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  • 2017-03-15 (xsd:date)
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  • Do the Confederate Battle Flag's Colors Have Religious Significance? (en)
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  • An image circulated online promoted the claim that the colors of the Confederate battle flag were chosen for their religious meanings: However, that interpretation ran counter to historical analysis. According to the image, the use of red in the flag — which has become known as the Stars and Bars (not a historically accurate term) — symbolizes the blood of Christ, while the white border around the blue cross represents the protection of God. The cross itself, the claim states, hearkens to Saint Andrew, the first disciple of Jesus: But author John Coski, the historian for the American Civil War Museum in Richmond, Virginia, pointed out in his 2005 book The Confederate Battle Flag: America's Most Embattled Emblem that the battle flag's designer, William Porcher Miles, actually strove to avoid attributing any religious meaning to it: In a report to the Confederate Congress, Miles said that the original Confederate national flag's colors were red, white, and blue because they were the great republican colors. But here, again, he declined to ascribe religious meaning to them, instead saying that they were emblematic of the three great virtues — of valor, purity and truth. A picture of Miles' report can be seen below: Miles also explained the significance of the flag's colors in a 27 August 1861 letter to Confederate Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard. The museum provided us with a scan of the letter, which can be seen below: In the letter, Miles explained that the diagonal blue cross was preferable because it avoided the religious objection about the upright cross. He called the diagonal cross more Heraldric [sic] than Ecclesiastical and significant of strength and progress. Historian John Coski told us in an email that: Coski also noted that, while the battle flag has come to be known as the Stars and Bars, that nickname was actually coined for its predecessor, which was approved by the Confederate States Provisional Congress and used between 1861 and 1863. (en)
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