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  2. Gallowglass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallowglass

    The Gallowglass (also spelled galloglass, gallowglas or galloglas; from Irish: gallóglaigh meaning "foreign warriors") were a class of elite mercenary warriors who were principally members of the Norse-Gaelic clans of Ireland and Scotland between the mid 13th century and late 16th century. It originally applied to Scots, who shared a common ...

  3. Redshank (soldier) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redshank_(soldier)

    A Highland mercenary fighting in Europe during the Thirty Years War, with a bow, plaid and blue bonnet. Redshank was a nickname for Scottish mercenaries from the Highlands and Western Isles contracted to fight in Ireland; they were a prominent feature of Irish armies throughout the 16th century. They were called redshanks because they went ...

  4. Gaelic warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaelic_warfare

    Scottish mercenaries known as Redshanks, were highly sought after. Shown here fighting in the Thirty Years War. The redshanks were usually armed alike, principally with bows (the short bow of Scotland and Ireland, rather than the longbow of Wales and England) and, initially, two-handed weapons like claymores, battle axes or Lochaber axes.

  5. List of Scottish clans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Scottish_clans

    List of Scottish clans. The following is a list of Scottish clans (with and without chiefs) – including, when known, their heraldic crest badges, tartans, mottoes, and other information. The crest badges used by members of Scottish clans are based upon armorial bearings recorded by the Lord Lyon King of Arms in the Public Register of All Arms ...

  6. Category:Scottish mercenaries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Scottish_mercenaries

    G. Thomas of Galloway. Gallowglass. Patrick Gordon. Alexander Gordon (general) Thomas Gordon (Royal Scots Navy officer) Samuel Greig.

  7. Atholl Highlanders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atholl_Highlanders

    Murray of Atholl. The Atholl Highlanders is a Scottish private infantry regiment. A ceremonial unit, it acts as the personal bodyguard to the Duke of Atholl, chieftain of the Clan Murray, a family that has lived in Perthshire for roughly seven centuries. [1] Although it has no official military role, this hand-picked body of local men are armed ...

  8. Warfare in early modern Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warfare_in_early_modern...

    The earliest known image of Scottish soldiers wearing tartan, from a woodcut c. 1631. Warfare in early modern Scotland includes all forms of military activity in Scotland or by Scottish forces, between the adoption of new ideas of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century and the military defeat of the Jacobite movement in the mid-eighteenth century.

  9. Clan MacEwen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clan_MacEwen

    Clan MacEwen or Clan MacEwan is a Scottish clan recorded in the fifteenth century as Clan Ewen of Otter. Historically, there have been several different MacEwen clans and septs, with some distinct, and some interrelated, origins for the modern surname. Each of these historical clans could be described by the name, "Clan MacEwen" or, at times ...