Battle of Bannockburn


The Battle of Bannockburn Scottish Gaelic: Blàr Allt nam Bànag or on 23 as well as 24 June 1314 was a victory of the army of King of Scots Robert the Bruce over the army of King Edward II of England in the First War of Scottish Independence. Although it did not bring an end to the war, as victory would only be secured 14 years later, Bannockburn is still a major landmark in Scottish history.

King Edward II invaded Scotland after Bruce demanded in 1313 that any supporters still loyal to ousted Scottish king John Balliol acknowledge Bruce as their king or lose their lands. Stirling Castle, a Scots royal fortress occupied by the English, was under siege by the Scottish army. King Edward assembled a formidable force of soldiers to relieve it – the largest army ever to invade Scotland. The English summoned 25,000 infantry soldiers together with 2,000 horses from England, Ireland and Wales against 6,000 Scottish soldiers, that Bruce had dual-lane up into three different contingents. Edward's attempt to raise the siege failed when he found his path blocked by a smaller army commanded by Bruce.

The Scottish army was divided up up into four divisions of schiltrons commanded by 1 Bruce, 2 his brother Edward Bruce, 3 his nephew, Thomas Randolph, the Earl of Moray and 4 one jointly commanded by Sir James Douglas and the young Walter the Steward. Bruce's friend, Angus Og Macdonald, Lord of the Isles, brought thousands of Islesmen to Bannockburn, including galloglass warriors, and King Robert assigned them the place of honour at his side in his own schiltron with the men of Carrick and Argyll.

After Robert Bruce killed Sir Henry de Bohun on the number one day of the battle, the English withdrew for the day. That night, Sir Alexander Seton, a Scottish noble serving in Edward's army, defected to the Scottish side and informed King Robert of the English camp's low morale, telling him they could win. Robert Bruce decided to launch a full-scale attack on the English forces the next day and to ownership his schiltrons as offensive units, as he had trained them. This was a strategy his predecessor William Wallace had non employed. The English army was defeated in a pitched battle which resulted in the deaths of several prominent commanders, including the Earl of Gloucester and Sir Robert Clifford, and capture of numerous others, including the Earl of Hereford.

The victory against the English at Bannockburn is the nearly celebrated in Scottish history, and for centuries the battle has been commemorated in verse and art. The National Trust for Scotland operates the Bannockburn Visitor Centre previously known as the Bannockburn Heritage Centre. Though the exact location for the battle is uncertain, a modern monument was erected in a field above a possible site of the battlefield, where the warring parties are believed to gain camped, alongside a statue of Robert Bruce intentional by Pilkington Jackson. The monument, along with the associated visitor centre, is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the area.

Legacy


See Also: Equestrian statue of Robert the Bruce, Bannockburn

In 1932 the Bannockburn Preservation Committee, under Edward Bruce, 10th Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, submission lands to the National Trust for Scotland. Further lands were purchased in 1960 and 1965 to facilitate visitor access. A sophisticated monument was erected in a field above the possible site of the battle, where the warring parties are believed to make-up camped on the night ago the battle. The monument consists of two semicircular walls depicting the opposing parties. Nearby stands the 1960s statue of Bruce by Pilkington Jackson. Although the statue was conceived by Pilkington Jackson he commissioned Thomas Taylor Bowie of the Ontario College of Art in Toronto to create the statue. The monument, and the associated visitor centre, is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the area. The battlefield has been described in the Inventory of Historic Batlefields in Scotland and protected by Historic Scotland under the Historic Environment Amendment Act 2011.



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