Buy State Flags from 
Allstate FlagsBuy US flags 
from Five Star Flags
This page is part of © FOTW Flags Of The World website

Order of Saint Stephen (Tuscany, Italy)

Mistakenly reported as a Maltese flag in old charts

Last modified: 2005-04-09 by santiago dotor
Keywords: order of saint stephen | tuscany | cross: maltese (red) | maltese cross (red) |
Links: FOTW homepage | search | disclaimer and copyright | write us | mirrors



[Malta 1771 (Encyclopedia Britannica)]
by Randy Young



See also:


Description

In the 1771 Encyclopedia Britannica Malta appears as a red Maltese cross on a white field.

Randy Young, 1 December 1998

I did not see either the white Maltese cross on a red field (except as part of the civil ensign) or its reversed pattern even in battle pictures. One exception to this is a flag which was the reverse of the civil ensign, thus red Maltese cross on a white field with a red border which was part of the display of a flag and banner makers company at the Crafts Museum. Unfortunately, there was no caption or other indication of what the flag might be.

Norman Martin, 26 November 2000

The red eight pointed cross on a white field is the flag of the Tuscan Order of Saint Stephen, now extinct. It is often (incorrectly) associated with Malta, appearing on several charts of maritime flags as such. There are cases where it is still used in this manner in Malta, notably the Band Club of Kalkara and by the national carrier Sea Malta, as shown in my book [str92] p. 34.

Adrian Strickland, 30 November 2000

According to Peter Bander van Duren, Orders of Knighthood and of Merit, p. 339, the Tuscan Order of Saint Stephen:

It was founded in 1562, by Cosimo de'Medici, Duke of Florence. Its members were of noble birth and had to belong to the Catholic religion (...) Abolished during the French Revolution, Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany revived the Order in 1817 (...) The Order was abolished in 1866, when the Grand Duchy of Tuscany became part of the Italian Kingdom, but the Grand Duke continued to award it because he considered the Order to be dynastic and belonging to the the House of Habsburg-Tuscany.
One can see from this that there has never been any connection with the Sovereign Military and Hospitaller Order of Malta.

Adrian Strickland, 3 December 2000

Znamierowski 2000 [zna99], French edition, p. 6, shows a colour plate from Colton's Delineation of Flags of All Nations, 1862. Two Maltese ensigns are displayed on the plate, the second one (#130) labelled Malta, showing a white field with a decentered Maltese cross. This seems to be a variant of the flag of the order of St. Stephen, mistakenly reported as a Maltese flag in an old chart.

Ivan Sache, 10 March 2001

From Colton, Delineation of Flags of All Nations, 1862
[Malta c.1862 in Colton]
by Ivan Sache