In the great halls of Fontainebleau and Amboise, and on the blood-soaked battlefields of the Hundred Years’ War, one group stood between France’s kings and their enemies. They were not French. They wore tartan beneath their armour. They spoke Gaelic in the gilded corridors of royal palaces. And for more than three centuries, they were trusted with the most powerful lives in Europe.

The Alliance That Made It Possible
The story begins with the Auld Alliance itself. First forged in 1295, this pact between Scotland and France united two kingdoms against their shared rival: England. It was the oldest military alliance in European history, and it shaped the fates of both nations for generations.
Scottish soldiers had long fought alongside French troops on continental soil. Scottish nobles sent their sons to French universities. Scottish merchants traded wine and wool across the Channel. Over decades of shared sacrifice and commerce, a deep current of trust ran between the two peoples.
You can read more about the full sweep of the Auld Alliance and what made it so remarkable. But within that larger story lived one of history’s most extraordinary military institutions: the Garde Écossaise.
Born in Crisis: The Formation of the Guard
The Garde Écossaise was formally established in 1418, at one of the darkest moments in French history. The Battle of Agincourt had broken France three years earlier. Henry V of England was advancing steadily. The French dauphin — the future Charles VII — was desperate, politically isolated, and surrounded by treachery at court.
He needed men he could trust absolutely. He turned to Scotland.
The reasoning was stark and brilliant. French nobles might harbour feudal ambitions of their own; any lord with enough soldiers was a potential rival. But the Scots had no claim to French land, no web of French alliances, no stake in French succession. Their only tie was loyalty to the man who had paid for it.
The Garde Écossaise — formally known as the Compagnie des Gardes du Corps du Roi Écossais — was granted an extraordinary privilege: the right to stand watch in the king’s private chambers. Every night, while the king slept, Scots stood guard at the door. No position in the entire kingdom was more intimate or more trusted.
What It Meant to Serve
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Being chosen for the Garde Écossaise was a transformative honour. Recruits were drawn largely from noble Scottish families, and once accepted, their lives changed completely.
They wore French royal livery. They attended court ceremonies and rode in royal processions alongside the greatest lords of France. Many learned French fluently, married French women, and built lives on French soil. Some rose to positions of genuine influence, commanding troops far beyond their original bodyguard role.
Yet they carried Scotland with them. Gaelic was spoken among the guard’s own ranks. Letters home described French palaces and foreign customs, but always in the cadences of men who had not forgotten where they came from. The clan values they had grown up with — loyalty, honour, steadfastness — were precisely what made them so valued on foreign soil.
Standing Beside Joan of Arc
The Garde Écossaise did not merely stand in doorways. They fought. And their record on French battlefields was formidable.
Scottish soldiers fought alongside Joan of Arc during her campaigns to reclaim France from English occupation. They were there at some of the most consequential moments of fifteenth-century French history.
At the Battle of Baugé in 1421, a Scots force inflicted a significant defeat on an English army — one of the most important military victories on French soil in that era. The outcome helped demonstrate that the Auld Alliance was more than a diplomatic arrangement. It was a fighting partnership that could genuinely change the course of a war.
A Legacy Scattered Across Two Nations
The guard survived for more than three centuries, outlasting dozens of French kings, the Wars of Religion, and the slow fading of the Auld Alliance itself. By the time of the French Revolution, it had become largely ceremonial in nature — but its pride was undiminished.
Its traces are woven into the fabric of France in ways that are easy to miss. Certain French surnames carry unmistakable Scottish roots: Douglas, Drummond, Ramsay, Stuart. Bordeaux wine merchants still trace their commercial origins to Scottish traders who settled during the Alliance years. French phrases derived from Scots Gaelic have been identified by linguists, faint echoes of a centuries-long conversation across the Channel.
In Scotland, the Garde Écossaise is remembered as proof of something that history rarely delivers so cleanly: that a small, proud nation on the edge of Europe was trusted, for generations, at the very heart of a continental superpower.
Where to Feel It Today
Scotland’s French connection is buried in the stones of its cities if you know where to look. Edinburgh’s Old Town carries visible traces of French architectural influence in its tenements and closes — buildings designed in a continental style that sets Edinburgh apart from any other British city.
The spirit of the Garde Écossaise lives on wherever Scots have carried their identity into unfamiliar territory and remained stubbornly, unmistakably themselves. For more stories of Scotland’s extraordinary reach across history and across continents, explore lovetovisitscotland.com.
Three hundred years of standing watch. Three hundred years of choosing loyalty over comfort, and proximity to power over the safety of home. These were the Scots who crossed the Channel and stood guard over the kings of France — and in doing so, left a piece of Scotland at the very centre of European history.
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