Background and origins (1600 - 1690) In the early 17th century, following the
Nine Years' War, the Irish province of
Ulster was
colonised by Protestant settlers from Great Britain. Most of the colonists came from the Scottish Lowlands and Northern England. This scheme was sponsored by the British monarchy as a way of controlling the mainly Catholic and Gaelic province. There was another wave of Scottish migration to Ulster during the
Scottish famine of the 1690s. In the '
Glorious Revolution' of 1688, Catholic king
James VII of Scotland and James II of England and Ireland was overthrown and replaced by the Dutch-born Protestant king
William of Orange. This led to
war in Ireland and
rebellion in the Scottish Highlands. The mainly-Protestant armies of William (
Williamites) defeated the mainly-Catholic armies of James (
Jacobites). The Protestant "Williamite" victory solidified the political influence of the Reformed faith in both countries.
Foundation and Military Spread (1795–1800) The Orange Order was formally founded in Ulster in 1795 – during a
period of Protestant-Catholic sectarian conflict – as a brotherhood sworn to defend the
Protestant Ascendancy and the Protestant British monarchy. Its name is a tribute to William of Orange. In 1798, Protestant
British soldiers from Scotland were sent to Ireland to help suppress an
Irish republican rebellion. These soldiers fought alongside Orange militiamen and, when they returned to Scotland, they founded Scotland's first Orange lodges.
Growth and Immigration (1800–1850) The Scottish Orange Order grew swiftly in the early 1800s, when there was an influx of working-class Ulster Protestant immigrants into the Scottish Lowlands. Many of these immigrants saw themselves as returning to the land of their forefathers. There was also a wave of Irish Catholic immigration to the Lowlands in this period, especially during the
Great Famine. To gain an upper hand in their new home, and to differentiate themselves from the Irish Catholics, Irish Protestants showed their loyalty to 'king and country' through the medium of the Orange Order.
Political influence and Parades The first Orange march in Scotland was held in Glasgow on 12 July (
The Twelfth) 1821. It was accompanied by sectarian unrest between Protestants and Catholics. Scottish Orange Order leaders forged informal alliances with "
anti-Popery"
Tories to oppose
Catholic emancipation in 1829 and
Parliamentary Reform in 1831. In the 1990s, the Scottish Orange Order provided financial support to construct a new Orange temple for the
Ghanaian Orange Order in
Accra. This was due to the Order in
Ghana being targeted following the
1981 Ghanaian coup d'état lead by
Jerry Rawlings. ==Structure==