Ovavoo wrote:We do have one but as we won the war of the roses ...
Unless "we" are Welsh, then "we" didn't.
Neither Yorkists nor real Lancastrians "won".
The Lancastrian nobility were virtually wiped-out in 1461.
Having not taken part in the wars until then, Henry Tudor "won" the Wars of the Roses when Richard III died at Bosworth in 1485.
Granted, he claimed to be a Lancastrian, but a swift glance at his lineage shows his closest claim was through being the son of the second marriage of a lady who had been married to Henry V and had no Lancastrian heritage of her own.
Her second marriage after having widowed was to a Welsh bloke called Owen Tudor.
Henry Tudor was their son.
Henry did have a Lancastrian half-brother from his mother's first marriage but there was no Lancastrian blood in Henry's veins.
Nonetheless, if you want to believe in the County versus County bollox and bask in that perceived glory, you go right ahead.