User:Jnestorius/Four provinces flag
See Four Provinces Flag of Ireland and Cross-border flag for Ireland.
Notes
[edit]Phil Shanahan's medals for his four-in-a-row Railway Cup wins (1950–1–2–3) have an identical design except that the four provincial crests are ordered in three different ways (UCLM ULMC LUMC).[1]
The design of Irish Transport and General Workers' Union membership badges from its 1909 foundation were changed periodicallu, rotating between the arms of the four provinces, initially quarterly but later twice or once a year. The red hand of Ulster was the badge during the 1913 lockout and adopted permanently in 1919.[2]
Individual province's arms
[edit]G. D. Burtchaell et al (1902) explain parts in relation to the RSAI crest.[3]
Critiquing S. M. Collins on medieval v [early?] modern[4]
Ulster King of Arms c.1700 [possibly some later additions][5]
- Connacht [p. 16 no. 10] "p pale A. & Az a demi eagle disp p pale @ & a Sinister Arm conjoyned wth it at the sholders holding a Sword Pr sleeved A";
- Ireland Kingdom [p. 32 A] "P [^ Port~:] Jupiter an Irish harpe Sol stringed luna"; note [p. 33 A] "The ancient Armes of this kingdom were S. a King sitting crosse-legged in his throne, holding in his right hand a Lilly O."
- Leinster [p. 42 no. 4] "Vert an Irish harp O. stringed A.";
- Meath "county when governed by a king" [p. 46 no. 17] "Azur a King sitting on his Throne holding forth his Right hand in the sinister a Scepter all Proper"
- Munster [p. 47 no. 3] "Az 3 eastern diadems Pr" with sketch;
- Ulster [p. 70 no. 6] "O a lion ramp double queue G rather Argent a dexter hand couped Gules rather Or a cross Gules on an escutcheon Argent a dexter hand couped Gules" [in 3 different hands, followed by signature "@@ Ulster" in 3rd hand;
2022-4 lamppost outbreak
[edit]https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/letters/flag-sightings-1.4817654
https://www.donegallive.ie/news/donegal-life/860498/do-you-know-what-this-flag-represents.html
Table
[edit]In the following table, columns 1, 2, 3, 4 correspond to the following quarters of the shield:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Division | flush? | Comments | Instances |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Connacht | Leinster | Munster | Ulster | Line | No | alphabetical order |
|
Connacht | Munster | Leinster | Ulster | Quartered | No | Gable of Four Provinces pub, Coventry[11] and logo https://www.belgrade.co.uk/stories/welcoming-our-newest-corporate-supporters-the-four-provinces/ | |
Line | No | Irish Photography Federation (Shields in lower half of circular logo. Ulster colours are white-on-red rather than red-on-yellow.)[12] | |||||
Connacht | Munster | Ulster | Leinster | Quartered | Yes | 1939 Cluna Studio greeting card commemorating 1916 rising commissioned by Kathleen Clarke, the Lord Mayor of Dublin[13] | |
No | Cover of CD "A Song for Every County ; A Journey Through Ireland"[14] | ||||||
Connacht | Ulster | Leinster | Munster | Quartered | Yes |
| |
Saltire | No | Irish Shipping house flag (from 1947)[17] | |||||
Line | NI republican memorial: Clonard Martyrs Memorial Garden -- flags one of three different orderings at this site | ||||||
Connacht | Ulster | Munster | Leinster | Quartered | Yes | map order for quartering (NW — NE — SW — SE) | National Coarse Fishing Federation of Ireland (Logo is a map of Ireland with the provinces delineated by their arms.)[18] |
No |
| ||||||
Leinster | Connacht | Munster | Ulster | Quartered | Yes | ||
No |
An Camán 1933-12-09 p.4 "Ó Chúig Árdaibh na h-Éireann" masthead | ||||||
Leinster | Connacht | Ulster | Munster | Quartered | Yes | John J. Kennedy in 1991 called this "usual" in RoI[32] |
|
No |
| ||||||
Line | 1937 postage stamps commemorating the new constitution[41] | ||||||
Leinster | Munster | Ulster | Connacht | Quartered | Yes | Craobh na hAiséirghe Christmas card for the year 1941, celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Easter Rising (simplified, monochrome).[42] | |
Leinster | Munster | Connacht | Ulster | Quartered | No | Harry Clarke title-page border to Ireland's memorial records 1914-1918[43] | |
Leinster | Ulster | Connacht | Munster | Quartered | No | NI republican memorial: Clonard Martyrs Memorial Garden -- plaque 2 one of three different orderings at this site | |
Saltire |
|
||||||
Leinster | Ulster | Munster | Connacht | Quartered | No |
| |
Saltire | Auer Champion Japanese souvenir lighter[53] | ||||||
Munster | Connacht | Leinster | Ulster | Line | No | ||
Munster | Connacht | Ulster | Leinster | Quartered | Yes | 17th-century map of Galway (with arms of Meath in escutcheon, and De Lacy instead of De Burgo arms for Ulster).[56] | |
No |
| ||||||
Line |
| ||||||
Munster | Leinster | Connacht | Ulster | Line | No |
| |
Munster | Leinster | Ulster | Connacht | Quartered | No | ||
Line | 1980s poster of hurlers [possibly GAA-endorsed?][64] | ||||||
Munster | Ulster | Connacht | Leinster | Quartered | No |
Evie Hone stained glass My Four Green Fields | |
Munster | Ulster | Leinster | Connacht | Quartered | Yes |
| |
Ulster | Connacht | Leinster | Munster | Quartered | No | map order for saltire (N — W — E — S) | NI republican memorial: Republican Plot (Ballymacnab Graveyard) |
Saltire | Yes | National Dental Nurse Training Programme of Ireland logo (crests rotated to orient towards centre)[67] | |||||
No |
| ||||||
Ulster | Connacht | Munster | Leinster | Quartered | Yes | Former crest of SJAI (Show Jumping Association of Ireland — now Showjumping Ireland (SJI) with different logo). Stylised Ulster and slightly altered Connacht arms.[86] | |
No |
| ||||||
Ulster | Leinster | Connacht | Munster | Quartered | Yes |
| |
No |
| ||||||
Saltire | Former FAI logo (four overlapping roundels),[94] as still seen on the FAI Cup trophy.[95] | ||||||
Line | Commemorative postcard and poster for 1932 Eucharistic Congress (In a crescent with St Patrick's Saltire in the middle)[96][97] | ||||||
Ulster | Leinster | Munster | Connacht | Quartered | Yes |
| |
No |
| ||||||
Saltire |
| ||||||
Line | IRA memorial board at Ardilea Close, Belfast (in site 2013-2014 at minimum)[106] | ||||||
Ulster | Munster | Connacht | Leinster | Quartered | Yes | ||
No |
| ||||||
Line | c.1900 Harry Clarke stained-glass panel of The Four Provinces of Ireland[114] | ||||||
Ulster | Munster | Leinster | Connacht | Quartered | Yes | McLysaght in 1949 described "Ulster, Munster, Leinster and Connacht" as "the stock phrase of our school days".[34] |
|
No |
| ||||||
Line |
|
Killester Garden Village book cover has UMLC Saltire
Unattested orderings
[edit]- CLUM
Uncentred circle
[edit]Where the arms appear on four sides of a monument there may be no "front" of the monument. The possible orderings depend on fixing, say, Connacht and proceeding clockwise.
- CLMU
- The National Monument, Grand Parade, Cork (Connacht faces SW, central figure faces N)
- O'Connell monument, Dublin (Ulster is "front" and faces south, Leinster faces east)
- CMUL
- Rotunda, City Hall, Dublin.[137]
- CMLU
- 2013 "The Gathering of Stones" monument, Lough Boora Discovery Park, Offaly[138]
Nonstandard arms
[edit]- 17th-century map of Galway (with arms of Meath in escutcheon, and De Lacy instead of De Burgo arms for Ulster).[56] Linearly at at Mu-C-Me-L-U; Quarterly Mu-C-U-L with Me escutcheon;[56] perhaps the "standard" conversion of linearly to quarterly is clockwise nw-ne-se-sw rather than readingwise nw-ne-sw-se?
Dublin for Leinster, Galway for Connacht
[edit]Francis Joseph Bigger's 1912 article "The Arms and Flags of Ireland" rejects the received Connacht arms as an ugly British imposition unknown in Connacht; he also rejects the Leinster arms because those conflict with the arms of Ireland (he rejects Saint Patrick's Blue as a "fake colour"). Thus he adopts the Galway and Dublin symbols which he interprets as Gaelic. Long version also says Ulster has white not yellow field.[139]
- Rug in the Royal Dublin Society Council Chamber, designed by Lucius O'Callaghan and made in 1928 by the Dun Emer Guild.[140]
- Ulster—Galway city—Dublin city—Munster
- Scott Medal This 1925 example [141]
- 1964 Donegal Carpets commissioned by New Ireland Assurance[142]
- Ulster—Dublin city—Galway city—Munster
- "The Arms of Ireland and Her Four Provinces", embroidery in Orange Hall Lodge, North Toronto (with gold-harp-on-green for Ireland in the centre).[143]
References
[edit]Sources
[edit]- Collins, S. M. (July 1941). "Some English, Scottish, Welsh and Irish Arms in Medieval Continental Rolls". The Antiquaries Journal. 21 (3): 203–210. doi:10.1017/S0003581500010222.
- Committee of the Irish National War Memorial. "Decorative borders". Ireland's memorial records 1914-1918; being the names of Irishmen who fell in the great European war, 1914-1918. Vol. 5: Ker to McGil. Decorative borders by Harry Clarke. Maunsel & Roberts. Retrieved 9 March 2018 – via Trinity College Dublin.
- Hood, Susan (2002). Royal Roots, Republican Inheritance: The Survival of the Office of Arms. Woodfield Press. ISBN 9780953429332.
- Kennedy, John J. Fitzpatrick (1998). "When did the Irish Chiefs Adopt Heraldry?". In Vachon, Auguste; Boudreau, Claire; Cogné, Daniel (eds.). Genealogica & Heraldica: Ottawa 1996. 22nd International Congress of Genealogical and Heraldic Sciences. Actexpress. University of Ottawa Press. pp. 363–372. ISBN 9780776616001. JSTOR j.ctt1cn6rc9.45. OCLC 742332933. Project MUSE 343702.
- p. 366 cites Collins' blason from Conrad Grünenberg - Lagonie O'Neill, Ultonigen [recte Munster] MacCarthy Mór, Ultonigen De Burgh; Conaxien "Gules three fishes naiaent in pale Argent" - fanciful herring fishery?
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- "Soloheadbeg Ambush Memorial". Tipperary Town. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
- "War Memorial Soloheadbeg Memorial in Soloheadbeg, Tipperary". www.irishwarmemorials.ie. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
- ^ Hodgson, Norman (1953). An Tóstal. RTÉ Archives. RTÉ. Event occurs at 1m23s. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
- ^ Finn, Tomás (28 May 2018). "NUI, Galway is hosting a conference on Rural Ireland". Twitter. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
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- "City Hall Drone Survey". Dublin City Architects Blog. 25 March 2019. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
- "City Hall 12 Murals". Dublin City Council. 7 March 2018. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
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- "The Gathering of Stones". Dry Stone Wall Association of Ireland. Retrieved 31 October 2022. "The Gathering of Stones". Lough Boora Discovery Park. Retrieved 31 October 2022.
- ^ Bigger, Francis Joseph (1912). "The Arms and Flags of Ireland". Saothar na hÉireann. London: London Gaelic League.
- slightly abbreviated version in:— Bigger, Francis Joseph (16 April 1914). "The Arms and Flags of Ireland". New Zealand Tablet: 26 – via PapersPast.;
- original reprinted in:— Bigger, Francis Joseph (1927). Articles and Sketches: Biographical, Historical, Topographical. Dublin: Talbot Press. pp. 63–67.
- ^ "The Making of Beautiful Things". Minerva. Royal Dublin Society: 3. Winter 2020. Retrieved 17 December 2020 – via Issuu.
Why the Dublin and Galway county arms supplanted the provincial emblems of Leinster and Connacht is a mystery at present.
- ^ "The design of the Scott Medal". Garda Síochána Historical Society. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
- ^ Parsons, Michael (11 July 2015). "€25,000 Donegal carpet for auction". The Irish Times. Retrieved 14 June 2020.; "A SPECIALLY COMMISSIONED DONEGAL CARPET AT MEALY'S « antiquesandartireland.com". antiquesandartireland. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
- ^ Robinson, Arianne (18 October 2016). "Heritage listing Orange Hall Lodge; ireland-four-provinces". Signal Toronto. fig.9 of 22. Retrieved 22 June 2020.