Scottish History
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Online publication covering Scottish history, heritage and archaeology. Featuring articles, reviews, latest book releases, places to visit, events and more. Published in Ayrshire. Editor: @neilritchie.bsky.social
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A plan of the battle of Prestonpans by Paul Fourdrinier, based on a plan drawn by an officer of engineers who was present at the engagement. The identity of the engineer on whose map this published map is based is unknown.

📜 RA CP/MAIN/5 f.164-164b
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On 13 September 1653, a Cromwellian flotilla anchored off Duart Castle, Isle of Mull, was ravaged by a storm, which sank three warships, including the Swan. The ships were supporting Colonel Ralph Cobbett's expedition to subdue Clan Maclean during the Earl of Glencairn's Royalist uprising.
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3 September 1745: The Jacobite army marched from Blair Castle, through the Pass of Killiecrankie and on to Dunkeld. Charles Edward Stuart lodged in Dunkeld House, where he was entertained by local fiddler Niel Gow. The advance guard led by Lochiel and Keppoch arrived at Perth and secured the town.
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The "Lily" floating airstrip during trials off Lamlash, Isle of Arran, on 30 August 1945. Created by R. M. Hamilton, it consisted of hexagonal buoyancy drums connected to form a flexible landing surface. It was intended to support the planned invasion of Japan.

📸 Lt D. C. Oulds / IWM (A 30255)
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Ready your muskets and join the Sir Arthur Erskine regiment for a tour of the site of Dunkeld's 1689 Jacobite Battle! 22-23 August 2025. For more info and to book visit: www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/dunkeld-ba...
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21 August 1689: The Jacobites under Brigadier-General Alexander Cannon attacked the Earl of Angus's Regiment commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel William Cleland, holding the town of Dunkeld. The brutal urban fighting would see most of the town destroyed before the Jacobites were forced to withdraw.
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On 16 August 1745, two companies from the 2nd Battalion of St Clair’s 1st Regiment of Foot (Royal Scots), marching to reinforce the garrison of Fort William, were attacked by a party of Macdonalds at Highbridge in the first military engagement of the Jacobite Rising of 1745.
Action at Highbridge: The first shots of the Jacobite ’45 - Jacobite Wars
On 16 August 1745, two companies from the 2nd Battalion of St Clair’s 1st Regiment of Foot (Royal Scots), marching to reinforce the garrison of Fort William, were attacked by a party of Macdonalds at ...
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8 August 1503: 30-year-old James IV married 13-year-old Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII of England, in a ceremony in Holyrood Abbey. The wedding was portrayed as the marriage of the Thistle and the Rose by the Scots poet William Dunbar.
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8 August 1503: 30-year-old James IV married 13-year-old Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII of England, in a ceremony in Holyrood Abbey. The wedding was portrayed as the marriage of the Thistle and the Rose by the Scots poet William Dunbar.
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The 9th (Highlanders) Battalion, Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment) at Leith following their mobilisation in August 1914. At the outbreak of the war, they formed part of the Lothian Brigade (TF). The 1/9th Battalion would deploy to France in February 1915 and would first see action at Second Ypres.
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The departure of the 1/5th (The Sutherland and Caithness) Battalion, Seaforth Highlanders from Wick railway station on 6 August 1914, heading for Bedford. The battalion was part of the Territorial Force and formed part of the Seaforth & Cameron Brigade.

📸 IWM (HU 94294)
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Captain Thomas Sheridan Riddell-Webster of the 1st Battalion, Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) at Maryhill Barracks in Glasgow in early August 1914. The 1st Battalion would leave Glasgow by train for Southampton on 13 August and would embark on SS Caledonia the following day.

📸 IWM (Q 51468)
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On 15 June 1725, Russian warships and transport vessels anchored off the Isle of Lewis while en route to Spain. Rumours quickly spread that they were there to land arms and men to support a Jacobite rising, and it was feared that this was part of a larger Russian invasion.
Russia and the Jacobite scare of 1725 | Jacobite Wars
On 15 June 1725, Russian warships and transport vessels anchored off of the Isle of Lewis while en-route to Spain. Rumours quickly spread that they were there to land arms and men to support a Jacobit...
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2 July 1745: Lieutenant-General Sir John Cope, commander-in-chief in Scotland, received a report from Duncan Forbes of Culloden, Lord President of the Court of Session, that Charles Edward Stuart was expected to land in the western highlands that summer to attempt an insurrection.
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19 June 1746: Argyll Militia under Major-General John Campbell of Mamore arrived at St Kilda. Mamore had received intelligence that Charles Edward Stuart and other prominent Jacobites were hiding there. He found nothing but a population largely ignorant of world events.
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Peter Tillemans' painting of the Battle of Glen Shiel commemorates Major-General Joseph Wightman's victory over the Jacobite forces under the Marquis of Tullibardine on 10 June 1719. It is one of the few extant oil paintings of the Highland landscape from the first half of the 18th century.
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Colonel James Campbell's Dragoons (Royal Scots Greys) with their distinctive mitre caps guarding Spanish and Highland captives at the battle of Glen Shiel, fought on 10 June 1719. 3 Troops of the Greys saw action under Major Patrick Robertson. Painting by Lionel Edwards.
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A Polish soldier of General Stanisław Maczek's 1st Polish Armoured Division feeding young owls sitting on a 25-pounder at the Artillery School in Blairadam, Fife in May 1943.
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15 May 1689: With the Firth of Clyde secured by Captain George Rooke's Royal Navy squadron, Captain William Young's 500-strong Scottish government expeditionary force boarded hired boats at Largs and sailed across to Tarbert in northern Kintyre, where the force disembarked later that day.
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12 May 1746: Alexander Macdonald of Glencoe's Regiment surrendered to Major-General John Campbell of Mamore at his camp in Appin. Mamore allowed the common men to return home but detained the gentlemen of the regiment. Macdonald told Mamore that he had been intimidated into joining the Jacobites.
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During the Jacobite Rising of 1719, Royal Navy warships attacked and captured the Spanish-held Eilean Donan Castle in Kintail. The castle was the main Jacobite base and was cannonaded into submission before being seized by a naval landing party and blown up to prevent its further use.
The Royal Navy’s capture of Eilean Donan Castle | Jacobite Wars
During the Jacobite Rising of 1719, Royal Navy warships attacked and captured the Spanish-held Eilean Donan Castle in Kintail. The castle was the main Jacobite base and was cannonaded into submission ...
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7 May 1689: A 500-strong Scottish government force drawn from a number of regiments and under the command of Captain William Young of Lord Bargany's Regiment was ordered to be assembled in Ayrshire, ready to cross over to northern Kintyre and deal with the Jacobite threat there.
A mape of the west of Scotland containing Clydsdail, Nithsdail, Ranfrew, Shyre of Ayre, & Galloway, 1685 / National Library of Scotland).