We get this nonsense point from the left many times over about St George.
It's annoying because many other countries do this same exact thing over symbols and stories in their national heritage and I doubt they get this irritating 'oh but actually' nonsense from people wanting to p1ss all over it.
Yes Silver....and guess what, Camelot and the round table and the hunt for the holy grail came from embellished stories and wasn't fact.....This assumption that we don't know this is...again, irritating.
While I find this ridiculous, again because I don't know anyone who doesn't know the whole story is a myth much like King Arthur and is about national identity rather some kind of documentary about the real person....It's like someone trying to tell you that Santa Claus isn't real.....if people want the known facts about who St George was in reality then we have this from Grok:
St. George, the Christian martyr and patron saint of England and other countries, is traditionally believed to have been born in Cappadocia, a region in modern-day Turkey, around the late 3rd century AD. His father was likely a Greek Christian from Cappadocia, and his mother was from Lydda (modern-day Israel). While he was born in what is now Turkey, the term "Turkish" is anachronistic, as the Turks did not arrive in the region until centuries later. Ethnically, St. George was likely Greek or of mixed Greco-Roman descent, and culturally, he was part of the Roman Empire's Christian community. So, while he was born in what is now Turkey, calling him "Turkish" would be inaccurate.