The Royal Company's traditions relate to its reason for formation, the archery competition. To further this, it offers thirteen prizes that were at some time in the past competed for annually. Many are retained to the present day.
The Musselburgh Arrow The tradition of shooting the silver
Musselburgh Arrow, a small arrow presented by the town of
Musselburgh in 1603, predates the creation of the Royal Company and follows in the traditions of other
burghs of Scotland. A new, large arrow was presented in 1713. The victor of the shooting retains the arrow for a year, and on handing it over to the next victor appends a medal to the arrow with an engraved personal motto, all of which are held by the Royal Company. One hundred and three such medals were held by the company by 1816.
Three Arrows By the 1820s, three more arrows were also presented by the cities of
Peebles (1626),
Selkirk (1675) and
Edinburgh.
The Edinburgh Arrow was presented by the City of Edinburgh in 1709, and the medals appended to it are in gold. The
winner was at one time entitled to a prize of five pounds Sterling from the city, but this fell into abeyance after 1716. The 'Edinburgh Arrow' is an annual competition competed for at the nearby
Bruntsfield Links. It is the rule of the prize "1. That the said Silver Arrow be shot for at the rovers in Leith Links, upon the second Monday of June yearly, at ten of the clock in the forenoon if the day be favourable; and if not, that the shooting be adjourned to the next fair Monday." 16 June 2009 marked the 300th anniversary of the first competition for The Edinburgh Arrow. The three arrows are now depicted on one of the standards. Until the institution of the third prize, only a pair of arrows was presented to the Sovereign on demand, this now increased to three.
The Silver Punch Bowl and Ladle The fifth prize is
The Silver Punch Bowl and Ladle presented to the company in 1720, and likewise had medals appended to it by its winner. The Bowl made to the value of £20, and the bill for its construction and the engraving on it came to £22, 13s. 9d. sterling. It had inscribed on one side the common seal of the company, and on the opposite side the reverse of the seal; and between those, on one side a Saint Andrew, and on the other the following inscription: "
Edinburgh, 20th June 1720. — The Councill of the Royall Company of Archers, viz., Mr David Drummond, Praeses, Thomas Kincaid, John Nairn, James Ross, Robert Lowis, John Lowis, John Carnegy, George Drummond, Tresr., William Murray and James Lowis, clerks, ordered this piece of plate to be furnished out of the stock of the Company, and to be shot for as ane annual pryze. at rovers by the said Company, as the Councill for the time shall appoint"
The Pagodas Medal This prize consists of a medal, one of two which were presented to the Company in 1793 by Major James Spens, The 73rd Regiment (Royal Highland East Indies). They were made from fifty "
pagodas", being part of the money actually paid by
Tippu Sultan to the allies at the
Treaty of Seringapatam in 1792.
Silver Vase and Gold Medal A prize by the General
John Earl of Hopetoun commemorating the 1822 visit by King
George IV is also competed for annually on the king's or queen's birthday, and known as the Commemoration Prize.
The Royal Prize of 20 Guineas Since 1677, there has also been a competition for
The Royal Prize for which £20 is awarded on the condition that the winner contributes to the Company silver plate to the value of money received from the Crown. The condition is that the plate must bear the insignia of Archery.
The Silver Bugles The ninth and tenth prizes are a pair of Silver Bugles, one presented to the Royal Company by one of the General Officers,
Sir Henry Jardine, Knight, and which was shot for on 9 April 1830, for the first time. The second was presented later by the
Sovereign's Bodyguard.
St. Andrew's Prize St. Andrew's Cross, given in the 1840s by
Sir George Steuart Mackenzie, of Coul, to the Royal Company, and called the "St.Andrew's Prize." The above prizes were competed at the 180, 185 and 200 yards distance with two targets or 'clouts' as the aiming mark, one located at each end of the range. Two further prizes are competed for 'at butts' or point blank distance.
Prize of the Goose The Prize of the Goose was competed for since 1703 and involved a live goose, requiring the winner to kill the goose when only its head protruded from the mark. The winner was to be known as the Captain of the Goose for a season. At some time in the history of the company the above method was adopted for shooting for the prize of the Goose by inserting a small glass globe of about an inch in diameter in the centre of the butt-mark, which is a circular piece of cardboard, four inches in diameter. The competitor whose arrow first breaks this globe is declared " Captain of the Goose " for the year, and was awarded the other gold medal presented by Major Spens.
The Gold Medal This is the more often competed for prize, the competition being held three times a year for three days each time, the scoring accounted in points like the usual archery competition.
Competition rules in 1822. Detail from a painting by
Alexander Carse The rules and regulations of the Royal Company of Archers have never been printed, and, in fact, were never completed. The society may, therefore, be considered as "lawless" when within the precincts of their shooting ground. ==Duties==