
Scotland has red deer, golden eagles, red squirrels, and red kites. But its official national animal is none of these. It’s a beast that has never existed — and has been on Scottish coats of arms for nearly a thousand years. The unicorn isn’t a quirky choice. It was a deliberate and defiant one.
A Beast the Middle Ages Believed Was Real
In medieval Europe, the unicorn wasn’t considered a fairy tale. It was a creature naturalists wrote about in all seriousness — powerful, wild, and completely impossible to capture by force.
Medieval texts described it as the fiercest animal alive. Not the gentle, glittering horse of children’s stories, but something dangerous and untameable. Hunters who pursued it rarely came back victorious.
That reputation was exactly what appealed to Scotland. A symbol of raw, unchained strength — answering to no one.
Seven Centuries on Scottish Heraldry
Scotland’s connection to the unicorn runs back to at least the 12th century. King William I — known as William the Lion — used the unicorn on his royal seal around 1165.
By the reign of James III in the 1400s, the unicorn was firmly established as Scotland’s heraldic beast. It appeared in gold, often against the rich red and gold of Scottish royal colours.
For three centuries before the Union with England, the unicorn stood alone as the guardian of the Scottish crown — two of them, typically, flanking the royal arms. Scotland didn’t need a lion. It had something fiercer.
Scotland’s other national symbols — the thistle and the Saltire — each carry their own stories of strength and defiance. The unicorn fits that same tradition.
The Chain That Changes Everything
Look closely at any Scottish unicorn in heraldry and you’ll notice something. It wears a crown around its neck and a chain attached to it. That chain matters more than almost any other detail.
In medieval belief, an unchained unicorn was one of the most dangerous forces in the natural world. It was thought capable of destroying anything in its path. Chains weren’t a sign of defeat — they were proof of the enormous power being contained.
The Scottish reading of this was clear: the unicorn is so mighty that even in captivity, it takes a crown and iron to hold it. Strip away the chain, and nothing could stop it.
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When the Lion and the Unicorn Were Forced to Share
In 1603, King James VI of Scotland inherited the English throne and became James I of England. Two kingdoms, two coats of arms — and two very different animals — had to be joined into one.
An old English saying held that the lion and the unicorn were mortal enemies, forever at war. Bringing them onto the same shield was no small thing.
But notice the detail the Scots insisted on. On the Scottish version of the royal arms — the one used in Scotland to this day — the unicorn stands on the LEFT. In heraldry, the left side is the position of honour, the dominant place. The unicorn stands ahead of the lion.
It’s a small thing, perhaps. But in heraldry, position is everything. Scotland made its point quietly and kept it there permanently.
Where to See Scotland’s Unicorn Today
The unicorn is everywhere in Scotland once you start looking. Edinburgh Castle bears the full Scottish royal arms above its entrance, unicorn prominent on the left-hand side.
At Linlithgow Palace in West Lothian, a famous Unicorn Fountain stands in the courtyard — dating to the early 16th century, restored but still striking. Mary Queen of Scots was born at Linlithgow.
Walk the Royal Mile in Edinburgh and you’ll find unicorn carvings on old closes, above doorways, and carved into the stonework of buildings that have stood for centuries. The city is full of them, hiding in plain sight.
You can also explore the clan traditions and symbols that grew up alongside the unicorn — Scotland’s identity was always built layer upon layer, each symbol reinforcing the last.
What the Unicorn Says About Scotland
The thistle says: don’t tread on me. The Saltire says: we have our own faith and our own sky. The unicorn says something different.
It says: we chose an impossible creature — and we meant it. We chose something untameable, something that bows to no one, something the rest of the world says cannot exist.
Perhaps that’s the most Scottish thing of all.
What is Scotland’s national animal?
Scotland’s national animal is the unicorn. It has appeared on Scottish royal coats of arms since at least the 12th century and remains an official national symbol of Scotland today.
Why did Scotland choose the unicorn as its national animal?
In medieval times, the unicorn was considered a real and ferociously powerful creature — untameable by force. Scotland adopted it as a symbol of strength, independence, and pride that could not be conquered. The unicorn’s chained depiction in heraldry represents contained power, not submission.
Where can I see unicorn symbols in Scotland?
Edinburgh Castle, the Royal Mile, and Linlithgow Palace are the best places to find unicorn imagery. Linlithgow’s 16th-century Unicorn Fountain is one of the finest examples. Edinburgh’s Old Town buildings are also dotted with carved unicorn details throughout.
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