a Pantone Color Quick Online Color Tool www pantone com Retrieved 27 December 2017 Subject to the Twenty seventh Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland 2004 The national Flag Department of the Taoiseach See for example Long Journey Home Archived 2 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine by Elvis Costello and Paddy Moloney See for example the lyrics and commentary on the following Irish rebel songs Green White and Gold Archived 14 April 2005 at the Wayback Machine The Dying Rebel others The Zen Cart Team and County Coat of Arms Irish Flag buy discounted Irish flags with family crest for Irish family reunion 24 00 A Bit O Blarney com Celtic Jewelry Shop serving online since 1999 Abitoblarney com Retrieved 30 September 2017 Photographic image PNG S1 thejournal ie Retrieved 30 September 2017 a b Andries Burgers 21 May 2006 Ireland Green Flag Flags of the World Citing G A Hayes McCoy A History of Irish Flags from earliest times 1979 Cronin amp Adair 2002 Kelly James That Damn d Thing Called Honour Duelling in Ireland 1570 1860 Cork University Press 1995 p 65 How Green Became Associated With St Patrick s Day and All Things Irish Time 16 March 2017 Retrieved 25 October 2018 The color green cropped up again during an effort in the 1790s to bring nonsectarian republican ideas to Ireland inspired by the American revolution and the French revolution Brian o Cuiv 1977 The Wearing of the Green Studia Hibernica 17 18 107 119 JSTOR 20496123 As early as 1803 many of those who attended the execution of Robert Emmet are described as wearing green favours to display their sympath with the young patriot and it would seem that the Uniter Irishmen first promoted the colour So you know Ireland s national colour might not be green right TheJournal 17 March 2013 Retrieved 25 October 2018 The most prominent use of green emerged during the wave of Irish nationalism and republican feeling in the 19th century when the colour was adopted as a more striking way of separating Ireland from the various reds or blues that were now associated with England Scotland and Wales a b c d e Ireland Flags of the World 2001 Retrieved 11 June 2007 Tricolour Flag of Ireland Your Irish Culture 2007 Retrieved 11 June 2007 Archived 2008 Contrary to popular belief the tricolour was not the actual flag of the Easter Rising although it had been flown from the General Post Office that flag was a green flag featuring in gold a harp and the words Irish Republic Hayes McCoy Gerard Anthony 1979 A History of Irish flags from Earliest Times Academy Press Dublin ISBN 978 0 906187 01 2 NAI DFA 26 102 Extracts from the report of the Irish delegation to the Fourth Assembly of the League of Nations September 1923 Documents on Irish Foreign Policy Vol 2 Royal Irish Academy September 2000 No 134 ISBN 1 874045 83 6 Retrieved 21 March 2011 Public Record Office document DO 117 100 written in 1928 a b c Merchant Shipping Bill 1947 Second Stage Archived 5 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine 20 November 1947 Dail debates Vol 108 No 15 p 23 Forde Frank 2000 The Long Watch Island Books p 108 ISBN 1 902602 42 0 a b Dail debates Vol 33 No 17 p 7 cc 2290 95 Archived 23 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 20 March 1930 Dail debates Vol 53 No 7 p 4 Archived 23 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine 21 June 1934 Sweeney Pat 2010 Liffey Ships Mercier Press p 202 ISBN 978 1 85635 685 5 Dail debates Vol 81 No 14 p 23 20 February 1941 Forde Frank 2000 The Long Watch Island Books p 2 ISBN 1 902602 42 0 McRonald Malcolm 2007 The Irish Boats Vol 3 Liverpool to Belfast Tempus p 70 ISBN 978 0 7524 4235 8 Share Bernard 1978 The Emergency Dublin Gill and Macmillan p 99 ISBN 0 71710 916 X Sections 2 and 14 Merchant Shipping Act 1947 Irish Statute Book FitzGerald Garret Ireland Partition of Encarta 2007 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Archived 9 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine 31 October 2009 a b c Flags Used in Northern Ireland Conflict Archive on the Internet 1 April 2007 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Flags and Emblems Display Act Northern Ireland 1954 Conflict Archive on the Internet 1 April 2007 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Boyd Andrew 1969 Holy War in Belfast 1964 The Tricolour Riots Anvil Press ISBN 0 900068 10 8 Eleventh Night Tricolours SF posters Celtic and Palestine flags burned irishtimes com Irish Times 12 July 2019 Retrieved 7 March 2021 Northern Ireland United Kingdom Flags of the World 2007 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Ewart Shirley amp Schubotz Dirk 2004 Voices behind the Statistics Young People s Views of Sectarianism in Northern Ireland National Children s Bureau p 7 Loyalist paramilitary flags explosion BBC News 21 June 2000 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Brown Kris amp MacGinty Roger 2003 Public Attitudes toward Partisan and Neutral Symbols in Post Agreement Northern Ireland Identities Global Studies in Power and Culture Vol 10 No 1 pp 83 108 Bryan Dr Dominic amp Stevenson Dr Clifford 2006 Flags Monitoring Project 2006 Preliminary Findings Institute of Irish Studies Queen s University Belfast Retrieved 14 June 2007 The Belfast Agreement 1998 Conflict Archive on the Internet Retrieved 14 June 2007 Wilson Robin July 2000 Flagging concern The Controversy over Flags and Emblems Democratic Dialogue Retrieved 14 June 2007 Northern Ireland Assembly Official Report of Tuesday 6 June 2000 Archived 6 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine Northern Ireland Assembly 6 June 2000 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Report on Draft Regulations proposed under Article 3 of the Flags Northern Ireland Order 2000 Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Northern Ireland Assembly 17 October 2000 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Alex Maskey Motion 39 flags and emblems Archived 19 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine SinnFein ie 17 February 2006 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Tricolour raised in City Hall BBC News 4 September 2002 Retrieved 14 June 2007 Should Belfast have its own flag BBC News Talking Point 5 September 2002 Retrieved 14 June 2007 The National Flag Guidelines for use of the National Flag Department of the Taoiseach a b c The National Flag Display placing and precedence Department of the Taoiseach A flag is at half mast in any position below the top of the staff but never below the middle point of the staff As a general guide the half mast position may be taken as that where the top of the flag is the depth of the flag below the top of the staff The National Flag Hoisting and lowering the Flag Department of the Taoiseach a b The National Flag Saluting the Flag Department of the Taoiseach The National Flag Worn out Flag Department of the Taoiseach a b The National Flag Respect for the National Flag Department of the Taoiseach For military purposes sunrise occurs at 8 00 a m between March and October and at 8 30 a m between November and February Sunset is deemed to occur at 3 30 p m in January and December 4 30 p m in February and November 5 30 p m in March and October 6 00 p m in April 7 00 p m in May and September and 8 00 p m between June and August The National Flag Practices to avoid Department of the Taoiseach The National Flag Occasions on which the National Flag is flown Department of the Taoiseach Quick thinking Irish fans come to the rescue of victorious Ivory Coast star at World Indoor Athletics Championships Irish Independent 5 March 2018 Retrieved 6 March 2018 What have the Ivory Coast ever done to deserve this JOE ie Loyalists ask us to respect their flag as they burn everyone else s IrishCentral com 12 July 2013 McLysaght Emer Belfast shop insists it s displaying Ivory Coast flag NOT Ireland flag The Daily Edge This Dublin pub was caught rapid flying the Ivory Coast flag www dailyedge ie Retrieved 27 December 2022 External links Edit Quotations related to Flag of Ireland at Wikiquote Media related to National flag of Ireland at Wikimedia Commons Ireland at Flags of the World The National Flag Irish government paper containing history and usage guidelines archived Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flag of Ireland amp oldid 1147047308, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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