Search This Blog

Monday 13 February 2012

Battle of Bannockburn

The Battle Of Bannockburn was fought on June 23-24 1314 at Bannockburn, Scotland, between Robert (I) the Bruce, King of Scotland, and Edward II of England.

The battle began when the Scottish forces intercepted an army commanded by King Edward II , which was en route to the relief of a besieged English stronghold, Stirling Castle.

Edward II, attempting to relieve Stirling Castle, led over 2,000 knights and 15,000 foot soldiers, including about 5,000 archers. Bruce had only 500 light cavalry and some 7,000 foot soldiers.

After inconclusive skirmishing between patrols of the two armies, the English forces crossed the stream known as the Bannockburn during the night, establishing their position on the plain beyond it. the Edward's forces launched a mass attack, led by cavalry, on the Scottish positions. The maneuver was badly executed, leaving Edward's knights in boggy ground and the archers out of position in the rear. Bruce blocked the English advance with tightly packed formations of pikemen, then, as the archers tried to deploy, charged with his cavalry and routed them.

This depiction from the Scotichronicon (c.1440) is the earliest known image of the battle

The victorious Bruce attributed his success to the relic of the Scottish Saint, St. Fillan, which he took into battle. He declared it was the Saint’s intercession that gave him victory.

Robert Burns' "Scots Wae Nae" was inspired by Bruce's marching song "Hey Tutti Taitie" which was sung by his troops during Bannockburn.

The defeat of the English led to the independence of Scotland.

Source Hutchinson Encyclopedia © RM 2012. Helicon Publishing is division of RM.

No comments:

Post a Comment