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Wales: Church in Wales
Cymru
Last modified: 2009-05-24 by rob raeside
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Željko Heimer, 4 September 2001
See also:
Church in Wales
A different flag is used by the Church in Wales: a white flag with a black cross, and a gold Celtic cross emblem inside the cross. It is described as being in accordance with the Grant of Arms of 9 December 1954; a white field charged with a royal blue St George's cross, and in the centre
thereof a Celtic Cross in gold. It was to replace the flag which had been in
use since 1936; a black cross on a golden field said to have been taken from the
arms of the manors of Llawhaden and Pebidiog (anciently known as Dewisland), of
which the early Bishops of St David's were barons.
David Prothero, 3 September 2001
Blas Delgado Ortiz, 30 December 2001
Based on a recent photo this flag appears to be
2:1, in contrast to the one shown above by Željko Heimer. Also, all the spaces inside the emblem appears golden, instead of some blue in the background,
and it is smaller than previously depicted. The crosses' arms inside each four squares seem to be
trefoils.
Blas Delgado Ortiz, 30 December 2001
The provincial [church] flag is a white flag with a blue cross centred by a
Celtic cross (black and white picture attached). The heraldic description is
Argent, on a Cross Azure a Celtic Cross Or.
Furthermore as you probably know,
each diocese bears arms (6).
- The diocese of St. Asaph - Sable, two keys endorsed in saltire wards in
chief, argent (available
here)
- The diocese of Bangor - Gules, a bend or, guttee de poix between two
mullets, pierced argent (available
here)
- The diocese of St. David's - Sable, on a cross or, five cinquefoils of the
field (available
here)
- The diocese of Llandaff - Sable, two pastoral staves endorsed in saltire,
the dexter or, the sinister argent. On a chief azure three mitres with their
infulae or (available
here)
- The diocese of Monmouth - Per pale azure and sable two croziers in saltire
or, between in chief a besant charged with a lion passant guardant gules, in
fesse two fleurs-de-lis and in base a fleur-de-lis of the third (available
here)
- The diocese of Swansea/Brecon - Per fess azure and or in chief surmounting
a Catherine wheel issuant an eagle rising reguardant of the second and in base
a fleur-de-lis of the first (available
here)
However, you will find that there are no flags depicting these diocesan arms on their own. On most occasions the provincial flag will be used. On occasions St. David's may fly the flag of St David (black with a gold cross). There are no stringent rules for churches as such, on national feast days they may fly the Union Jack (hopefully not upside down) and on St David's Day (1st March) some will fly the Red Dragon. Mostly though they fly the provincial flag on feast days of saints, especially the patron saint.
Hendrik Haye, 14 December 2004
A more elaborate version of
this flag is shown at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Church_in_Wales_flag.svg.
Ron Lahav,
8 January 2009
Dewi Sant (Saint David's Cross)
by António Martins-Tuvalkin, 18 August 2001
The gold cross on black of St David has, as far as I know, never had
an official status in Wales. The nearest to it was that it was used by
Anglican churches in Wales before disestablishment in 1921. I have never
seen it flying - the nearest was a banner of the arms of the diocese of
St David's which flew from my college on St David's day. The only written
reference for the gold-and-black flag I have seen is in Carr (1961).
Roy Stilling, 21 November 1995
According to Carr (1961), Flags of the World,
a black cross on gold was used by Welsh Anglican churches until 1954. '[It]
is said to have been taken from the arms of the manors of Llawhaden and
Pebidiog (anciently known as Dewisland [NB: Dewi Sant is the Welsh
for St David]), of which the early bishops of St David's were barons' (p66).
This, of course, is the reverse of the gold cross on black flag
previously mentioned.
However, the arms of the bishopric of St David's are a gold cross on
black, like the flag mentioned, but with four outline black cinquefoils
in the arms of the cross. I spent three years in Wales at university and
I too never saw a cruciform flag being flown instead of the Red
Dragon. However, on St David's Day (1st March), my college - St David's
University College, Lampeter (Coleg Prifysgol Dewi Sant, Llanbedr Pont
Steffan for any Welsh-speakers) - flew a banner of the arms of St David's.
Roy Stilling, 3 September 1996
For more details about this flag, see our page on the
St. David's flag.