Flag of Lancashire

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Lancashire
Proportion3:5
Adopted2008
Designed byFriends of Real Lancashire

The Lancashire flag is the flag of the Lancashire County Palatine, that is the historic county boundaries of Lancashire, not the current ceremonial county of Lancashire.[1]

The Red Rose of Lancaster is a symbol for the House of Lancaster, immortalised in the verse "In the battle for England's head/York was white, Lancaster red" (referring to the 15th century War of the Roses). The traditional Lancashire flag, a red rose on a white field, was never registered. When an attempt was made to register it with the Flag Institute, it was found that this flag had already been registered by the town of Montrose, Angus, several hundred years earlier with the Lyon Office. As the Flag Institute will not register two flags of the same design within the UK, Lancashire's official flag was registered — in 2008 — as a red rose on a gold field. The background was chosen as it, along with red, are the livery colours of the county.[2]

Although not registered as the Lancashire flag, many people within the historic county boundaries still use the traditional red rose on a white field flag.[citation needed][who?]

Flag design

The Pantone colors for the flag are: yellow, 116; red, 485; dark red, 201; and green, 354.[3]

References

  1. ^ https://www.gov.uk/government/news/lancashire-flag-flying-high-above-whitehall
  2. ^ Lancashire Evening Post: Lancashire flag is all yellow
  3. ^ "Lancashire". The Flag Institute. Retrieved 24 August 2015.