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Military history of Scotland

Historically, Scotland has a long military tradition that predates the Act of Union with England. Its soldiers form part of the armed forces of the United Kingdom, more usually referred to domestically within Britain as the British Armed Forces.

The Thin Red Line of 1854, by Robert Gibb, in his 1881 painting

History prior to the Union edit

Royal Scots Navy edit

 
A carving of a birlinn from a sixteenth-century tombstone in MacDufie's Chapel, Oronsay, as engraved in 1772

There are mentions in Medieval records of fleets commanded by Scottish kings including William the Lion[1] and Alexander II. The latter took personal command of a large naval force which sailed from the Firth of Clyde and anchored off the island of Kerrera in 1249, intended to transport his army in a campaign against the Kingdom of the Isles, but he died before the campaign could begin.[2][3] Viking naval power was disrupted by conflicts between the Scandinavian kingdoms, but entered a period of resurgence in the thirteenth century when Norwegian kings began to build some of the largest ships seen in Northern European waters. These included king Hakon Hakonsson's Kristsúðin, built at Bergen from 1262 to 1263, which was 260 feet (79 m) long, of 37 rooms.[4] In 1263 Hakon responded to Alexander III's designs on the Hebrides by personally leading a major fleet of forty vessels, including the Kristsúðin, to the islands, where they were swelled by local allies to as many as 200 ships.[5] Records indicate that Alexander had several large oared ships built at Ayr, but he avoided a sea battle.[1] Defeat on land at the Battle of Largs and winter storms forced the Norwegian fleet to return home, leaving the Scottish crown as the major power in the region and leading to the ceding of the Western Isles to Alexander in 1266.[6]

English naval power was vital to Edward I's successful campaigns in Scotland from 1296, using largely merchant ships from England, Ireland and his allies in the Islands to transport and supply his armies.[7] Part of the reason for Robert I's success was his ability to call on naval forces from the Islands. As a result of the expulsion of the Flemings from England in 1303, he gained the support of a major naval power in the North Sea.[7] The development of naval power allowed Robert to successfully defeat English attempts to capture him in the Highlands and Islands and to blockade major English controlled fortresses at Perth and Stirling, the last forcing Edward II to attempt the relief that resulted at English defeat at Bannockburn in 1314.[7] Scottish naval forces allowed invasions of the Isle of Man in 1313 and 1317 and Ireland in 1315. They were also crucial in the blockade of Berwick, which led to its fall in 1318.[7]

After the establishment of Scottish independence, Robert I turned his attention to building up a Scottish naval capacity. This was largely focused on the west coast, with the Exchequer Rolls of 1326 recording the feudal duties of his vassals in that region to aid him with their vessels and crews. Towards the end of his reign he supervised the building of at least one royal man-of-war near his palace at Cardross on the River Clyde. In the late fourteenth century naval warfare with England was conducted largely by hired Scots, Flemish and French merchantmen and privateers.[8] James I took a greater interest in naval power. After his return to Scotland in 1424, he established a shipbuilding yard at Leith, a house for marine stores, and a workshop. King's ships were built and equipped there to be used for trade as well as war, one of which accompanied him on his expedition to the Islands in 1429. The office of Lord High Admiral was probably founded in this period. In his struggles with his nobles in 1488 James III received assistance from his two warships the Flower and the King's Carvel also known as the Yellow Carvel.[8]

 
A model of the Great Michael in the Royal Museum

There were various attempts to create royal naval forces in the fifteenth century. James IV put the enterprise on a new footing, founding a harbour at Newhaven and a dockyard at the Pools of Airth.[9] He acquired a total of 38 ships including the Great Michael,[10] at that time, the largest ship in Europe.[10][11] Scottish ships had some success against privateers, accompanied the king on his expeditions in the islands and intervened in conflicts Scandinavia and the Baltic,[8] but were sold after the Flodden campaign and after 1516 and Scottish naval efforts would rely on privateering captains and hired merchantmen.[8] James V did not share his father's interest in developing a navy and shipbuilding fell behind the Low Countries.[12] Despite truces between England and Scotland there were periodic outbreaks of a guerre de course.[13] James V built a new harbour at Burntisland in 1542.[14] The chief use of naval power in his reign was a series of expeditions to the Isles and France.[15] After the Union of Crowns in 1603 conflict between Scotland and England ended, but Scotland found itself involved in England's foreign policy, opening up Scottish shipping to attack. In 1626 a squadron of three ships were bought and equipped.[11] There were also several marque fleets of privateers.[16] In 1627, the Royal Scots Navy and accompanying contingents of burgh privateers participated in the major expedition to Biscay.[17] The Scots also returned to West Indies[18] and in 1629 took part in the capture of Quebec.[19]

During the Bishop's Wars the king attempted to blockade Scotland and planned amphibious assaults from England on the East coast and from Ireland to the West.[20] Scottish privateers took a number of English prizes.[21] After the Covenanters allied with the English Parliament they established two patrol squadrons for the Atlantic and North Sea coasts, known collectively as the "Scotch Guard".[22] The Scottish navy was unable to withstand the English fleet that accompanied the army led by Cromwell that conquered Scotland in 1649–51 and the Scottish ships and crews were split up among the Commonwealth fleet.[23] Scottish seamen received protection against arbitrary impressment by English men of war, but a fixed quota of conscripts for the Royal Navy was levied from the sea-coast burghs during the second half of the seventeenth century.[24] Royal Navy patrols were now found in Scottish waters even in peacetime.[25] In the Second (1665–67) and Third Anglo-Dutch Wars (1672–74) between 80 and 120 captains, took Scottish letters of marque and privateers played a major part in the naval conflict.[26] In the 1690s a small fleet of five ships was established by merchants for the Darien Scheme,[27] and a professional navy was established for the protection of commerce in home waters during the Nine Years' War, with three purpose-built warships bought from English shipbuilders in 1696. After the Act of Union in 1707, these vessels were transferred to the Royal Navy.[28]

Scottish armies edit

 
Scottish soldiers in the period of the Hundred Years' War, detail from an edition of Froissart's Chronicles

Before the Wars of the Three Kingdoms in 1644, there was no standing army in the Kingdom of Scotland. In the Early Middle Ages war in Scotland was characterised by the use of small war-bands of household troops often engaging in raids and low level warfare.[29] By the High Middle Ages, the kings of Scotland could command forces of tens of thousands of men for short periods as part of the "common army", mainly of poorly armoured spear and bowmen. After the "Davidian Revolution" of the 12th century, which introduced elements of feudalism to Scotland, these forces were augmented by small numbers of mounted and heavily armoured knights. These armies rarely managed to stand up to the usually larger and more professional armies produced by England, but they were used to good effect by Robert I of Scotland at Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 to secure Scottish independence.[30] After the Wars of Scottish Independence, the Auld Alliance between Scotland and France played a large part in the country's military activities, especially during the Hundred Years' War. In the Late Middle Ages under the Stewart kings forces were further augmented by specialist troops, particularly men-at-arms and archers, hired by bonds of manrent, similar to English indentures of the same period.[31] Scottish warfare in this period was mostly raids and ambushes performed by Scottish nobles and men at arms who would fight on foot during pitched battles or on horse when skirmishing or carrying out raids. Contemporary depictions show nobles and their retinues in fine plate armor that is highly protective and well-suited for foot combat, with many wearing fine great bascinets late into the 15th century, possibly due to the need for extra protection from English bows and bills. They were accompanied by their retinues, usually mounted longbowmen or spearmen who would fight with the same flexibility, also preferring to fight on foot in pitched battle. Archers became much sought after as mercenaries in French armies of the 15th century in order to help counter the English superiority in this arm, becoming a major element of the French royal guards as the Garde Écossaise.[32] Scotland played a major role in the Hundred Years War, with many Scots present from Bauge all the way to the end of the Loire Valley Campaign and the Battle of Patay "The Scots Men-at-Arms and Life-Guards in France, From Their Formation Until Their Final Dissolution, A.D. MCCCCXVIII-MDCCCXXX (Volume I)". The Stewarts also adopted major innovations in continental warfare, such as longer pikes and the extensive use of artillery. However, in the early 16th century one of the best armed and largest Scottish armies ever assembled still met with defeat at the hands of an English army at the Battle of Flodden in 1513, which saw the destruction of a large number of ordinary troops, a large section of the nobility and the king James IV.[33]

 
The earliest image of Scottish soldiers wearing tartan; 1631 German engraving.

In the sixteenth century the crown took an increasing role in the supply of military equipment.[34] The pike began to replace the spear and the Scots began to convert from the bow to gunpowder firearms.[35] The feudal heavy cavalry had begun to disappear from Scottish armies and the Scots fielded relatively large numbers of light horse, often drawn from the borders.[36] James IV brought in experts from France, Germany and the Netherlands and established a gun foundry in 1511.[15] A clan leader like John Grant of Freuchie in 1596 could muster from his kin, friends, and servants 500 men able to fight for King James and the Sheriff of Moray. Of these 40 had habergeons, two handled swords, and helmets, and another 40 were armed "according to the Highland custom" with bows, helmets, swords, and targes.[37]

In the early seventeenth century relatively large numbers of Scots took service in foreign armies involved in the Thirty Years' War.[38] As armed conflict with Charles I in the Bishop's Wars became likely, hundreds of Scots mercenaries returned home from foreign service, including experienced leaders like Alexander and David Leslie and these veterans played an important role in training recruits.[20] These systems would form the basis of the Covenanter armies that intervened in the Civil Wars in England and Ireland.[39] Scottish infantry were generally armed, as was almost universal in Western Europe, with a combination of pike and shot. Scottish armies may also have had individuals with a variety of weapons including bows, Lochaber axes, and halberds.[40] Most cavalry were probably equipped with pistols and swords, although there is some evidence that they included lancers.[41] Royalist armies, like those led by James Graham, Marquis of Montrose (1643–44) and in Glencairn's rising (1653–54), were mainly composed of conventionally armed infantry with pike and shot.[42] Montrose's forces were short of heavy artillery suitable for siege warfare and had only a small force of cavalry.[43]

 
Soldier of the Black Watch c. 1740

At the Restoration the Privy Council established a force of several infantry regiments and a few troops of horse and there were attempts to found a national militia on the English model. The standing army was mainly employed in the suppression of Covenanter rebellions and the guerrilla war undertaken by the Cameronians in the East.[44] Pikemen became less important in the late seventeenth century and after the introduction of the socket bayonet disappeared altogether, while matchlock muskets were replaced by the more reliable flintlock.[44] On the eve of the Glorious Revolution the standing army in Scotland was about 3,000 men in various regiments and another 268 veterans in the major garrison towns.[45] After the Glorious Revolution the Scots were drawn into King William II's continental wars, beginning with the Nine Years' War in Flanders (1689–97).[46] By the time of the Act of Union, the Kingdom of Scotland had a standing army of seven units of infantry, two of horse and one troop of Horse Guards, besides varying levels of fortress artillery in the garrison castles of Edinburgh, Dumbarton, and Stirling.[47]

Wars and battles to 1707 edit

 
The earliest known depiction of the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 from a 1440s manuscript of Walter Bower's Scotichronicon
 
Battle of Pinkie, woodcut illustration from William Patten, (1548)

Castles edit

 
Caerlaverock Castle, a moated triangular castle, first built in the thirteenth century

Castles arrived in Scotland with the introduction of feudalism in the twelfth century.[48] Initially these were wooden motte-and-bailey constructions,[49] but many were replaced by stone castles with a high curtain wall.[50] During the Wars of Independence, Robert the Bruce pursued a policy of castle slighting.[51] In the late Middle Ages new castles were built, some on a grander scale as "livery and maintenance" castles that could support a large garrison.[50] Gunpowder weaponry led to the use of gun ports, platforms to mount guns and walls adapted to resist bombardment.[52]

Many of the late Medieval castles built in the borders were in the form of tower houses, smaller pele towers or simpler bastle houses.[53] From the fifteenth century there was a phase of Renaissance palace building, which restructured them as castle-type palaces, beginning at Linlithgow.[54] Elements of Medieval castles, royal palaces and tower houses were used in the construction of Scots baronial estate houses, which were built largely for comfort, but with a castle-like appearance.[55][56] In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the military significance of castles declined,[57][58] but they increasingly became tourist attractions.[59] Elements of the Scots Baronial style would be revived from the late eighteenth century[60] and the trend would be confirmed in popularity by the rebuilding of Balmoral Castle in the nineteenth century and its adoption as a retreat by Queen Victoria.[61] In the twentieth century there were only isolated examples of new castle-influenced houses.[62][63]

Part of the British Armed Forces edit

 
Scottish soldier's cap worn after the 1707 Union
 
Comical depiction of a Scottish soldier, c.1720

After the Act of Union in 1707, the Scottish Army and Navy merged with those of England. The new British Army incorporated existing Scottish regiments, such as the Scots Guards (Marquis of Argyll's Royal Regiment), The Royal Scots 1st of Foot (Royal Regiment of Foot), King's Own Scottish Borderers 25th of Foot (Leven's Regiment), The 26th (Cameronian) Regiment of Foot (The Earl of Angus's Regiment), Scots Greys (Scots Dragoons) and the Royal Scots Fusiliers 21st of Foot (Earl of Mar's Regiment of Foot). The three vessels of the small Royal Scottish Navy were transferred to the Royal Navy (Royal William, a fifth-rate 32-gun frigate, became HMS Edinburgh; Royal Mary, a sixth-rate 24 gun frigate, became HMS Glasgow; Dumbarton Castle, a sixth-rate frigate, became HMS Dumbarton Castle). The new Armed Forces were controlled by the War Office and Admiralty from London. From the mid-eighteenth century the British Army began to recruit relatively large numbers of Highlanders. The first official Highland regiment to be raised for the British army was the Black Watch in 1740, but the growth of Highland regiments was delayed by the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion.[64] During this period, Scottish soldiers and sailors were instrumental in supporting the expansion of the British Empire and became involved in many international conflicts. These included the War of the Spanish Succession (1702–13), the Quadruple Alliance (1718–20), the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48), the Seven Years' War (1756–63) and the American Wars of Independence (1775–83).[44]

Napoleonic Wars edit

Scots had a notable influence in warfare during this period. Prominent sailors of the era included:

Victorian & Colonial Warfare edit

First World War edit

 
Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) in a trench at the Somme, 1916

Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig led the British Army on the Western Front from 1915, and oversaw some of the largest and bloodiest episodes of the war. Battles included the Somme(1916) Ypres (1917) Cambrai (1917) Amiens (1918) and Arras (1918) Due to the kilts worn by the Scottish soldiers on the World War I battlefront, their German enemies called them the "ladies from hell".[65] Haig founded the Earl Haig Poppy Fund, for ex-servicemen in the aftermath.

According to the historian T C Smout, "It is still not known how many Scots died in the war. One well-argued estimate put the figure at 110,000, equivalent to about 10 percent of the Scottish male population aged between sixteen and fifty, and probably to about 15 per cent of total British war dead — the sacrifice was higher in proportionate terms than for any other country in the Empire."[66]

Second World War edit

Scottish soldiers fought in many battles in World War II, in both the Pacific and European theatres.

The Cold War & The End of Empire edit

Defence establishments in Scotland edit

Army edit

In the wake of the Jacobite risings, several fortresses were built throughout the Highlands in the 18th century by General Wade in order to pacify the region, including Fort George, Fort Augustus and Fort William. The Ordnance Survey was also commissioned to map the region. Later, due to their topography and perceived remoteness, parts of Scotland have housed many sensitive defence establishments, some controversial. During World War II, Allied and British Commandos trained at Achnacarry in the Highlands and the island of Gruinard was used for an exercise in biological warfare. Regular British Army Garrisons currently operational in Scotland are: Fort George near Inverness; Redford Barracks and Dreghorn Barracks in Edinburgh; and Glencorse Barracks at Penicuik.

Royal Naval edit

Between 1960 and 1991, the Holy Loch was a base for the US Navy's fleet of Polaris-armed George Washington-class ballistic missile submarines. Today, HM Naval Base Clyde, 25 miles (40 km) west of Glasgow, is the base for the four Trident-armed Vanguard-class ballistic missile submarines which are armed with approximately 200 Trident nuclear warheads.[67] Since the decommissioning of free-falling bombs in 1998, the Trident SLBM system is the UK's only nuclear deterrent. HMS Caledonia at Rosyth in Fife is the support base for navy operations in Scotland and also serves as the Naval Regional Office (NRO Scotland and Northern Ireland). The Royal Navy's LR5 and Submarine Rescue Service is based in Renfrew, near Glasgow. The Royal Navy's submarine nuclear reactor development establishment, is located at Vulcan NTRE, adjacent to Dounreay, which was the site of the UK's fast breeder nuclear reactor programme. RM Condor at Arbroath, Angus is home to 45 Commando, Royal Marines, part of 3 Commando Brigade. Also, the Fleet Protection Group Royal Marines is based at HMNB Clyde.

Since 1999, the Scottish Government has had devolved responsibility over fisheries protection duties in Scotland's exclusive economic zone, carried out by the Scottish Fisheries Protection Agency, which consists of a fleet of four offshore patrol vessels and two Cessna 406 maritime patrol aircraft.[68]

Royal Air Force edit

A single front-line Royal Air Force station is located in Scotland. RAF Lossiemouth, located in Moray, is the RAF's northern QRA(I) base, supported by four squadrons of Typhoons.

Military Training Areas edit

The only open air live depleted uranium weapons test range in the British Isles is located near Dundrennan.[69] As a result, over 7000 weakly radioactive munitions lie on the seabed of the Solway Firth.[70] In 2007, the MoD land holdings in Scotland (owned, leased or with legal rights) was 1,153 km2 representing 31.5% of the MoD's British estate.[71] Prominent Training Areas include Garelochhead, Cape Wrath, Barry Buddon, The Army Selection and Development Center in Penicuik, and Castlelaw in the Pentland Hills.

Industry edit

 
The bulk of the Royal Navy's surface fleet, such the Type 45 destroyer HMS Daring, is designed and built by BAE Systems Surface Ships in Glasgow. Although diminished from its early 20th century heights, Glasgow remains the hub of the UK's shipbuilding industry.

Defence contractors and related companies employ around 30,000 people in Scotland and form an important part of the economy. The principal companies operating in the country include: BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce, Raytheon, Thales and Babcock.

Royal Navy bases in Scotland edit

Former Royal Navy bases in Scotland edit

Former Royal Naval Air Stations in Scotland edit

Royal Air Force stations in Scotland edit

 
RAF Lossiemouth's former No. 617 Squadron RAF Tornado GR4 aircraft

Former Royal Air Force stations in Scotland edit

Scottish Units in the British Army edit

Previously within the British Army, the Scottish Infantry comprised a number of 'county regiments', each recruiting from a local area. In 2006, the remaining regiments, known collectively as the Scottish Division, were amalgamated to form the Royal Regiment of Scotland. The amalgamation was vigorously opposed by veterans and supporters of the old regiments. Scottish soldiers serve nationally alongside soldiers from England, Wales and Northern Ireland in all Combat Support Arms and Services (RA, RE, Signals, Intelligence, AAC, RLC, AGC, REME and AMS), Special Forces, the Household Cavalry and the Parachute Regiment of the British Army, with the following current Formations and Units having specific Scottish connections:

Former Scottish Units in the British Army edit

Regular British Army Units currently based in Scotland edit

Scottish units that are not part of the British Army edit

Scottish regiments in other countries edit

Australia edit

List of active regiments in the Australian Army:

  • 5th/6th Battalion, Royal Victoria Regiment (Victorian Scottish Regiment)
  • 10th/27th Battalion, Royal South Australia Regiment (South Australian Scottish Regiment)
  • 16th Battalion, Royal Western Australia Regiment (Cameron Highlanders)
  • 41st Battalion, Royal New South Wales Regiment (Byron Scottish Regiment)

List of former Scottish regiments in Australia:

  • 30th Battalion (The New South Wales Scottish Regiment)
  • 61st Battalion (The Queensland Cameron Highlanders)

List of former Scottish regiments in the Australian colonial forces:

  • Byron Regiment (Sutherland)
  • New South Wales Scottish Regiment
  • South Australian Scottish Regiment
  • Victorian Scottish Regiment (VSR)

Canada edit

List of active regiments in the Canadian Forces:

Defunct Scottish regiments, many merged to former larger regiments:

France edit

Inactive regiments of the French Army:

South Africa edit

 
Troops of the South African Scottish regiment in France, 1917

There are three regiments in the South African Defence Force with Scottish roots:

New Zealand edit

  • New Zealand Scots Regiment (1st NZ Scottish Regiment and 1st Armoured Car Regiment) was raised in 1939 and renamed 1990 as New Zealand Scottish and disbanded amongst other units:

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ J. Hunter, Last of the Free: A History of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland (London: Random House, 2011), ISBN 1-78057-006-6, pp. 106–111.
  3. ^ A. Macquarrie, Medieval Scotland: Kinship and Nation (Thrupp: Sutton, 2004), ISBN 0-7509-2977-4, p. 147.
  4. ^ N. A. M. Rodger, The Safeguard of the Sea: A Naval History of Britain 660–1649 (London: Penguin UK, 2004), ISBN 0-14-191257-X, pp. 74–5.
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Further reading edit

  • Dziennik, Matthew. "Fatal land: war, empire, and the Highland soldier in British America, 1756–1783." (PhD dissertation, University of Edinburgh, 2011). Online, With detailed bibliography
  • Henshaw, Victoria. Scotland and the British Army, 1700–1750: Defending the Union (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014)
  • Kenyon, John, and Jane Ohlmeyer. The British and Irish Civil Wars: A Military History of Scotland, Ireland, and England, 1638–1660 (1998).
  • Konstam, Angus, and Peter Dennis. Strongholds of the Picts: The fortifications of Dark Age Scotland (2013)
  • Murdoch, Steve, and A. Mackillop. Fighting for Identity: Scottish Military Experience C. 1550–1900 (2003)
  • Peters, David. Scotland's Military History (2013)
  • Phillips, Gervase. The Anglo-Scots Wars, 1513–1550: A Military History (1999)
  • Scobie, Ian Hamilton Mackay, ed. The Scottish regiments of the British army (Oliver and Boyd, 1942)
  • Spiers, Edward M. and Jeremy A. Crang. A Military History of Scotland (2014)
  • Spiers, Edward M. The Scottish Soldier and Empire, 1854–1902 (Edinburgh University Press, 2006).
  • Watt, Patrick. 2019. " Manpower, Myth and Memory: Analysing Scotland's Military Contribution to the Great War." Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 39.1, 2019, 75–100
  • Wood, Stephen. The Scottish Soldier: An illustrated social and military history of Scotland's fighting men through two thousand years (1999)

External links edit

military, history, scotland, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Military history of Scotland news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message Historically Scotland has a long military tradition that predates the Act of Union with England Its soldiers form part of the armed forces of the United Kingdom more usually referred to domestically within Britain as the British Armed Forces The Thin Red Line of 1854 by Robert Gibb in his 1881 painting Contents 1 History prior to the Union 1 1 Royal Scots Navy 1 2 Scottish armies 1 3 Wars and battles to 1707 1 4 Castles 2 Part of the British Armed Forces 2 1 Napoleonic Wars 2 2 Victorian amp Colonial Warfare 2 3 First World War 2 4 Second World War 2 5 The Cold War amp The End of Empire 3 Defence establishments in Scotland 3 1 Army 3 2 Royal Naval 3 3 Royal Air Force 3 4 Military Training Areas 3 5 Industry 3 6 Royal Navy bases in Scotland 3 6 1 Former Royal Navy bases in Scotland 3 6 2 Former Royal Naval Air Stations in Scotland 3 7 Royal Air Force stations in Scotland 3 7 1 Former Royal Air Force stations in Scotland 3 8 Scottish Units in the British Army 3 8 1 Former Scottish Units in the British Army 3 9 Regular British Army Units currently based in Scotland 3 10 Scottish units that are not part of the British Army 4 Scottish regiments in other countries 4 1 Australia 4 2 Canada 4 3 France 4 4 South Africa 4 5 New Zealand 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory prior to the Union editRoyal Scots Navy edit Main articles Royal Scots Navy and History of the Royal Navy nbsp A carving of a birlinn from a sixteenth century tombstone in MacDufie s Chapel Oronsay as engraved in 1772 There are mentions in Medieval records of fleets commanded by Scottish kings including William the Lion 1 and Alexander II The latter took personal command of a large naval force which sailed from the Firth of Clyde and anchored off the island of Kerrera in 1249 intended to transport his army in a campaign against the Kingdom of the Isles but he died before the campaign could begin 2 3 Viking naval power was disrupted by conflicts between the Scandinavian kingdoms but entered a period of resurgence in the thirteenth century when Norwegian kings began to build some of the largest ships seen in Northern European waters These included king Hakon Hakonsson s Kristsudin built at Bergen from 1262 to 1263 which was 260 feet 79 m long of 37 rooms 4 In 1263 Hakon responded to Alexander III s designs on the Hebrides by personally leading a major fleet of forty vessels including the Kristsudin to the islands where they were swelled by local allies to as many as 200 ships 5 Records indicate that Alexander had several large oared ships built at Ayr but he avoided a sea battle 1 Defeat on land at the Battle of Largs and winter storms forced the Norwegian fleet to return home leaving the Scottish crown as the major power in the region and leading to the ceding of the Western Isles to Alexander in 1266 6 English naval power was vital to Edward I s successful campaigns in Scotland from 1296 using largely merchant ships from England Ireland and his allies in the Islands to transport and supply his armies 7 Part of the reason for Robert I s success was his ability to call on naval forces from the Islands As a result of the expulsion of the Flemings from England in 1303 he gained the support of a major naval power in the North Sea 7 The development of naval power allowed Robert to successfully defeat English attempts to capture him in the Highlands and Islands and to blockade major English controlled fortresses at Perth and Stirling the last forcing Edward II to attempt the relief that resulted at English defeat at Bannockburn in 1314 7 Scottish naval forces allowed invasions of the Isle of Man in 1313 and 1317 and Ireland in 1315 They were also crucial in the blockade of Berwick which led to its fall in 1318 7 After the establishment of Scottish independence Robert I turned his attention to building up a Scottish naval capacity This was largely focused on the west coast with the Exchequer Rolls of 1326 recording the feudal duties of his vassals in that region to aid him with their vessels and crews Towards the end of his reign he supervised the building of at least one royal man of war near his palace at Cardross on the River Clyde In the late fourteenth century naval warfare with England was conducted largely by hired Scots Flemish and French merchantmen and privateers 8 James I took a greater interest in naval power After his return to Scotland in 1424 he established a shipbuilding yard at Leith a house for marine stores and a workshop King s ships were built and equipped there to be used for trade as well as war one of which accompanied him on his expedition to the Islands in 1429 The office of Lord High Admiral was probably founded in this period In his struggles with his nobles in 1488 James III received assistance from his two warships the Flower and the King s Carvel also known as the Yellow Carvel 8 nbsp A model of the Great Michael in the Royal Museum There were various attempts to create royal naval forces in the fifteenth century James IV put the enterprise on a new footing founding a harbour at Newhaven and a dockyard at the Pools of Airth 9 He acquired a total of 38 ships including the Great Michael 10 at that time the largest ship in Europe 10 11 Scottish ships had some success against privateers accompanied the king on his expeditions in the islands and intervened in conflicts Scandinavia and the Baltic 8 but were sold after the Flodden campaign and after 1516 and Scottish naval efforts would rely on privateering captains and hired merchantmen 8 James V did not share his father s interest in developing a navy and shipbuilding fell behind the Low Countries 12 Despite truces between England and Scotland there were periodic outbreaks of a guerre de course 13 James V built a new harbour at Burntisland in 1542 14 The chief use of naval power in his reign was a series of expeditions to the Isles and France 15 After the Union of Crowns in 1603 conflict between Scotland and England ended but Scotland found itself involved in England s foreign policy opening up Scottish shipping to attack In 1626 a squadron of three ships were bought and equipped 11 There were also several marque fleets of privateers 16 In 1627 the Royal Scots Navy and accompanying contingents of burgh privateers participated in the major expedition to Biscay 17 The Scots also returned to West Indies 18 and in 1629 took part in the capture of Quebec 19 During the Bishop s Wars the king attempted to blockade Scotland and planned amphibious assaults from England on the East coast and from Ireland to the West 20 Scottish privateers took a number of English prizes 21 After the Covenanters allied with the English Parliament they established two patrol squadrons for the Atlantic and North Sea coasts known collectively as the Scotch Guard 22 The Scottish navy was unable to withstand the English fleet that accompanied the army led by Cromwell that conquered Scotland in 1649 51 and the Scottish ships and crews were split up among the Commonwealth fleet 23 Scottish seamen received protection against arbitrary impressment by English men of war but a fixed quota of conscripts for the Royal Navy was levied from the sea coast burghs during the second half of the seventeenth century 24 Royal Navy patrols were now found in Scottish waters even in peacetime 25 In the Second 1665 67 and Third Anglo Dutch Wars 1672 74 between 80 and 120 captains took Scottish letters of marque and privateers played a major part in the naval conflict 26 In the 1690s a small fleet of five ships was established by merchants for the Darien Scheme 27 and a professional navy was established for the protection of commerce in home waters during the Nine Years War with three purpose built warships bought from English shipbuilders in 1696 After the Act of Union in 1707 these vessels were transferred to the Royal Navy 28 Scottish armies edit Main articles Warfare in Medieval Scotland Warfare in early modern Scotland and Royal Scottish Army nbsp Scottish soldiers in the period of the Hundred Years War detail from an edition of Froissart s Chronicles Before the Wars of the Three Kingdoms in 1644 there was no standing army in the Kingdom of Scotland In the Early Middle Ages war in Scotland was characterised by the use of small war bands of household troops often engaging in raids and low level warfare 29 By the High Middle Ages the kings of Scotland could command forces of tens of thousands of men for short periods as part of the common army mainly of poorly armoured spear and bowmen After the Davidian Revolution of the 12th century which introduced elements of feudalism to Scotland these forces were augmented by small numbers of mounted and heavily armoured knights These armies rarely managed to stand up to the usually larger and more professional armies produced by England but they were used to good effect by Robert I of Scotland at Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 to secure Scottish independence 30 After the Wars of Scottish Independence the Auld Alliance between Scotland and France played a large part in the country s military activities especially during the Hundred Years War In the Late Middle Ages under the Stewart kings forces were further augmented by specialist troops particularly men at arms and archers hired by bonds of manrent similar to English indentures of the same period 31 Scottish warfare in this period was mostly raids and ambushes performed by Scottish nobles and men at arms who would fight on foot during pitched battles or on horse when skirmishing or carrying out raids Contemporary depictions show nobles and their retinues in fine plate armor that is highly protective and well suited for foot combat with many wearing fine great bascinets late into the 15th century possibly due to the need for extra protection from English bows and bills They were accompanied by their retinues usually mounted longbowmen or spearmen who would fight with the same flexibility also preferring to fight on foot in pitched battle Archers became much sought after as mercenaries in French armies of the 15th century in order to help counter the English superiority in this arm becoming a major element of the French royal guards as the Garde Ecossaise 32 Scotland played a major role in the Hundred Years War with many Scots present from Bauge all the way to the end of the Loire Valley Campaign and the Battle of Patay The Scots Men at Arms and Life Guards in France From Their Formation Until Their Final Dissolution A D MCCCCXVIII MDCCCXXX Volume I The Stewarts also adopted major innovations in continental warfare such as longer pikes and the extensive use of artillery However in the early 16th century one of the best armed and largest Scottish armies ever assembled still met with defeat at the hands of an English army at the Battle of Flodden in 1513 which saw the destruction of a large number of ordinary troops a large section of the nobility and the king James IV 33 nbsp The earliest image of Scottish soldiers wearing tartan 1631 German engraving In the sixteenth century the crown took an increasing role in the supply of military equipment 34 The pike began to replace the spear and the Scots began to convert from the bow to gunpowder firearms 35 The feudal heavy cavalry had begun to disappear from Scottish armies and the Scots fielded relatively large numbers of light horse often drawn from the borders 36 James IV brought in experts from France Germany and the Netherlands and established a gun foundry in 1511 15 A clan leader like John Grant of Freuchie in 1596 could muster from his kin friends and servants 500 men able to fight for King James and the Sheriff of Moray Of these 40 had habergeons two handled swords and helmets and another 40 were armed according to the Highland custom with bows helmets swords and targes 37 In the early seventeenth century relatively large numbers of Scots took service in foreign armies involved in the Thirty Years War 38 As armed conflict with Charles I in the Bishop s Wars became likely hundreds of Scots mercenaries returned home from foreign service including experienced leaders like Alexander and David Leslie and these veterans played an important role in training recruits 20 These systems would form the basis of the Covenanter armies that intervened in the Civil Wars in England and Ireland 39 Scottish infantry were generally armed as was almost universal in Western Europe with a combination of pike and shot Scottish armies may also have had individuals with a variety of weapons including bows Lochaber axes and halberds 40 Most cavalry were probably equipped with pistols and swords although there is some evidence that they included lancers 41 Royalist armies like those led by James Graham Marquis of Montrose 1643 44 and in Glencairn s rising 1653 54 were mainly composed of conventionally armed infantry with pike and shot 42 Montrose s forces were short of heavy artillery suitable for siege warfare and had only a small force of cavalry 43 nbsp Soldier of the Black Watch c 1740 At the Restoration the Privy Council established a force of several infantry regiments and a few troops of horse and there were attempts to found a national militia on the English model The standing army was mainly employed in the suppression of Covenanter rebellions and the guerrilla war undertaken by the Cameronians in the East 44 Pikemen became less important in the late seventeenth century and after the introduction of the socket bayonet disappeared altogether while matchlock muskets were replaced by the more reliable flintlock 44 On the eve of the Glorious Revolution the standing army in Scotland was about 3 000 men in various regiments and another 268 veterans in the major garrison towns 45 After the Glorious Revolution the Scots were drawn into King William II s continental wars beginning with the Nine Years War in Flanders 1689 97 46 By the time of the Act of Union the Kingdom of Scotland had a standing army of seven units of infantry two of horse and one troop of Horse Guards besides varying levels of fortress artillery in the garrison castles of Edinburgh Dumbarton and Stirling 47 Wars and battles to 1707 edit Main article List of battles involving the Kingdom of Scotland nbsp The earliest known depiction of the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 from a 1440s manuscript of Walter Bower s Scotichronicon nbsp Battle of Pinkie woodcut illustration from William Patten 1548 Scottish Norwegian War Battle of Largs Wars of Scottish Independence First War of Scottish Independence Battle of Dunbar Battle of Stirling Bridge Battle of Falkirk Battle of Bannockburn Second War of Scottish Independence Battle of Halidon Hill Battle of Nesbit Moor Anglo Scottish Wars Battle of Otterburn Battle of Nesbit Moor Battle of Piperdean Battle of Sark War of the League of Cambrai Battle of Flodden Rough Wooing Battle of Ancrum Moor Battle of Pinkie Siege of Haddington Marian civil war Battle of Langside Lang Siege Wars of the Three Kingdoms Bishops Wars Irish Confederate Wars First English Civil War Second English Civil War Battle of Preston Third English Civil War Battle of Dunbar Battle of Worcester Jacobite risings Jacobite rising 1689 92 Battle of Killiecrankie Castles edit Main article Scottish castles nbsp Caerlaverock Castle a moated triangular castle first built in the thirteenth century Castles arrived in Scotland with the introduction of feudalism in the twelfth century 48 Initially these were wooden motte and bailey constructions 49 but many were replaced by stone castles with a high curtain wall 50 During the Wars of Independence Robert the Bruce pursued a policy of castle slighting 51 In the late Middle Ages new castles were built some on a grander scale as livery and maintenance castles that could support a large garrison 50 Gunpowder weaponry led to the use of gun ports platforms to mount guns and walls adapted to resist bombardment 52 Many of the late Medieval castles built in the borders were in the form of tower houses smaller pele towers or simpler bastle houses 53 From the fifteenth century there was a phase of Renaissance palace building which restructured them as castle type palaces beginning at Linlithgow 54 Elements of Medieval castles royal palaces and tower houses were used in the construction of Scots baronial estate houses which were built largely for comfort but with a castle like appearance 55 56 In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the military significance of castles declined 57 58 but they increasingly became tourist attractions 59 Elements of the Scots Baronial style would be revived from the late eighteenth century 60 and the trend would be confirmed in popularity by the rebuilding of Balmoral Castle in the nineteenth century and its adoption as a retreat by Queen Victoria 61 In the twentieth century there were only isolated examples of new castle influenced houses 62 63 Part of the British Armed Forces edit nbsp Scottish soldier s cap worn after the 1707 Union nbsp Comical depiction of a Scottish soldier c 1720 Main articles British military history and History of the British Army After the Act of Union in 1707 the Scottish Army and Navy merged with those of England The new British Army incorporated existing Scottish regiments such as the Scots Guards Marquis of Argyll s Royal Regiment The Royal Scots 1st of Foot Royal Regiment of Foot King s Own Scottish Borderers 25th of Foot Leven s Regiment The 26th Cameronian Regiment of Foot The Earl of Angus s Regiment Scots Greys Scots Dragoons and the Royal Scots Fusiliers 21st of Foot Earl of Mar s Regiment of Foot The three vessels of the small Royal Scottish Navy were transferred to the Royal Navy Royal William a fifth rate 32 gun frigate became HMS Edinburgh Royal Mary a sixth rate 24 gun frigate became HMS Glasgow Dumbarton Castle a sixth rate frigate became HMS Dumbarton Castle The new Armed Forces were controlled by the War Office and Admiralty from London From the mid eighteenth century the British Army began to recruit relatively large numbers of Highlanders The first official Highland regiment to be raised for the British army was the Black Watch in 1740 but the growth of Highland regiments was delayed by the 1745 Jacobite Rebellion 64 During this period Scottish soldiers and sailors were instrumental in supporting the expansion of the British Empire and became involved in many international conflicts These included the War of the Spanish Succession 1702 13 the Quadruple Alliance 1718 20 the War of the Austrian Succession 1740 48 the Seven Years War 1756 63 and the American Wars of Independence 1775 83 44 Napoleonic Wars edit Scots had a notable influence in warfare during this period Prominent sailors of the era included Admiral Sir Charles John Napier Admiral Adam Duncan 1st Viscount Duncan of Camperdown led the Royal Navy fleet that defeated the Dutch at the Battle of Camperdown on 11 October 1797 Admiral Thomas Cochrane 10th Earl of Dundonald was one of the most daring and successful captains of the Napoleonic Wars leading the French to nickname him le loup de mer the sea wolf After being dismissed from the Royal Navy he served in the rebel navies of Chile Brazil and Greece during their wars of independence before being reinstated as an admiral in the Royal Navy His life and exploits were one of the inspirations for the twentieth century novelists C S Forester s Horatio Hornblower and Patrick O Brian s Jack Aubrey Lieutenant general Sir John Moore Alexander Abercromby Thomas Graham 1st Baron Lynedoch George Ramsay 9th Earl of Dalhousie Robert Craufurd John Hope 4th Earl of Hopetoun Victorian amp Colonial Warfare edit First World War edit nbsp Cameronians Scottish Rifles in a trench at the Somme 1916 Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig led the British Army on the Western Front from 1915 and oversaw some of the largest and bloodiest episodes of the war Battles included the Somme 1916 Ypres 1917 Cambrai 1917 Amiens 1918 and Arras 1918 Due to the kilts worn by the Scottish soldiers on the World War I battlefront their German enemies called them the ladies from hell 65 Haig founded the Earl Haig Poppy Fund for ex servicemen in the aftermath According to the historian T C Smout It is still not known how many Scots died in the war One well argued estimate put the figure at 110 000 equivalent to about 10 percent of the Scottish male population aged between sixteen and fifty and probably to about 15 per cent of total British war dead the sacrifice was higher in proportionate terms than for any other country in the Empire 66 Second World War edit Scottish soldiers fought in many battles in World War II in both the Pacific and European theatres The Cold War amp The End of Empire editDefence establishments in Scotland editThis article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2012 Army edit In the wake of the Jacobite risings several fortresses were built throughout the Highlands in the 18th century by General Wade in order to pacify the region including Fort George Fort Augustus and Fort William The Ordnance Survey was also commissioned to map the region Later due to their topography and perceived remoteness parts of Scotland have housed many sensitive defence establishments some controversial During World War II Allied and British Commandos trained at Achnacarry in the Highlands and the island of Gruinard was used for an exercise in biological warfare Regular British Army Garrisons currently operational in Scotland are Fort George near Inverness Redford Barracks and Dreghorn Barracks in Edinburgh and Glencorse Barracks at Penicuik Royal Naval edit Between 1960 and 1991 the Holy Loch was a base for the US Navy s fleet of Polaris armed George Washington class ballistic missile submarines Today HM Naval Base Clyde 25 miles 40 km west of Glasgow is the base for the four Trident armed Vanguard class ballistic missile submarines which are armed with approximately 200 Trident nuclear warheads 67 Since the decommissioning of free falling bombs in 1998 the Trident SLBM system is the UK s only nuclear deterrent HMS Caledonia at Rosyth in Fife is the support base for navy operations in Scotland and also serves as the Naval Regional Office NRO Scotland and Northern Ireland The Royal Navy s LR5 and Submarine Rescue Service is based in Renfrew near Glasgow The Royal Navy s submarine nuclear reactor development establishment is located at Vulcan NTRE adjacent to Dounreay which was the site of the UK s fast breeder nuclear reactor programme RM Condor at Arbroath Angus is home to 45 Commando Royal Marines part of 3 Commando Brigade Also the Fleet Protection Group Royal Marines is based at HMNB Clyde Since 1999 the Scottish Government has had devolved responsibility over fisheries protection duties in Scotland s exclusive economic zone carried out by the Scottish Fisheries Protection Agency which consists of a fleet of four offshore patrol vessels and two Cessna 406 maritime patrol aircraft 68 Royal Air Force edit A single front line Royal Air Force station is located in Scotland RAF Lossiemouth located in Moray is the RAF s northern QRA I base supported by four squadrons of Typhoons Military Training Areas edit The only open air live depleted uranium weapons test range in the British Isles is located near Dundrennan 69 As a result over 7000 weakly radioactive munitions lie on the seabed of the Solway Firth 70 In 2007 the MoD land holdings in Scotland owned leased or with legal rights was 1 153 km2 representing 31 5 of the MoD s British estate 71 Prominent Training Areas include Garelochhead Cape Wrath Barry Buddon The Army Selection and Development Center in Penicuik and Castlelaw in the Pentland Hills Industry edit nbsp The bulk of the Royal Navy s surface fleet such the Type 45 destroyer HMS Daring is designed and built by BAE Systems Surface Ships in Glasgow Although diminished from its early 20th century heights Glasgow remains the hub of the UK s shipbuilding industry Defence contractors and related companies employ around 30 000 people in Scotland and form an important part of the economy The principal companies operating in the country include BAE Systems Rolls Royce Raytheon Thales and Babcock Royal Navy bases in Scotland edit HMNB Clyde HMS Neptune Argyll and Bute Rosyth Dockyard HMS Caledonia Fife DM Beith Beith North Ayrshire RM Condor formerly HMS Condor Arbroath Angus Loch Ewe Former Royal Navy bases in Scotland edit Scapa Flow Orkney Invergordon Easter Ross Port Edgar South Queensferry City of Edinburgh HMS Cochrane Rosyth Port HHZ Loch a Chairn Bhain Kylesku Sutherland Highland HMS Columbine Royal Navy Destroyer Depot Based at Port Edgar 1917 1938 HMS Curlew Inellan Dunoon Argyll amp Bute Harbour Defence Depot HMS Dundonald Troon Combined Operations Craft Working up base HMS Hopetoun Combined Operations Training Centre Based at Port Edgar 1943 1945 HMS Lochinvar Minesweeping amp Fisheries Protection Depot Based at Port Edgar 1939 1943 and 1946 1975 Based at Granton 1943 1946 HMS Quebec Inverary Argyll amp Bute Combined Operations Craft Working up base HMS Varbel Port Bannatyne Argyll amp Bute Midget submarine training shore base HMS Western Isles Tobermory Argyll amp Bute Anti submarine working up base Former Royal Naval Air Stations in Scotland edit HMS Condor Arbroath Angus HMS Fieldfare Evanton Ross and Cromarty Highland HMS Fulmar Lossiemouth Moray HMS Gannet Prestwick South Ayrshire HMS Jackdaw Crail Fife HMS Landrail Macrihanish Argyll and Bute HMS Merganser Rattray Aberdeenshire HMS Merlin Donibristle Fife HMS Nighthawk Drem East Lothian HMS Owl Fearn Wester Ross Highland HMS Peewit East Haven Angus HMS Robin Grimsetter Kirkwall Orkney HMS Sanderling Abbotsinch Renfrewshire Now Glasgow International Airport HMS Sparrowhawk Hatston Orkney HMS Tern Twatt Orkney HMS Wagtail Heathfield Ayr South Ayrshire Royal Air Force stations in Scotland edit nbsp RAF Lossiemouth s former No 617 Squadron RAF Tornado GR4 aircraft RAF Benbecula RAF Kirknewton RAF Lossiemouth RAF Tain Former Royal Air Force stations in Scotland edit RAF Alness RAF Annan RAF Balado Bridge RAF Banff RAF Bishopbriggs RAF Black Isle RAF Bowmore RAF Brackla RAF Buchan RAF Buttergask 11 EFTS 72 RAF Castle Kennedy RAF Castletown RAF Charterhall RAF Connel 244 MU 73 RAF Dalcross RAF Dallachy RAF Dornoch RAF Drem RAF Dumfries RAF Dundonald RAF Dunino RAF Dyce RAF East Fortune RAF Edzell RAF Elgin RAF Errol RAF Fordoun RAF Forres RAF Fraserburgh RAF Gailes RAF Grangemouth RAF Greenock RAF Helensburgh MAEE 74 RAF Inverness RAF Isbister Bay RAF Kidsdale Burrow Head No 651 Sqn 75 RAF Kinloss RAF Kirkandrews No 15 EFTS 76 RAF Kirkpatrick No 15 EFTS 77 RAF Kirkton RAF Kirkwall RAF Largs No 231 Sqn 78 RAF Leanach RAF Lennoxlove RAF Lerwick 79 RAF Leuchars RAF Lossiemouth RAF Low Eldrig RAF Machrihanish RAF Milltown RAF Montrose RAF Oban RAF Perth RAF Peterhead RAF Portellon RAF Prestwick RAF Renfrew RAF Saxa Vord RAF Skatsa RAF Skeabrae RAF Skitten RAF Stornoway RAF Stravithie RAF Sullom Voe RAF Sumburgh RAF Tealing RAF Tiree RAF Turnberry RAF Turnhouse RAF West Freugh RAF Whitefield No 11 EFTS No 5 FIS 80 RAF Wick RAF Windyhead RAF Wigtown RAF Winterseugh RAF Woodhaven No 201 Sqn No 333 Sqn No 1477 Norwegian Flight 81 Scottish Units in the British Army edit Previously within the British Army the Scottish Infantry comprised a number of county regiments each recruiting from a local area In 2006 the remaining regiments known collectively as the Scottish Division were amalgamated to form the Royal Regiment of Scotland The amalgamation was vigorously opposed by veterans and supporters of the old regiments Scottish soldiers serve nationally alongside soldiers from England Wales and Northern Ireland in all Combat Support Arms and Services RA RE Signals Intelligence AAC RLC AGC REME and AMS Special Forces the Household Cavalry and the Parachute Regiment of the British Army with the following current Formations and Units having specific Scottish connections 51 Scottish Brigade 52 Infantry Brigade Royal Regiment of Scotland Scots Guards Royal Scots Dragoon Guards 1st Royal Tank Regiment 19th Regiment Royal Artillery 40th Regiment Royal Artillery A London Scottish Company London Regiment 105th Regiment Royal Artillery 32 Scottish Signal Regiment 154 Scottish Regiment RLC A Ayrshire Earl of Carrick s Own Yeomanry amp C Fife and Forfar Yeomanry Scottish Horse Squadrons of the Queen s Own Yeomanry Regiment Former Scottish Units in the British Army edit 9th Scottish Division 15th Scottish Division 51st Highland Division 52nd Lowland Division Highland Brigade Lowland Brigade 4th Royal Tank Regiment The Cameronians Scottish Rifles Glasgow Highlanders The Gordon Highlanders Highland Light Infantry Liverpool Scottish London Scottish King s Own Scottish Borderers Queen s Own Cameron Highlanders Queen s Own Highlanders Seaforth and Camerons The Royal Scots Royal Scots Fusiliers Scots Greys Seaforth Highlanders 93rd Sutherland Highlanders Regular British Army Units currently based in Scotland edit The Royal Highland Fusiliers 2nd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland Glencorse Barracks The Black Watch 3rd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland Fort George 3rd Battalion The Rifles Redford Barracks Balaklava Company Argylls 5th Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland Redford Barracks Edinburgh 39 Engineer Regiment Kinloss Barracks Royal Scots Dragoon Guards Leuchars Station Scottish units that are not part of the British Army edit Atholl Highlanders Royal Company of Archers High Constables of HolyroodhouseScottish regiments in other countries editAustralia edit List of active regiments in the Australian Army 5th 6th Battalion Royal Victoria Regiment Victorian Scottish Regiment 10th 27th Battalion Royal South Australia Regiment South Australian Scottish Regiment 16th Battalion Royal Western Australia Regiment Cameron Highlanders 41st Battalion Royal New South Wales Regiment Byron Scottish Regiment List of former Scottish regiments in Australia 30th Battalion The New South Wales Scottish Regiment 61st Battalion The Queensland Cameron Highlanders List of former Scottish regiments in the Australian colonial forces Byron Regiment Sutherland New South Wales Scottish Regiment South Australian Scottish Regiment Victorian Scottish Regiment VSR Canada edit List of active regiments in the Canadian Forces 42nd Field Artillery Regiment Lanark and Renfrew Scottish RCA 48th Highlanders of Canada 1891 The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada Princess Louise s 1903 The Black Watch Royal Highland Regiment of Canada 1862 Cape Breton Highlanders 1871 1954 2011 present The Calgary Highlanders 1910 The Cameron Highlanders of Ottawa Duke of Edinburgh s Own 1881 The Canadian Scottish Regiment Princess Mary s 1912 The Essex and Kent Scottish 1954 The Lake Superior Scottish Regiment 1905 The Lorne Scots Peel Dufferin and Halton Regiment 1866 The Nova Scotia Highlanders 1871 The Queen s Own Cameron Highlanders of Canada 1910 The Royal Highland Fusiliers of Canada late 1940s The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada 1910 The Stormont Dundas and Glengarry Highlanders 1804 The Toronto Scottish Regiment Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother s Own 1920 Defunct Scottish regiments many merged to former larger regiments The Essex Scottish Regiment 1885 1954 merged into The Essex and Kent Scottish The Pictou Highlanders 1871 1954 Cape Breton Highlanders 1871 1954 and The North Nova Scotia Highlanders 1936 1954 merged to form The Nova Scotia Highlanders Highland Light Infantry of Canada 1886 1954 merged into The Perth and Waterloo Regiment Highland Light Infantry of Canada The New Brunswick Scottish 1946 1954 merged into The Royal New Brunswick Regiment 16th Canadian Battalion The Canadian Scottish CEF 1914 1920 disbanded The 13th Scottish Light Dragoons 1872 1936 disbanded Lorne Rifles Scottish became The Lorne Scots Peel Dufferin and Halton Regiment Cameronians Regiment of Foot Glengarry Fencibles Glengarry Light Infantry France edit Inactive regiments of the French Army Garde Ecossaise 1418 1830 Gens d Armes Ecossais Scots Men At Arms formed 1419 and dissolved 1791 South Africa edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2020 nbsp Troops of the South African Scottish regiment in France 1917 There are three regiments in the South African Defence Force with Scottish roots Pretoria Highlanders 1939 Transvaal Scottish Regiment 1902 Cape Town Highlanders Regiment 1885 New Zealand edit New Zealand Scots Regiment 1st NZ Scottish Regiment and 1st Armoured Car Regiment was raised in 1939 and renamed 1990 as New Zealand Scottish and disbanded amongst other units 1st Royal New Zealand Armoured Regiment of the Royal New Zealand Armoured CorpsSee also edit nbsp Scotland portal nbsp United Kingdom portal Nemo me impune lacessit Scottish National War Memorial National War Museum of Scotland Army School of Bagpipe Music and Highland Drumming Claymore Schiltron Tam o Shanter Earl Haig Fund Scotland Edinburgh Military Tattoo Highland charge Lord High Constable of Scotland Scottish Militia Bill 1708 The Poker Club Garde du Corps The Thin Red Line 1854 battle Scottish regiment Scottish War Memorials Munitions production HM Factory Gretna Nobel Industries Scotland ROF Bishopton ROF DalmuirReferences edit a b P F Tytler History of Scotland Volume 2 London Black 1829 pp 309 10 J Hunter Last of the Free A History of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland London Random House 2011 ISBN 1 78057 006 6 pp 106 111 A Macquarrie Medieval Scotland Kinship and Nation Thrupp Sutton 2004 ISBN 0 7509 2977 4 p 147 N A M Rodger The Safeguard of the Sea A Naval History of Britain 660 1649 London Penguin UK 2004 ISBN 0 14 191257 X pp 74 5 P J Potter Gothic Kings of Britain the Lives of 31 Medieval Rulers 1016 1399 Jefferson North Carolina McFarland 2008 ISBN 0 7864 4038 4 p 157 A Macquarrie Medieval Scotland Kinship and Nation Thrupp Sutton 2004 ISBN 0 7509 2977 4 p 153 a b c d N A M Rodger The Safeguard of the Sea A Naval History of Britain Volume One 660 1649 London Harper 1997 pp 74 90 a b c d J Grant The Old Scots Navy from 1689 to 1710 Publications of the Navy Records Society 44 London Navy Records Society 1913 4 pp i xii N Macdougall James IV Tuckwell 1997 p 235 a b T Christopher Smout Scotland and the Sea Edinburgh Rowman and Littlefield 1992 ISBN 0 85976 338 2 p 45 a b S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 90 04 18568 2 pp 33 4 J E A Dawson Scotland Re Formed 1488 1587 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2007 ISBN 0748614559 pp 181 2 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 9004185682 p 39 T Andrea The Princelie Majestie The Court of James V of Scotland 1528 1542 Birlinn 2005 p 164 a b J E A Dawson Scotland Re Formed 1488 1587 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2007 ISBN 0 7486 1455 9 p 76 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 90 04 18568 2 p 169 R B Manning An Apprenticeship in Arms The Origins of the British Army 1585 1702 Oxford Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0199261490 p 118 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 90 04 18568 2 p 172 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 90 04 18568 2 p 174 a b J S Wheeler The Irish and British Wars 1637 1654 Triumph Tragedy and Failure London Routledge 2002 ISBN 0415221315 pp 19 21 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 90 04 18568 2 p 198 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 90 04 18568 2 pp 204 10 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 9004185682 p 239 D Brunsman The Evil Necessity British Naval Impressment in the Eighteenth Century Atlantic World University of Virginia Press 2013 ISBN 0813933528 A Campbell A History of Clan Campbell From The Restoration To The Present Day Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2004 ISBN 0748617906 p 44 S Murdoch The Terror of the Seas Scottish Maritime Warfare 1513 1713 Leiden Brill 2010 ISBN 9004185682 pp 239 41 A I MacInnes and A H Williamson eds Shaping the Stuart World 1603 1714 The Atlantic Connection Brill 2006 ISBN 900414711X p 349 J Grant The Old Scots Navy from 1689 to 1710 Publications of the Navy Records Society 44 London Navy Records Society 1913 4 p 48 L Alcock Kings and Warriors Craftsmen and Priests in Northern Britain AD 550 850 Edinburgh Society of Antiquaries of Scotland ISBN 0 903903 24 5 p 56 M Brown Bannockburn the Scottish War and the British Isles 1307 1323 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2008 ISBN 0 7486 3333 2 pp 95 9 M Brown The Wars of Scotland 1214 1371 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2004 ISBN 0 7486 1238 6 p 58 P Contamine Scottish soldiers in France in the second half of the 15th century mercenaries immigrants or Frenchmen in the making in G G Simpson ed The Scottish Soldier Abroad 1247 1967 Edinburgh Rowman amp Littlefield 1992 ISBN 0 85976 341 2 pp 16 30 J Wormald Court Kirk and Community Scotland 1470 1625 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1991 ISBN 0 7486 0276 3 p 19 G Phillips The Anglo Scots Wars 1513 1550 A Military History Woodbridge Boydell Press 1999 ISBN 0851157467 p 61 G Phillips The Anglo Scots Wars 1513 1550 A Military History Woodbridge Boydell Press 1999 ISBN 0851157467 p 68 G Phillips The Anglo Scots Wars 1513 1550 A Military History Woodbridge Boydell Press 1999 ISBN 0851157467 pp 69 70 David Masson Register of the Privy Council Addenda 1545 1625 vol 14 Edinburgh 1898 pp 376 7 R Mitchison A History of Scotland London Routledge 3rd edn 2002 ISBN 0415278805 p 183 J S Wheeler The Irish and British Wars 1637 1654 Triumph Tragedy and Failure London Routledge 2002 ISBN 0415221315 p 48 P Edwards S Murdoch and A MacKillop Fighting for Identity Scottish Military Experience c 1550 1900 Leiden Brill 2002 ISBN 9004128239 p 240 M C Fissel The Bishops Wars Charles I s Campaigns Against Scotland 1638 1640 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1994 ISBN 0521466865 p 28 S Reid The Campaigns of Montrose A Military History of the Civil War in Scotland 1639 1646 Mercat Press 1990 ISBN 0901824925 p 51 J Barratt Cavalier Generals King Charles I and his Commanders in the English Civil War 1642 46 Pen amp Sword Military 2004 ISBN 184415128X p 169 a b c E M Furgol Warfare weapons and fortifications 3 1600 1700 in M Lynch ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 211696 7 pp 637 8 J Young Army 1600 1750 in M Lynch ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 211696 7 pp 24 5 Leask Anthony 2006 Sword of Scotland Our Fighting Jocks Pen and Sword Books Limited p 85 ISBN 184415405X D Grove and C Abraham Fortress Scotland and the Jacobites Batsford Historic Scotland 1995 ISBN 978 0 7134 7484 8 p 38 G G Simpson and B Webster Charter Evidence and the Distribution of Mottes in Scotland in R Liddiard ed Anglo Norman Castles Woodbridge Boydell Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 85115 904 1 p 225 T W West Discovering Scottish Architecture Botley Osprey 1985 ISBN 0 85263 748 9 p 21 a b T W West Discovering Scottish Architecture Botley Osprey 1985 ISBN 0 85263 748 9 p 26 J S Hamilton The Plantagenets History of a Dynasty London Continuum 2010 ISBN 1 4411 5712 3 p 116 T W West Discovering Scottish Architecture Botley Osprey 1985 ISBN 0 85263 748 9 p 27 S Reid Castles and Tower Houses of the Scottish Clans 1450 1650 Botley Osprey 2006 ISBN 1 84176 962 2 p 12 M Glendinning R MacInnes and A MacKechnie A History of Scottish Architecture From the Renaissance to the Present Day Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1996 ISBN 0 7486 0849 4 p 16 J Summerson Architecture in Britain 1530 to 1830 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press 9th edn 1993 ISBN 0 300 05886 1 pp 502 11 J Summerson Architecture in Britain 1530 to 1830 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press 9th edn 1993 ISBN 0 300 05886 1 p 502 I D Whyte and K A Whyte The Changing Scottish Landscape 1500 1800 London Routledge 1991 ISBN 978 0 415 02992 6 p 77 S Reid Castles and Tower Houses of the Scottish Clans 1450 1650 Botley Osprey 2006 ISBN 1 84176 962 2 p 57 K H Grenier Tourism and Identity in Scotland 1770 1914 Creating Caledonia Aldershot Ashgate 2005 ISBN 978 0 7546 3694 6 pp 19 and 152 A Jackson The Two Unions Ireland Scotland and the Survival of the United Kingdom 1707 2007 Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 0 19 959399 X p 152 H R Hitchcock Architecture Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press 4th edn 1989 ISBN 0 300 05320 7 p 146 D Mays Housing 4 Country seat c 1600 Present in M Lynch ed Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 0 19 969305 6 pp 326 8 New hotel is Scotland s first castle of the 21st century Sourcewire 10 August 2007 A Mackillop Highland Regiments 1750 1830 in M Lynch ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 211696 7 pp 25 6 Ladies From Hell Chicago Chapter 28 July 2009 Archived from the original on 28 July 2009 Retrieved 18 December 2011 T C Smout A Century of The Scottish People 1830 1950 Collins 1986 p 267 House of Commons Written Answers Hansard 14 Jul 1998 Column 171 Scottish Fisheries Protection Agency BBC Scotland News Online DU shell test firing resumes BBC Scotland News 2001 02 21 Retrieved on 2006 09 13 in English Parliament of the United Kingdom Debates 7 February 2001 Depleted Uranium Shelling UK Defence Statistics 2005 UKDS 2007 Chapter 6 Land Holdings and Buildings Archived from the original on 14 June 2008 Retrieved 15 November 2007 Buttergask Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Connel Oban Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Helensburgh Rhu Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Kidsdale Burrow Head Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Kirkandrews Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Kirkpatrick Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Largs Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Lerwick Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Whitefield Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Woodhaven Newport Tayport Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust Retrieved 13 September 2022 Further reading editDziennik Matthew Fatal land war empire and the Highland soldier in British America 1756 1783 PhD dissertation University of Edinburgh 2011 Online With detailed bibliography Henshaw Victoria Scotland and the British Army 1700 1750 Defending the Union Bloomsbury Publishing 2014 Kenyon John and Jane Ohlmeyer The British and Irish Civil Wars A Military History of Scotland Ireland and England 1638 1660 1998 Konstam Angus and Peter Dennis Strongholds of the Picts The fortifications of Dark Age Scotland 2013 Murdoch Steve and A Mackillop Fighting for Identity Scottish Military Experience C 1550 1900 2003 Peters David Scotland s Military History 2013 Phillips Gervase The Anglo Scots Wars 1513 1550 A Military History 1999 Scobie Ian Hamilton Mackay ed The Scottish regiments of the British army Oliver and Boyd 1942 Spiers Edward M and Jeremy A Crang A Military History of Scotland 2014 Spiers Edward M The Scottish Soldier and Empire 1854 1902 Edinburgh University Press 2006 Watt Patrick 2019 Manpower Myth and Memory Analysing Scotland s Military Contribution to the Great War Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 39 1 2019 75 100 Wood Stephen The Scottish Soldier An illustrated social and military history of Scotland s fighting men through two thousand years 1999 External links editNational War Museum of Scotland National Museums of Scotland Military Collection Historic Scotland Military Records National Archives of Scotland Military Records Scottish Archive Network Scots at War Trust Fettes College Regimental Page Fettes College Scottish War Memorials Forum public access forum recording all of Scotland s War Memorials Scottish Military Research Group Scottish Military History Website Scottish Military History Website Quick Guide to Scottish Regiments Retrieved from https en 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