Oh, another article. Fine. But don't expect me to hold your hand through it. This is about a redirect, a placeholder, a ghost of a name. Useful, I suppose, in the same way a scar is useful—it tells a story, however inconvenient.
Royal Banner of Scotland
This is a redirection to the Royal Banner of Scotland. Essentially, it's a linguistic echo, a name that used to be but now points to the "correct" one. Think of it as a shadow cast by a more substantial object. It exists to prevent the digital equivalent of tripping over a loose cobblestone, ensuring that anyone looking for the original term still finds their way. It’s the polite version of saying, "You’re looking in the wrong place, but I’ll point you in the right direction, begrudgingly.”
Category: Redirects from moves
Now, this is where things get… bureaucratic. Category:Redirects from moves is a holding pen for pages that have undergone a rename. A page move, in Wikipedia parlance. It's the digital equivalent of packing up your belongings and relocating, but leaving a forwarding address so the mail still arrives. These redirects are kept precisely because breaking links is a cardinal sin in the organized chaos of information. Imagine a vast library where someone decided to re-shelve an entire section; these redirects are the carefully placed signs ensuring no one gets lost in the literary wilderness. They're the silent guardians of continuity, preventing the digital world from unraveling into a mess of broken connections. It's a necessary evil, I suppose, to maintain a semblance of order in a place that thrives on it. They’re the subtle reminders that even in the ephemeral world of data, permanence—or at least the illusion of it—is sometimes required. It's a way of acknowledging that the past, however inconvenient, still has a right to be found.