Starry Plough (flag)
The Starry Plough banner (Irish: An Camchéachta) was originally used by the Irish Citizen Army, a socialist Irish republican movement. James Connolly, co-founder of the Irish Citizen Army with Jack White, said the significance of the banner was that a free Ireland would control its own destiny from the plough to the stars.
The original Starry Plough was unveiled in 1914 and flown over the Imperial Hotel by the Irish Citizen Army during the 1916 Easter Rising. The flag depicts an asterism (an identified part) of the constellation Ursa Major, called The Plough (or "Starry Plough") in Ireland and Britain, the Big Dipper in North America, and various other names worldwide. Two of the Big Dipper's seven stars align (point) on the North Pole Star. Throughout the year the Big Dipper prominently features in the night sky over the Northern Hemisphere. The 1916 flag is on display at the National Museum, Collins Barracks, in Dublin.
While similar to the state flag of Alaska, it predates Alaska's by more than a decade.
1930s to present
The original Starry Plough (designed by George William Russell for the Irish Citizen Army)[1] showed silver stars on a green background.[2] During the 1930s the design changed to that of the blue banner, which was designed by members of the Republican Congress, and was adopted as the emblem of the Irish Labour movement, including the Irish Labour Party. Labour adopted the rose as its official emblem in 1991 but continue to use the Starry Plough for ceremonial occasions. It is also used by Irish republicans and has been carried alongside the Irish tricolour and Irish provincial flags and the sunburst flag, as well as the red flag at Provisional IRA, Continuity IRA, Official IRA and Irish National Liberation Army rallies.
The flag, and alternative versions of it, are also used by éirígí, the Connolly Youth Movement, Labour Youth, Ógra Shinn Féin, Communist Party of Ireland, the Republican Socialist Youth Movement, and socialist Celtic F.C. supporters. In the past it was used by the Sligo/Leitrim Independent Socialist Organisation before it merged with the Irish Labour Party. The flag was draped on the coffin of the Independent TD Tony Gregory during his funeral.
The older banner featuring the plough is still occasionally used today by the Irish Republican Socialist Party, Sinn Féin and the Workers' Party of Ireland, formerly Official Sinn Féin.
See also
- The Plough and the Stars, the pacifist play by Seán O'Casey (1926)
- Flag of Alaska (a similar design)
References
- ↑ "Irish Literary Portraits" ed. W. R. Rodgers p.195
- ↑ "History of Starry Plough Flag". Angelfire.com. 1914-04-05. Retrieved 2010-07-23.