Why is the British flag called the Union Jack? The American flag is the Stars and Stripes, the Australian flag the Southern Cross, and the everlasting Confederate flag the Stars and Bars. All these nicknames derive from the flags’ appearances. But what does “Union Jack” derive from?
‘Union’ refers to the United Kingdom. A ‘jack’ I believe is the shield that hangs on an Admiral’s ship. Technically the British flag is not a jack, but who cares?
Incidentally, anyone know the origin of the Jolly Roger name?
From the “Flags of the World” FAQ at http://www.fotw.stm.it/flags/faq.html:
From http://www.fotw.stm.it/flags/gb.html#use:
FOTW actually references Cecil on the subject of the Jolly Roger:
The link below does a good job of showing how the three flags of St. Andrew (Scotland), St. George (England), and St. Patrick (Ireland), were combined to form the Union Jack of the United Kingdom.
This site is in Japanese, but the pictures explain it
… and this site explains “the real reason Westminster fears Scottish independence”.
The Australian flag is never referred to as the southern cross. The southern cross is a constellation, a representation thereof is on the flag, but the flag has only ever been refered to as the Australin flag (complete with Union Jack canton). The Eureka flag (the Oz equivalent of the confederate flag in many ways) consists of only the southern cross)
Thank you all for the info!
Gaspode, my apologies. I honestly thought your flag was called the Southern Cross. My bad.