No, not exactly. The Scottish flag is a blue background with a white diagonal cross. It is part of the Union flag for Britain. The other two parts are made up from the Northern Ireland flag and the English flag. The Welsh flag for some reason has no place.
The Union Flag or Union Jack, is Scotlands flag, and the English flag so...the answer is 2
The UK was formed in 1801 when the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland were joined to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. The flags of Scotland and England were combined to form the flag of Great Britain in 1707, the cross of St Patrick was added in 1801 to form the current flag. Wales is not represented separately and is represented by the St George's Cross as England and Wales were one single legal entity when England and Scotland combined.
The united Kingdom flag was formed with the union of three 'nations'. England, Wales and Scotland. It was the merging of the 'nations' flags which formed the Union Jack and Britain.
Its Red, White, And Blue. But It looks like a Cross, and a X Straight down the middle of the Flag.
I'm not entirely sure what you mean by this question, but here are three possible answers: If you are basically asking "Why is the flag of England a red cross on a white field?", then the answer is because it is the St. George's cross, and St. George is the patron saint of England. If you are asking "Why do they use the flag of England for Britain?" then the answer is they don't. The flag of England is as described above, and the flag of Britain is the Union Flag, a composite of the flags of Scotland, England and Northern Ireland If you are asking "Why does the flag of Britain look the way it does?", and are just mistakenly calling Britain "England", (a thing which, incidentally, really infuriates us Scots), then the answer is as above, it is a composite of three of the constituent nations in the state of the UK.
The Union Flag or Union Jack, is Scotlands flag, and the English flag so...the answer is 2
Scotland is on an island called Great Britain. Great Britain consists of Scotland, England and Wales. Northern Ireland is not in Great Britain but it is part of the UK (the same country as Scotland)
The English and Scottish flags come from when England and Scotland were separate countries and there was no such thing as the United Kingdom/Kingdom of Great Britain before the year 1707.
Tenerife
If you are referring to the current flag of Great Britain, then the answer is no.
The flag that was used as the basis of the design of Alabama's flag was the flag of Scotland. The design was the same with just a few modifications like the color.
No. England, Scotland and Wales have always shared the same island of Britain.
The UK was formed in 1801 when the Kingdom of Great Britain and the Kingdom of Ireland were joined to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. The flags of Scotland and England were combined to form the flag of Great Britain in 1707, the cross of St Patrick was added in 1801 to form the current flag. Wales is not represented separately and is represented by the St George's Cross as England and Wales were one single legal entity when England and Scotland combined.
The united Kingdom flag was formed with the union of three 'nations'. England, Wales and Scotland. It was the merging of the 'nations' flags which formed the Union Jack and Britain.
the same as now: The Union Jack
england scotland wales
The Saltire is the national flag of Scotland it is also known as The Saint Andrew's Cross.