Formation | 1798 |
---|---|
Legal status | Religious brotherhood |
Purpose | To promote Protestantism and unionism |
Headquarters |
Olympia House, G40 3TA |
Coordinates | 55°50′56″N 4°13′37″W / 55.849°N 4.227°W |
Region served
|
Scotland |
Membership
|
50,000 |
Henry Dunbar | |
Main organ
|
Trustees, Senior Officer Bearers |
Parent organization
|
Orange Institution |
Website | www.orangeorderscotland.com |
Olympia House,
13 Olympia Street,
Bridgeton
The Grand Orange Lodge of Scotland, or Loyal Orange Institution of Scotland, is the branch of the Orange Order in Scotland. It is a Protestant fraternity that defends/promotes Protestantism, Britishness, and the continued unity of the United Kingdom (i.e. unionism). It also campaigns against Scottish independence and was an official participant in the 2014 independence referendum. Its headquarters are in Bridgeton, Glasgow and it claims about 50,000 members, the vast majority of whom are working-class Protestants from the Scottish Lowlands.
The Orange Order was formed in Ulster in 1795 by Ulster Protestants, many of whom had Scottish roots. It was brought to Scotland in 1798 by soldiers returning from service in Ulster, and its membership was soon swelled by large numbers of Ulster Protestant immigrants. As such, the Scottish branch has strong links with Northern Ireland and Ulster unionism/loyalism.
The Order is best known for its yearly marches, the biggest of which are held on and around 12 July ('The Twelfth').
In the early 17th century, following the Nine Years' War, the Irish province of Ulster was colonized by Protestant settlers from Britain. There was another wave of Scottish migration to Ulster during the Scottish famine of the 1690s.