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    Why do the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards consider the Russian Tsar Nicholas II their guardian angel?

    Feb 27 2023
    Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images; Public Domain
    Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images; Public Domain
    They are convinced that it is because of his heavenly intercession that they have been able to get by virtually unscathed in the armed conflicts of recent decades.

    Russian Emperor Nicholas II is not a meaningless figure to the Royal Scottish Dragoons. An icon depicting the monarch canonized in 2000 hangs in the regiment headquarters in Edinburgh and accompanies it during military operations, while the band of this military unit plays the anthem of the Russian Empire, ‘God Save the Tsar!’, at ceremonial events.

    So, what is the connection between the Russian tsar and the elite British soldiers?

    A royal present

    Public domainNicholas II, his consort Alexandra Feodorovna and his eldest daughter Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna visit Queen Victoria at Balmoral, 1896.
    Public domain

    The Royal Scottish Dragoon Guards Regiment is, indeed, the elite of the Armed Forces of the country. It was formed in 1971 by combining the 3rd Carabinieri Guards Regiment (Prince of Wales Dragoon Guards) and the 2nd Dragoon Regiment (the so-called ‘Royal Scots Greys’).

    Both military formations have a long history (since the 17th century) and many glorious victories are credited to them, but it is the ‘Greys’ that have a special bond with Russia.

    Public DomainTsar Nicholas II.
    Public Domain

    In 1894, Queen Victoria, in honor of the engagement of Tsesarevich Nicholas Alexandrovich (future Emperor Nicholas II) with her favorite granddaughter, Princess Alice of Hesse (future Empress Alexandra Feodorovna), appointed him to the honorary post of Chief Colonel of the 2nd Dragoon Regiment.

    There was nothing unusual in such a practice then. Thus, at the very same time, Prince of Wales ( future King Edward VII) became chief of the Kiev 9th Hussar Regiment.

    Strong ties

    Legion MediaPortrait of Nicholas II by Valentin Serov.
    Legion Media

    On November 19, 1894, in St. Petersburg, in the presence of the Prince and Princess of Wales, Nicholas, who had already become tsar, accepted the honorary patronage over the regiment and, two years later, Lieutenant Colonel Alfred Welby officially represented the Dragoons at his coronation.

    In 1896, Emperor Nicholas II made his first foreign visit after his coronation to Great Britain. For a meeting with Queen Victoria at Balmoral Castle in Scotland, he arrived in the red uniform of the Royal Scots Greys and it was these soldiers who accompanied him on his journey through the country.

    Legion MediaRoyal Scots Dragoon Guards Parade In Glasgow
    Legion Media

    In 1902, Nicholas II commissioned his portrait in the uniform of a colonel of the Dragoon Regiment from famous Russian artist Valentin Serov and presented it to his charges. Today, it is in the Royal Scots Greys Museum at Edinburgh Castle.

    Forever in memories

    The murder of Tsar Nicholas II in 1918 came as a shock to the Scottish Dragoons. As a sign of mourning for his martyrdom, they still wear a black flap under their berets.

    Public DomainSt. Nicholas the Tsar icon.
    Public Domain

    In 1998, representatives of the regiment attended the reburial of the remains of the royal family at the Peter and Paul Fortress in St. Petersburg and, three years later, representatives of the Moscow Caledonian Club (a public organization that promotes the historical and cultural heritage of Scotland and Russia) gave the Dragoons the same icon depicting Nicholas II, with which they are no longer parted.

    The ‘Greys’ are convinced that it was through the intercession of their heavenly guardian angel that they were able to avoid almost no casualties in the armed conflicts that followed.

    #romanov dynasty#nicholas ii
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    Gateway to Russia (Created by OpenAI)
    Gateway to Russia (Photo: Public domain, Sputnik, Totojang/Getty Images, surangaw/Getty Images)
    Public domain
    Fine Art Images/Heritage Images/Getty Images
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    Alexandra Koroleva; Public domain
    Gateway to Russia (Press photo, WorldWideImages/Getty Images)
    Gateway to Russia (Photo: Fine Art Images/Getty Images; Legion Media)
    Pavel Kuzmichev

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