
Last modified: 2009-05-24 by rob raeside
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There are two types of county flags which must be distinguished: firstly the flags which are commonly used by private individuals as a symbol of the county; secondly, flags which are used by the county councils (elected bodies which are responsible for local services such as water supply, public lighting, garbage collection, repair of minor roads, libraries, swimming pools, parks, etc.), not as a symbol of the county, but of the council itself.
The flags in popular use are based on the colours of the county 
teams in Gaelic football and hurling - the most popular spectator 
sports.  As these flags are entirely unofficial, the designs vary: one 
sees the colours arranged as horizontal stripes, quarters, lozenges, 
etc., but vertical stripes are the most common.  These flags have outgrown 
their sporting origins and are now widely used on festive occasions, flown 
alongside the European Union, national and provincial 
flags at shopping centres, hotels, etc.  However, in the six counties 
that constitute Northern Ireland, use of the 
county colours is confined to nationalist areas - the counties in Northern 
Ireland have been abolished for administrative purposes and the sports from 
which the county colours derive are not generally supported by unionists.
Vincent Morley, 4 December 1996
When I visited souvenir shop in Dublin in May 2005 I saw flags of all the counties showing mostly bicolors with a county shield and the county name written in Gaelic written above and in English below. Here is an example:
![[Presidential standard]](../images/i/ie-cty1.jpg) image by Nozomi Kariyasu, 17 January 2009
 
image by Nozomi Kariyasu, 17 January 2009
The flag proportion is 1: 2, the same as the national flag.
Nozomi Kariyasu, 17 January 2009
My experience in Co. Kerry in the southwest of Ireland is that only undefaced 
county colors have been used. Now it's been a few years since I was back but 
that was the case. The last time I was back in Ireland, I witnessed a couple of 
things:
1. Outside of a Quinnsworth in Tralee, two flagpoles were flying the 
Irish tricolor and Kerry County colors, green and gold (one flag on each pole)
2. A car-repair garage in Tralee displayed the Irish national flag along with 
six county colors representing the six counties in the province of Munster: 
Clare, Tipperary, Limerick, Kerry, Cork and Waterford. (Munster itself was not 
represented.)
Brian Ellis, 18 January 2009
I haven't seen the specific designs [at
http://www.tmealf.com/irish_counties.htm]. Some of the shields are clearly 
wrong. For example, in the case of Dublin (second row, third from left) the 
raven formerly appeared on the arms of Dublin County Council which was abolished 
some years ago, but the shield which is sometimes to be found on the Dublin 
county colours is always that of Dublin city - three burning castles on a blue 
field. Similarly, while the shield that is normally used for Armagh does include 
a gold harp on a blue field it is never reduced to just those elements (which in 
fact are the arms of Ireland). However, it is true that shields are sometimes 
displayed on county colours. The shields on the page at
http://irishcounties.com/index.htm 
do, I think, accurately show the ones that are in common use. Another page on 
the same site shows defaced county colours of a pattern that that I have seen:
http://irishcounties.com/irish_county_flags.htm. In my opinion, these are in 
deplorable taste: not only are the shields crudely drawn but the lettering is 
inexcusable. None the less, they really do exist. Fortunately, plain unadorned 
county flags without shields or inscriptions are still the ones most commonly 
seen.
Vincent Morley, 18 January 2009
In Ireland a type of flag showing the national tricolour with the county arms
in the central white stripe can be found being sold.  This flag is bogus -
no county uses this design for its county flag. A similar phenomenon exists with
Mexican state flags.
António Martins, 3 June 2002