 Rhywodol fath am hwnnw i'r ddefnyddio ddechrau. Mae'r ddefnyddio ddefnyddio ei ddefnyddio ddefnyddio yn y gallu matei niw. Diolch i'r ddefnyddio ddefnyddio deallu Ynny'r Gynnogau Gwyrdd i尔. Diolch i'r ddefnyddio ddefnyddio'r Gwyrdd i'r ddefnyddio'r Gwyrdd i'r ddefnyddio ddefnyddio'r sesiad syniad y Llywodraeth Scottish. Wrth gynch i gwaith mae fath o'r hollu, mae'n credu fath o'r paryll. Canongate is also the parish church for the palace of Holyrood house and of Edinburgh castle and it's with our role as Edinburgh's military church in mind that I want to focus briefly and probably inevitably on the centenary of the battle of Jutland which began exactly 100 years ago today and ended 100 years ago tomorrow. The largest naval action of the First World War, it remains something of a controversial battle in that both sides claimed victory of sorts. The Royal Navy's grand fleet under the command of Admiral Sir John Jelico and based largely in Scottish waters lost over 6,000 sailors and 14 ships out of a total of 60,000 sailors and 151 ships while the Imperial German high sea fleet lost 2,500 men and 11 ships out of a total of 45,000 sailors and 99 ships. The comparative losses meant that the Germans claimed victory but the blockade which they'd been trying to break remained in place for the rest of the war and British domination of the North Sea remained secure. As so often when the fog and confusion of battle had lifted questions were asked about some of the decisions taken by those in command on both sides. But the bravery of certain individuals who lost their lives on the 31st of May and on the 1st of June 1916 has always been beyond doubt. Men like Francis Harvey of the Royal Marine's Light Infantry who prevented a magazine igniting and blowing up an entire ship. Men like John Travers Cornwall, the 16-year-old who famously remained at his post while seriously injured but died in hospital before his mother could reach his bedside. Both of them were posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross and it is their valor and the service and sacrifice of so many like them to which we should surely devote time for reflection today and tomorrow.