The unicorn is Scotland’s national animal (Credit: StockImages/Alamy) From Edinburgh to St Andrews and Glasgow to Dundee, the one-horned mythological horse is real in Scotland.
The unicorn is the national animal of Scotland. The Royal Coat of Arms of Scotland, used prior to 1603 by the Kings of Scotland, was supported by two unicorns, and the current royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom is supported by a unicorn for Scotland along with a lion for England.

The Scottish Unicorn. In the 15th century, most of the European nobility are adopting animal emblems, often wild and uncommon ones (the lion for the kings of England, the porcupine for the kings of France, the eagle in Spain, etc.). In Scotland, James I went for the unicorn. We don’t really know why.

You can most prominently see the unicorn on Scotland’s coat of arms. This is because the unicorn has been Scotland’s national animal for over 600 years. Let’s find out why and how this came to be. Straight To. Notions of Unicorns; Unicorns in Religion and Folklore; Unicorns – Fact or Fiction? How Did the Unicorn Become a Scottish Symbol?
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