18 March

18 March 1689: The Earl of Leven’s Regiment of Foot (later the King’s Own Scottish Borderers) was raised in Edinburgh by Act of the Scottish Parliament. It was one of seven Scottish regiments established to support the revolution of William and Mary. Within 4 hours, around 780 volunteers enlisted to defend the city against the Jacobite supporters of James VII and II. Their first task was to blockade Edinburgh Castle which was held for James by the Duke of Gordon. The regiment’s baptism of fire came on 27 July 1689 at the battle of Killiecrankie. It was a shot fired from Leven’s regiment that mortally wounded the Jacobite commander John Graham of Claverhouse.

Neil Ritchie
Neil Ritchie
Neil Ritchie is the founder and editor of JacobiteWars.com. Neil has a keen interest in the military history of Scotland and in particular the military history of the Civil Wars and the Jacobite Risings. He is also the editor of other online publications covering military history and defence matters. Neil can be found on Bluesky: @neilritchie.bsky.social

further reading

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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...

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