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image located by Valentin Poposki, 20 May 2008See also:
Source:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/leicester The cinquefoil was the seal of Robert de Beaumont (sometimes
spelt Bellomont) who was the grandson of the first Earl of Leicester.
It is suggested that the cinquefoil represents a five-petalled flower
called the pimpernel, in a punning reference to his mother who was a
Fitz-pernell. He died in 1206 and the earldom passed to his sister's husband
Simon de Montfort whose forked-tailed lion was described by the
heralds in Anglo-French as, 'de gules ove un leon blank la cowe
furchee'. The zig-zag divisions of the quarters also derive from
Simon de Montfort who held the Honour of Hinkley in Leicestershire,
the arms of which consisted of a shield parted palewise indented
silver and red. Simon de Montfort was killed at the battle of Evesham in 1265
after leading an initially successful revolt of the barons against
King Henry III, who now conferred the earldom on his son Edmund who
was also Earl of Lancaster. His grandson ultimately passed the title
to John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, represented by the ermine ostrich
feather. When John of Gaunt's son ascended the throne as Henry IV, the
earldom was merged with the Crown. The forked-tailed lion also represents Lord Robert Dudley who was
created Earl of Leicester by Queen Elizabeth in 1564; though his lion
was green on gold.. They appear to have run out of earls for the fourth quarter, and
the sleeve comes from the arms of the Hastings family, Barons of
Loughborough.
The "Leicester Mercury", 22 June 2009, has an article dedicated to the flag,
explaining why the flag is not very commonly used in Leicestershire:
Pascal Vagnat, 5 November 1997
David Prothero, 11 November 1997
"[...]
Conservative MP for Bosworth David Tredinnick said: "There is no long tradition
of flag flying in Leicestershire and I think that is because it's not really a
very old symbol – certainly nowhere near as old as some other counties which
have ancient symbols going back to the War of the Roses."
A spokesman for the
county council said: "We fly the flag from the central pole of the County Hall
every day. When we fly the Union flag we move the county flag to one of the
outside poles as no flag can be flown in a more superior position than the Union
flag."
The county flag is not flown from Leicester Town Hall. A city council
spokesman said: "We fly the Union flag daily. There is also a civic flag with
the Leicester civic crest upon it and which is flown for civic events."
[...]"
http://www.thisisleicestershire.co.uk/news/couldn-t-fly-Leicestershire-flag/article-1095483-detail/article.html
Ivan Sache, 22 June 2009
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