
Last modified: 2016-06-13 by rob raeside
Keywords: union jack | cartoon | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil1.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 20 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 20 May 2013See also:
Many cartoons by James Gillray (1756 or 1757 - 1815) show an unusual 
depiction of Union Jack, with red cross over blue saltire on white field. A good 
example is the cartoon titled "The reception of the diplomatique and his suite, 
at the Court of Pekin" [1, 2], published in 1792 and ridiculing an unsuccessful 
British diplomatic mission to China earlier same year. The same flag also 
appears in the cartoons "Posting to the election, - a scene on the road to 
Brentford, Novr 1806" [3], published by the end of the year mentioned in the 
title, and "British tars, towing the Danish fleet into harbour" [4], published 
in 1807 after the Second Battle of Copenhagen and depicting conflicting public 
opinions on the event.
The reason for the use of this design is not quite 
clear; perhaps Gillray worried that he might have been prosecuted for the flag 
desecration if he had depicted the correct design, for the depicted persons who 
were offended by his cartoons, would have probably gladly used such an 
accusation against him. However, the same design appears in a number of 
patriotic cartoons as well, like the "Buonapartè, 48 hours after landing!" of 
1803 [5] and "John Bull offering little Boney fair play" of same year [6], where 
the use of correct design would be far less desecrating, if any,  
especially when it is known that the correct flag design was used in at least 
one such cartoon, namely the "French invasion - or - Buonaparte landing in Great 
Britain", also of 1803 [7].
Square versions of the described flag, with 
additional charges like the royal crown or inscriptions, appear as the military 
colors in the scenes depicted in cartoons "The salute" of 1797 [8] and 
"Westminster conscripts under the training act" of 1806 [9].
The same 
design appears as the charges on Britannia's shield, like "The genius of France 
triumphant, - or - Britannia petitioning for peace" of 1795 [10], "The nursery, 
with Britannia reposing in peace" of 1802 [11], "Britannia between death and the 
doctor's" of 1804 [12], and a number of others [13].
Sources:
[1] Cartoon "The reception of the diplomatique and his 
suite, at the Court of Pekin", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw61584/The-reception-of-the-diplomatique-and-his-suite-at-the-Court-of-Pekin?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=13&rNo=263 
[2] Cartoon "The reception of the diplomatique and his suite, 
at the Court of Pekin", at Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:The_Reception.JPG 
[3] Cartoon 
"Posting to the election, - a scene on the road to Brentford, Novr 1806", at 
National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw63580/Posting-to-the-election---a-scene-on-the-road-to-Brentford-Novr-1806?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=38&rNo=770 
[4] Cartoon "British tars, towing the Danish fleet into harbour", 
at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62985/British-tars-towing-the-Danish-fleet-into-harbour?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=39&rNo=786 
[5] Cartoon "Buonapartè, 48 hours after landing!", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62685/Napoleon-Bonaparte-Buonapart-48-hours-after-landing?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=34&rNo=685 
[6] Cartoon "John Bull offering little Boney fair play", at National Portrait 
Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62687/Napoleon-Bonaparte-John-Bull-offering-little-Boney-fair-play?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=34&rNo=687 
[7] Cartoon "French invasion - or - Buonaparte landing in Great
Britain", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw63553/Napoleon-Bonaparte-French-invasion---or---Buonaparte-landing-in-Great-Britain?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=34&rNo=695 
[8] Cartoon "The salute", National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62166/Thomas-Davies-The-salute?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=22&rNo=450 
[9] Cartoon "Westminster 
conscripts under the training act", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62742/Westminster-conscripts-under-the-training-act?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=37&rNo=756 
[10] 
Cartoon "The genius of France triumphant, - or - Britannia petitioning for 
peace", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw61895/The-genius-of-France-triumphant---or---Britannia-petitioning-for-peace?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=16&rNo=336 
[11] Cartoon "The nursery, with Britannia reposing in peace", 
at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62658/The-nursery-with-Britannia-reposing-in-peace?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=32&rNo=659 
[12] 
Cartoon "Britannia between death and the doctor's", at National Portrait 
Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62698/Britannia-between-death-and-the-doctors?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=35&rNo=703 
[13] List of 
James Gillray's cartoons in the collection of National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person.php?LinkID=mp01777&role=art 
Tomislav Todorovic, 20 May 2013
The misplaced blue in the Union Jack is probably a colouring error. In black 
and white, the depiction of the pre-1801 Union Jack is reasonably accurate. I am 
not sure of the process but colour was added later, and different prints of the 
same cartoon can be found in which the colouring is different.
See the pairs 
of prints at http://tinyurl.com/qgn5o5t
David Prothero, 21 May 2013
I have seen myself several examples of different colouring of the same 
cartoon while preparing my contribution. Still the flag colouring, regardless of 
the person responsible, seems to be consistent enough to be contributed about - 
and certainly was repeated too many times to be just an accidental error.
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil2.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
A swallow-tailed flag, with the previously described pattern at the hoist and 
plain red fly, is shown in the cartoon titled "Britannia between Scylla and 
Charybdis" or "Britannia between Scylla & Charybdis. or - The Vessel of the 
Constitution steered clear of the Rock of Democracy, and the Whirlpool of 
Arbitrary-Power", which was published in 1793 [14, 15]. The flag is flown from 
the boat named "The Constitution", which carries William Pitt the Younger, the 
then Prime Minister, and Britannia (note the pattern on the shield), sailing 
between Scylla, represented with the Phrygian cap on a pole atop the rock 
(symbolizing ideas of the French Revolution) and Charybdis, whose huge mouth, 
shaped like an inverted crown, is swallowing water and producing a whirlpool 
(symbolizing the absolute monarchy) [16].
![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil3.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
A similar flag appears in the 
cartoon "Middlesex-election. 1804" (year of publishing as in the title) [17]. 
In this satiric depiction of a contemporary election campaign, a flag appears 
which resembles the previously described one, but the tails seem to be 
shorter here, leaving much of the red field undivided. The other flag to be 
noted is the one charged with the scene of Britannia being whipped (note the
shield again).
Both of 
the above flags resemble the Red Ensign somewhat, but even more, the "Flag of 
the English People" from the 16-18th flag charts which suggests that such 
flags might have really existed and served as the model for Gillray's flag 
drawings.
![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil4.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil5.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
Another similar flag is shown in top central part of the 
cartoon "Camera-obscura", published in 1788 [18]. Here, both the flag and the
tails are much less oblong and the hoist field is approximately square. 
However, this flag is much less visible than the one shown in the top left 
corner, which is clearly based on the Red Ensign, only with swallow-tailed 
fly and the canton patterned as above.
Whatever were the 
reasons for use of such flags, they must have been absent from the motives 
for the creation of cartoon named "Light expelling darkness, - evaporation of 
Stygian exhalations, - or - the sun of the Constitution, rising superior to 
the clouds of opposition" [capitalizations are mine], published in 1795 [19], 
where a flying female figure carries the pre-1801 Red Ensign, correctly 
depicted, in the right hand and scales in the left hand. This character, 
which might be the personification of Justice, seems to guide the chariot of
Sun, drawn by a lion and a unicorn and decorated with a line drawing of the 
royal arms beneath the sun disc. Although the explanation of this cartoon is 
not given, as well as for all the others from the same source, the 
charioteer's face resembles that of William Pitt the Younger from "Britannia 
between Scylla and Charybdis" [15, 16], so it is probably him, for he was the 
Prime Minister at both cartoons' publishing times. Even the idea behind both 
cartoons might have been the same, which is suggested by the words *COMMONS - 
KING - LORDS* inscribed within the sun disc, which is indeed a brief 
definition of the then constitutional system in Great Britain. These words, 
together with Classicist composition of the picture, also suggest that Gillray intended to compare the contemporary British government with that of
the Roman Republic, which was described by Polybius in his Histories as a 
combination of monarchy, aristocracy and democracy.
Sources [continued 
from above]:
[14] Cartoon "Britannia between Scylla and Charybdis", at 
National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw61615/Britannia-between-Scylla-and-Charybdis-Charles-James-Fox-Joseph-Priestley-Richard-Brinsley-Sheridan-William-Pitt?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=14&rNo=284
[15] Cartoon "Britannia between Scylla and Charybdis", reproduction at 
Wikipedia: 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:GillrayBritannia.jpg 
[16] Cartoon 
"Britannia between Scylla and Charybdis", explanation at Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Between_Scylla_and_Charybdis#Cultural_and_popular_references
[17] Cartoon "Middlesex-election. 1804", at National Portrait Gallery: 
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw63575/Middlesex-election-1804?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=35&rNo=717
[18] Cartoon "Camera-obscura", 
at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw61343/Camera-obscura?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=7&rNo=146
[19] Cartoon "Light expelling darkness, - evaporation of Stygian 
exhalations, - or - the sun of the Constitution, rising superior to the clouds 
of opposition", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw63485/Light-expelling-darkness---evaporation-of-stygian-exhalations---or---the-sun-of-the-constitution-rising-superior-to-the-clouds-of-pposition?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=18&rNo=372
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
The section contains a paragraph about the use of the pre-1801 Red Ensign in 
one of Gillray's cartoons. At the time of making the said contribution 
(2013-05-21) the source for the said cartoon (listed under number [19]) did not 
list the sitters' names. In the meantime, the source for cartoon named "Light 
expelling darkness, - evaporation of Stygian exhalations, - or - the sun of the 
Constitution, rising superior to the clouds of opposition" [19] was expanded to 
display the sitters' names, and one of them is indeed William Pitt the Younger, 
the then Prime minister, so he is obviously the man depicted as the Sun's 
charioteer - the logical position for him, given the composition of the picture 
and the idea behind it.
Tomislav Todorovic, 9 May 2015
It shall be noted that a real-life flag charged with the red cross
over blue saltire on white field was used by two shipping companies -
first by G.D. Tyser & Co. (1860-1914)
 
  
 A flag derived from the usual Gillray pattern by adding a repeated pattern 
in the canton, is shown in the cartoon "A block for the wigs - or, the new 
state whirligig", published in 1783 [20]. The flag is flying from the top of 
a pillar in center of a carousel on which sit several ministers of the then 
government [21]. Another copy of this cartoon exists, with a different 
coloring of the same flag, looking much less consistent (greater and lesser 
patterns colored differently) [22]. 
 A flag derived from the one described above and modeled 
like the "Flag of English People" from the 16-18th flag charts, appears in 
the cartoon "A French hail storm, - or - Neptune losing sight of the Brest
fleet", published in 1793 [23]. The cartoon depicts Admiral Richard Howe, 1st 
Earl Howe (1726-1799), in Neptune's chariot - large shell, drawn by two 
dolphins - with the trident as the flagstaff from which the described flag is 
flying. Sources 
[continued from above]: 
 Flags with the usual Gillray pattern, but with red and blue reversed, appear 
in the cartoon "The high-flying-candidate, (i.e. little Paul-goose,) mounting 
from a blanket", published in 1806 [24]. They have various ratios, 
from 1:1 to 3:5, some of them have fringes along the edge, and all of them 
bear with inscriptions which are not easy to read, except names of two 
sitters, (Alexander) Hood and (Richard Brinsley) Sheridan. Considering that 
all the identified sitters were contemporary politicians, the scene is 
clearly another Gillray's mocking with the then British political life. One 
of the flags seems to be white, with the described pattern in canton and no 
visible inscriptions, but is mostly hidden behind other flags, so it will be
left without a detailed description or an image here. These flags' pattern 
was more likely an error than those from the other cartoons; it is unclear 
whether the error was intentional, but seems to have been less likely so than 
in case of other patterns, especially because it seems not to have been 
repeated elsewhere.  
 The 
flag which resembles the pre-1801 Union Jack the most, but with a voided 
saltire, appears in the cartoon "Delicious dreams! - Castles in the air! - 
Glorious prospects!", published in 1808 [25]. The flag is flown from the 
chariot in top part of the drawing, where a dream of the characters from the 
bottom part is shown. Beside the flags in these two cartoons, one satiric 
and the other quite the opposite, this pattern also appears on Britannia's 
shield in cartoon "St George and the dragon", published in 1805 [27], a scene 
in which King George III on horse saves Britannia from a monster with the
head of Napoleon. The same shield appears as the shield of Zeus/Jupiter in 
the cartoon "Destruction of the French collossus", published in 1798 [28], 
where this god's lightnings destroy the French Republic, depicted as a 
monstrous variation of the Colossus of Rhodes. (Beside the shield, held by 
one of god's hands, only his other arm, which holds the lightnings, is 
visible.) 
 A flag modeled 
both after the above one and the "Flag of English People" appears in the 
cartoon "Scene le vrog house", published in 1782 [29], which is a rather 
indecent scene involving several British and French characters and, along 
with the said flag flying, a French flag, white with fleurs-de-lys, laying 
humiliated on the ground. 
 Another variant of the flag appears in the cartoon "Improvement in Weights & 
Measures. - or - Sir John Sinclair discovering ye Ballance of ye British Flag." 
The sitter is Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster, 1st Baronet (1754-1835), British 
politician and writer on finance and agriculture. He is shown as holding the 
scales with a Phrygian cap and some vegetables and inscribed scrolls on one 
side, and the said flag on the other; the whole is an allusion to his career, 
along with the other details of the picture, like books and scrolls on the table 
behind Sinclair, or picture and paper sheet on the wall, all bearing the 
inscriptions which are not completely readable in the source image, but even 
when they are, their meaning was certainly immediately understood by the 
contemporaries of Gillray and Sinclair, which is not the case with most of the 
present observers. The flag itself resembles several other variants by Gillray, 
but also differs from all of them: red cross and blue saltire, both within a 
white fimbriation (only around, but not between them), all on blue field, the 
whole pattern repeated in the canton. Conclusion: 
 Gillray's flag depictions with the white field, charged with red cross over 
blue saltire, and the plain red fly resemble the "Cap Presmant Pendant" from the 
notebook of William Downman, 1685-6, which was reproduced in "Flags at Sea" by 
Timothy Wilson, National Maritime Museum, 1986. Their hoist pattern resembles 
the yet unidentified flag currently listed as UFE 09-7, which is depicted on a 
painting from 17th or 18th century. All of these sources are unrelated to each 
other, but since Gillray's cartoons were created some time after the other 
pictures, it is possible that he drew inspiration from something he did see in 
real life - if not these very pictures, then something else that may have even 
not survived until present day. Whether his sources were based on real life 
themselves, is another matter which may remain unexplained until some new 
evidence is discovered. The British flag from the painting "The Death of General Warren at the Battle 
of Bunker Hill on 17 June 1775", made in 1786 by John Trumbull, resembles the 
contemporary Red Ensign, but blue and white had swapped places in the canton.
Tomislav Todorovic, 15 May 2015 
![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil6.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil7.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
[20] Cartoon "A block for the wigs - or, the new 
state whirligig", at National Portrait Gallery: 
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw61152/A-block-for-the-wigs---or-the-new-state-hirligig?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=4&rNo=81
[21] Cartoon "A block for the wigs - or, the new state whirligig", at 
Wikipedia: 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A_block_for_the_wigs_-_or,_the_new_state_whirligig_by_James_Gillray.jpg/a>
[22] Cartoon "A block for the wigs - or, the new state whirligig", alternate 
coloring, at Wikipedia: 
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A-Block-for-the-Wigs-illray.jpeg 
[23] Cartoon "A French hail storm, - or - Neptune losing sight of the Brest 
fleet", at National Portrait Gallery: 
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw61618/Richard-Howe-1st-Earl-Howe-A-French-hail-storm---or---Neptune-losing-sight-of-the-Brest-fleet?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=14&rNo=287
Tomislav Todorovic, 22 May 2013![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil8.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 23 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 23 May 2013![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil9.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
The same flag appears in the cartoon titled "The 
death of Admiral Lord Nelson - in the moment of victory!", published in 1805 
[26]. The scene both glorifies Nelson's victory - note the inscription 
Immortality on the arch made of clouds and winged figure blowing a trumpet 
- and expresses nationwide mourning after his death, the latter being
represented by grieving Britannia, her shield patterned exactly like the 
flag, above dying Nelson. The flag is also charged with inscription 
VICTORY, which is the name of Nelson's ship (note the holes on the flag as 
the result of the fighting), but is also related to the whole event. The 
other flag shown is a war trophy: French flag, depicted as a horizontal 
tricolor (typical for Gillray [13]), with incompletely visible inscription 
VIVE L'EMPEREUR. ![[James Gillray cartoon]](../images/g/gb_jgil10.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 21 May 2013
Sources 
[continued from above]:
[24] Cartoon "The high-flying-candidate, (i.e. little 
Paul-goose,) mounting from a blanket", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62755/The-high-flying-candidate-ie-little-Paul-goose-mounting-from-a-blanket?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=38&rNo=766/a>>
[25] Cartoon "Delicious dreams! - Castles in the air! - Glorious 
prospects!", at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62994/Delicious-dreams---Castles-in-the-air---Glorious-prospects?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=40&rNo=800
[26] Cartoon "The death of Admiral Lord Nelson - in the moment of victory!", 
at National Portrait Gallery: 
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62724/The-death-of-Admiral-Lord-Nelson---in-the-moment-of-victory-Horatio-Nelson-Sir-Thomas-Masterman-Hardy-1st-Bt?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=36&rNo=735
[27] Cartoon "St George and the dragon", at National Portrait Gallery: 
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw63578/St-George-and-the-dragon-Napoleon-Bonaparte-King-George-III?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=37&rNo=740
[28] Cartoon "Destruction of the French colossus", at National Portrait 
Gallery: 
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62271/Destruction-of-the-French-collossus?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=24&rNo=496
[29] Cartoon "Scene le vrog house", at National Portrait Gallery (WARNING: an indecent scene, 
listed only due to the flags depicted):
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw63195/Scene-le-vrog-house?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=3&rNo=67
Tomislav Todorovic, 23 May 2013![[James Gillray cartoon-like flag]](../images/g/gb_jgil11.gif) image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 22 May 2016
 
image by 
Tomislav Todorovic, 22 May 2016
Sources:
[30] Biography of Sir 
John Sinclair at Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_John_Sinclair,_1st_Baronet 
[31] 
Cartoon "Improvement in Weights & Measures. - or - Sir John Sinclair discovering 
ye Ballance of ye British Flag." at National Portrait Gallery:
http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw62288/Sir-John-Sinclair-1st-Bt?LinkID=mp01777&role=art&wPage=25&rNo=501
 
Tomislav Todorovic, 22 May 2016
The erroneously depicted Union Jack and 
derived flags appear in too many cartoons by James Gillray to be considered 
unintentional errors, still the reason for their use remains unclear, for the 
cartoons include both satiric and patriotic ones, both those in which the 
sitters are ridiculed and those in which they are glorified. To make the things 
even more complicated, correctly depicted Union Jack and derived flags also 
appear sometimes, but very rarely and never in satiric drawings, while some of 
Gillray's depictions do resemble some real-life flags, as well as some works by 
other artists.
 
Tomislav Todorovic, 22 May 2016
Cap Presmant Pendant
![[James Gillray cartoon-like flag]](../images/g/gb_cpp.jpg) image located by David Prothero, 12 February 2009
 
image located by David Prothero, 12 February 2009
Tomislav Todorovic, 22 May 2016
British flag from the painting "The Death of General Warren 
at the Battle of Bunker Hill on 17 June 1775"
This flag also resembles several depictions by James Gillray. While its 
existence could not have been confirmed so far and it is viewed as example of 
artistic license, one shall bear on mind that Trumbull did reside in London 
during several longer periods between 1780 and 1795, so it can be rightfully 
assumed that he must have been familiar with Gillray's works, bearing on mind 
their impact at the time. Although it is probably impossible to prove, he might 
have found the inspiration for his flag in some of them - in real life, indeed, 
even though the same might not be true for his model.
Tomislav Todorovic, 
22 May 2016