Katana VentraIP

Royal Bank of Scotland

The Royal Bank of Scotland (Scottish Gaelic: Banca Rìoghail na h-Alba)[2] is a major retail and commercial bank in Scotland. It is one of the retail banking subsidiaries of NatWest Group, together with NatWest (in England and Wales) and Ulster Bank. The Royal Bank of Scotland has around 700 branches, mainly in Scotland, though there are branches in many larger towns and cities throughout England and Wales. The bank is completely separate from the fellow Edinburgh-based bank, the Bank of Scotland, which pre-dates the Royal Bank by 32 years. The Royal Bank of Scotland was established to provide a bank with strong Hanoverian and Whig ties.[3]

Not to be confused with Bank of Scotland.

Native name

Banca Rìoghail na h-Alba

31 May 1727 (1727-05-31)

Edinburgh, Scotland, UK

71,200

Following ringfencing of the Group's core domestic business, the bank became a direct subsidiary of NatWest Holdings in 2019. NatWest Markets comprises the Group's investment banking arm. To give it legal form, the former RBS entity was renamed NatWest Markets in 2018; at the same time Adam and Company (which held a separate PRA banking licence) was renamed The Royal Bank of Scotland, with Adam and Company continuing as an RBS private banking brand until 2022.[4]

History[edit]

Foundation[edit]

The bank traces its origin to the Society of the Subscribed Equivalent Debt, which was set up by investors in the failed Company of Scotland to protect the compensation they received as part of the arrangements of the 1707 Acts of Union. The "Equivalent Society" became the "Equivalent Company" on 21 November 1724, and the new company wished to move into banking. The British government received the request favourably as the "Old Bank", the Bank of Scotland, was suspected of having Jacobite sympathies. Accordingly, the "New Bank" was chartered on 31 May 1727 as the Royal Bank of Scotland, with Archibald Campbell, Lord Ilay, appointed its first governor.


On 31 May 1728, the Royal Bank of Scotland invented the overdraft, which was later considered an innovation in modern banking.[5] It allowed William Hogg, a merchant in the High Street of Edinburgh, access to £1,000 (£170,833 in today's value)[6] credit.

featuring Edinburgh Castle

1 pound note

featuring Culzean Castle

5 pound note

featuring Glamis Castle

10 pound note

featuring Brodick Castle

20 pound note

featuring Inverness Castle (introduced in 2005)

50 pound note

featuring Balmoral Castle

100 pound note

List of investors in Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities

McDiarmid, Andrew. "The Equivalent Societies of Edinburgh and London, the Formation of the Royal Bank of Scotland, and the Nature of the Scottish Financial Revolution." Journal of British Studies 60.1 (2021): 88–114.

Munro, Neil. History of the Royal Bank of Scotland 1727–1927 (1928)

online

Official website

grouped at OpenCorporates

Royal Bank of Scotland companies