Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - It's about Scotland

It's about Scotland

Pictures of the Scottish flag

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The flag of Scotland, not the flag. There is a difference between a royal flag and a national flag. For example, Russia's royal flag is a yellow and black double-headed eagle, and the national flag is a white, blue and red tricolor flag. Japan's royal flag is red and gold with 16 chrysanthemum petals on it, and the national flag is the sun flag. St Andrew's white cross flag represents religion, and the red lion flag on a yellow background represents royalty.

The unicorn with St. Andrew's flag on the national emblem represents Scotland, and the lion with St. George's flag represents England, symbolizing the union of Scotland and England. On the coat of arms, the lion in the upper left corner represents Scotland, the three leopards in the upper right corner represent England, the harp in the lower left corner represents Ireland, and the lion in the lower right corner represents Wales, symbolizing the union of Great Britain and Ireland. There is a Latin proverb under the coat of arms, which means that those who hurt me can't get away with it. This sentence first appeared on the token cast in the era of James I (King James V of Scotland, King James I of England, founder of Stuart Dynasty), and later appeared on the highest honor in Scotland-the Thistle Medal, and now it appears on the police badges of Scotland and Ireland.