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The Oldest Alliance in History: Scotland’s Surprising Bond With France

In 1295, two nations made a promise that would reshape the map of Europe. Scotland and France, united by a shared threat from the south, signed an agreement that historians still call the oldest alliance in recorded history. They called it the Auld Alliance — and for almost three centuries, it held.

What Was the Auld Alliance?

The Auld Alliance was born out of necessity. England’s ambitions under Edward I threatened both Scotland and France. By joining forces, the two kingdoms created a strategic problem for any English king — attack one, and you’d have the other at your back.

The treaty, first signed in Paris on 23 October 1295, was renewed repeatedly over the following centuries. It bound the two nations together in war and in peace, in matters of trade, law, and royal marriage.

For Scotland, it was more than a military pact. It was a lifeline — and at times, a lifesaver.

The Soldiers Who Guarded French Kings

One of the most striking chapters of the Auld Alliance is the story of the Garde Écossaise — the Scottish Guard of the French royal court.

Founded in 1418, the Scottish Guard served as the personal bodyguard of the French monarch. These were Scotland’s finest soldiers, trusted above all others to stand closest to the king. For generations, while the rest of France’s military hierarchy shuffled and shifted, the Scots kept watch.

It was an honour unlike any other offered to a foreign nation, and Scottish soldiers wore it with enormous pride.

Mary, the Alliance Made Flesh

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No figure embodies the Auld Alliance more completely than Mary Queen of Scots. Born in Scotland in 1542, she was sent to France as a child for her own protection. She was raised at the French court, educated in French, and in 1558, she married the future King of France.

For a brief moment, Scotland and France shared the same crown.

Mary was in many ways the living symbol of everything the two nations had built together — cultured, cosmopolitan, and caught between two worlds. Her story ended in tragedy, but her life showed just how deeply the two countries had grown together.

The Words You Still Use

The Auld Alliance left permanent marks on the Scots language, and many of those marks survive to this day.

Words like ashet (a large oval dish), gigot (a leg of lamb), douce (quiet and gentle), and tasse (a small cup) are borrowed directly from French. When a Scots grandmother asks for the ashet or talks about a gigot chop, she is echoing a bond forged seven centuries ago.

Linguists also suggest that bonnie — perhaps the most iconic Scots word — may owe something to the French bonne, meaning good or fine.

If you’re curious about the many threads woven into Scotland’s linguistic history, discover more about the languages spoken in Scotland — there are more than you might expect.

A Cultural Exchange, Not Just a Military Pact

The Alliance did far more than keep soldiers fed and funded. It opened Scotland to European ideas, architecture, and learning.

Scottish students crossed the Channel to study at the University of Paris. Scottish merchants traded through Bordeaux and Dieppe. French craftsmen worked alongside Scottish masons on the great building projects of the Renaissance — and if you look closely at Stirling Castle or Linlithgow Palace, you can see their influence in every carved detail.

Scotland became a genuinely European nation during the years of the Auld Alliance. Not just a northern outpost, but a country with connections reaching deep into the Continent. You’ll find more of these centuries-old stories woven through the remarkable towns of Scotland that shaped this proud nation.

The End of the Old Friendship

The Reformation changed everything. By 1560, Scotland’s Protestant leaders looked to England for support, not to Catholic France. Within a generation, the alliance was quietly set aside — never formally ended, simply outgrown.

But not entirely forgotten. France still extends a symbolic offer of honorary citizenship to all Scots, a gesture that persists to this day. The mutual warmth between the two nations never entirely faded. You’ll find it in the claret still drunk in Edinburgh’s Old Town bars, in the French words hiding in Scots conversation, and in the inexplicable ease that Scots and French so often feel in one another’s company.

Where to Feel It Today

Walk Edinburgh’s Royal Mile and you’re walking a street shaped in part by French influence. Visit Stirling Castle and you’ll find Renaissance stonework that looks more Loire Valley than Lothian. The evidence of this ancient friendship is everywhere, if you know what you’re looking for.

For those planning a visit to Scotland, the Auld Alliance adds an extraordinary layer to every castle, every old-town street, and every archaic word overheard in a market. Follow more stories of Scotland’s remarkable past at lovetovisitscotland.com.

The Auld Alliance is history that is still alive — in the food, the language, and the long cultural memory of a nation that has always known it belongs to something bigger than itself.

Come to Scotland. Listen closely. You might just hear the whisper of Paris in a Scots voice.

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