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Lord Newburgh’s Regiment of Foot
Active | 1656 to 1662 |
Country | Scotland |
Allegiance | Royalist |
Conflicts | Anglo-Spanish War |
Type | Foot |
Colonel | Lord Newburgh |
Sir William Urry | |
Area Raised | Flanders |
Coat Colour | |
Flag Colour | |
Flag Design | |
Field Armies | Charles II 1658 |
Also Sir William Urry’s Regiment of Foot
Regiment raised for Charles II in exile from Scotsmen in Flanders, they fought at the Battle of the Dunes
Service History
1656
- Raised in Flanders from Scots Royalists
1657
1658
- June: Battle of the Dunes
1659
1660
- December: Quartered at Douai
1661
- Garrison of Mardyke
1662
- Garrison of Mardyke
- December: Reduced to 2 companies and incorporated into one of the Irish regiments at Mardyke
Notes
Charles II began to raise an army at Bruges in Flanders in 1656, having signed a treaty to ally with Spain against France and Cromwellian England. Originally to be Lt Gen Middleton's Regiment, instead Middleton was sent on a diplomatic mission to Poland and instead Lord Newburgh raised a regiment of exiled Scots Royalists, led in the field by Sir William Urry. In July 1658 the regiment fought at the Battle of the Dunes in Muskerry’s brigade, but the French and English Protectorate forces were victorious. They remained in Flanders, in garrison at Mardyke after the Restoration, but were amalgamated into one of the Irish regiments in 1662.
Flags and Equipment
Notable Officers
Lord Newburgh
Sir William Urry
Sir William Urry, brother of the multiple turncoat Sir John Urry.
Strength
- April 1657: Estimated at 300 men by English news-sheets
- Spring 1659: 10 companies
- December 1662: 2 companies