Freedom! On 23 June 1314, The Battle of Bannockburn, one of
the decisive battles of the First War of Scottish Independence, began.
The battle started after King Edward II gathered an enormous
force and marched north to relieve Stirling Castle, a strategically important
post and the site of several significant battles during the War of
Independence. King Robert the Bruce, with his own large force, waited for
Edward to come to him just south of Stirling, at the Bannock Burn, concealing
his soldiers in the thick forests.
The area had one road that would be able to handle the heavy
cavalry the English had brought with them, so naturally Robert had it boobytrapped.
One of the English captains, Sir Philip Mowbray, got wind of it and tried to
persuade Edward to abandon the battle but Edward persisted, and at any rate,
other captains sent ahead were already en route and could not be recalled.
Those captains, the earls of Gloucester and Hereford,
attacked, and Hereford’s nephew, Henry de Bohun, went after Robert, who was
armed only with a battle-axe to de Bohun’s lance. Not for nothing is Robert the
Bruce a legend—he stood up in his stirrups and split de Bohun’s skull in two
with the axe, and then later complained about having broken the shaft.
Emboldened by this, Bruce’s forces rushed out to engage the
English, who were eventually forced to retreat.
Realizing it wasn’t safe to approach Stirling by the most
direct route, Edward ordered his army to cross the Bannock Burn, which brought
them right into the wall of Scottish soldiers hiding in the woods. The English,
weighed down by heavy armor and equipment, were far less mobile than the Scots,
who forced them into disarray. The battle quickly became a rout. The English
saw how things were going and started to retreat. Some drowned trying to cross
the River Forth; others were crushed in the stampede of men trying to get back
across the Bannock Burn. Edward turned and ran, accompanied by his bodyguard
and leaving his remaining army without a leader. He eventually reached Dunbar
Castle and caught a ship to England. Many of his men were killed on the 90-mile
retreat to England. It’s estimated that less than a third of the footsoldiers
returned to England, which would mean about 11,000 casualties. Scottish
casualties, by comparison, were incredibly light.
The battle didn’t guarantee Scottish independence, but it
did make Bruce’s place on the throne more secure. Today, a statue of him stands
on the battlefield, which has been inventoried and protected by Historic Scotland.
No comments:
Post a Comment