Thank you for visiting our site 

If you are interested in more information, please contact Richard Brown at 510.797.7895 or Email

 richardl.brown@comcast.net

Contact the Webmater Brian Wimsett (in association with Richard Brown) Email: Brian Wimsett

 Comments or suggestions welcome ~ Richard Brown

Hi my name is Richard L. Brown, I am the founder of The Highlander Warriors and also the Pirate group Brun’s Raiders and I am looking for sponsors, who are interested in promoting Scottish/Celtic history. I have been performing in the northern Ca. area since 1999 and have gained a following and popularity among the Scottish/Celtic community. I perform at four middle schools a year, have done shows for the boy scouts and fund raisers for middle schools at the King’s Head inn in Campbell Ca. If you love Scottish Culture, and history, then we are the group for you. We bring history to the public and teach at the same time we are staging grand Scottish battles with live steel sword play. It is the love of our heritage that we bring to you straight from the heart battles that transport you, if just for a while,
back to another time and place.

In addition to the live battles, we have a display area that is designed to
teach those who are interested in Scottish Heritage. The display contains
books on various aspects of Celtic, Highland, Medieval history and replica
weaponry from those eras.

Should you have any questions or need further information, please feel free
to contact me at the number below. Thank you for your time and we are
looking forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

Richard Brown                                
Highlander Warriors
"Have Targe and Claymore Will Travel!"
richardl.brown@comcast.net                                                             
(510) 797-7895

A close affinity has always existed between Ireland and Scotland, especially northern Scotland. The native peoples of these places, the Irish on the one hand, and the Scottish Highlanders on the other, are known collectively as "the Gaels," and share as well the common heritage of the Gaelic culture and tongue. Because of its continuity with its lndo-European past, this culture could during its sixteenth-century heyday be described as the most ancient, the most unaffected, and the most unchanged and unchanging in all of Europe.