Historical flags
The following flags are only a selection of historical flags:
St. George's Cross

Fleur-de-lis

The "bannière de France" or Banner of France, which also displayed three gold fleurs-de-lis on a blue field, was raised by fur trader Pierre Du Gua de Monts at the settlement on Île Sainte-Croix in 1604, and a swallow tailed flag with fleurs-de-lis flew from Champlain's Habitation in Québec in 1608. With the death of King Henry IV in 1610, the "bannière" ceased to be used as a national flag.
During the first half of the 17th century, the inhabitants of New France viewed the white flag of the French royal navy as the flag of the French nation. This same flag was widely used after New France became a royal province by an edict of Louis XIV in 1663.
The fleur-de-lis reappeared as a symbol of French heritage in the arms granted to Quebec by Queen Victoria in 1868. In 1948, the Quebec government adopted the "fleurdelisé" as its provincial flag. The fleur-de-lis also appears with the coats of arms of Canada and New Brunswick.
Royal Union Flag

Version of 1606–1800
In the years between the Treaty of Paris and the American Revolution, the Royal Union Flag was supposed to be used at all British establishments on the North American continent, from Newfoundland to the Gulf of Mexico. In practice, however, it was frequently replaced by the Red Ensign, the flag of the British merchant marine, which featured the Royal Union Flag on a red background.
After the American Revolution, those colonists who remained loyal to the Crown and fought under the Royal Union Flag settled in many parts of what are now Ontario, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. The Royal Union Flag is often referred to as the flag of Canada's United Empire Loyalists.
Following the Act of Union between Great Britain and Ireland in 1801, the diagonal Cross of St. Patrick, red on white, was incorporated into the Royal Union Flag, giving it its present-day configuration.
Canadian Red Ensign

Version of 1957–1965
As new provinces entered Confederation, or when they received some mark of identification (sometimes taken from their seal), that mark was incorporated into the shield on the Canadian Red Ensign. Eventually, the shield was made up of the arms of the nine provinces then in Confederation, often accompanied by branches of oak and maple, a beaver, and the Royal Crown.
In 1922, this unofficial version of the Canadian Red Ensign was changed by an Order in Council and the composite shield was replaced with the shield from the recently proclaimed Royal Arms of Canada, more commonly known as the Canadian Coat of Arms. Two years later, this new version was approved for use on Canadian government buildings abroad. A similar order in 1945 authorized its use on federal buildings within Canada. The Canadian Red Ensign was replaced by the red and white maple leaf flag on February 15, 1965.
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