The original Starry Plough was designed by William H. Megahy, though the concept may have originated with
George William Russell, for the Irish Citizen Army and showed silver stars on a green background. The flag depicts an
asterism (an identifiable part of a constellation) of the
constellation Ursa Major, called
The Plough (or "Starry Plough") in Ireland and Britain, the
Big Dipper in North America, and various other names worldwide. Two of the Plough's seven stars point to
Polaris, the North Star.
James Connolly, co-founder of the Irish Citizen Army with
Jack White and
James Larkin, said the significance of the banner was that a free
Ireland would control its own destiny from the
plough to the stars. The sword as the
coulter is also a biblical reference in
Isaiah 2:3-4. In the Bible verse, God pushes his followers to turn their weapons into tools, turning the means for war into the means for peace. The marriage of
Catholic tradition, the biblical reference being integral to the flag's design, with socialist concepts, like the working class and the oppressor forcing them to take up their ploughshares as arms, leaves the Starry Plough flag with complex and nuanced implications that are susceptible to a wide range of interpretations. ==History==