 |
| Big Rab |
|
For all its historical inaccuracies
and myth-takes, Hollywood's "Braveheart" version
of William Wallace's struggle for Scottish freedom at least
got one thing right. It portrayed Robert the Bruce as being
somewhat less than the pure and sainted figure Scots historians
have traditionally painted him to be.
It is often said that history is written
by the winners, and this certainly seems to have been the
case with Scotland's liberator King, venerated by successive
generations as its greatest ever hero. Every Scottish schoolboy
knows about 1314, the Battle of Bannockburn and all that,
and there is no denying that he was indeed instrumental in
securing Scottish independence and in that respect at least,
he stands undoubtedly as the single most important figure
in our country's history.
The fact remains, however, that the
affectionately named "Good King Robert" was by no
means all good, at least not in the beginning of his rise
to the throne. Power and pragmatism, rather than patriotism,
was what drove the young Earl of Carrick.
Bruce was a typically self-seeking
nobleman, with his eyes firmly fixed on the prize, the eventual
Kingship of the Scots. He frankly wasn't too fussed about
how he won it or who he upset and pushed aside in the process,
as long as win it he did. In his eyes, the end would always
justify the means.
 |
| Edward II - Longshanks |
|
Initially, Bruce sided with England's
King Edward in the hope that Edward might support his father's
claim for the Scottish Throne over the current incumbent,
John Balliol. Although indeed valid, the Bruce claim to that
throne was only one of several at the time with equally impressive
Royal credentials.
After the royal vacuum left in Scotland
by the death of King Alexander in 1292 without an heir, Balliol
had been chosen by Edward himself, acting as a kind of "International
Referee" at the request of Scotland's squabbling nobility
who, typically, couldn't agree on the matter themselves.
The appointment of Balliol, on condition
that he accept Edward as his "Kingly" superior or
"Lord Paramount", was a sham, a means for Edward
to claim "overlordship" of the country, and when
Balliol repaid his English master's generosity by rebelling
against him in 1296, Bruce saw his chance to step in.
 |
|
A14th
century manuscript, showing John Balliol accepting
Edward as his overlord in 1292
|
|
Balliol was soon brought to heel, but
far from supporting Bruce's father as a replacement, Edward
instead took the opportunity to annexe Scotland as his own,
and with Balliol exiled the country was plunged into a state
of English occupation and martial law, her people brutally
repressed.
As a lesson for their rebellious behaviour
and to set an example to any who dared defy him in future,
Edward's troops in just one day massacred virtually the entire
population of Berwick and left their mutilated bodies to rot
for all to see.
Enter one William Wallace.
 |
|
William
Wallace not looking like Mel McGibson
|
|
When it became clear that Wallace had
the support of virtually the entire oppressed population in
his rebellion, Bruce switched sides and supported Wallace,
much to Edward's anger. The ensuing victory, against all the
odds, over Edward's army at the Battle of Stirling Bridge
in 1297 seemed for a while to have vindicated Bruce's decision.
Bruce was on the winning side, still in with a shout for the
crown, and Wallace meanwhile was appointed by Scotland's leading
nobles, Bruce included, to be "Guardian of Scotland",
a kind of "Caretaker King", by popular demand.
The golden glow of victory was not
to last long, however, and by 1299 it was virtually over for
Wallace, his "Braveheart" army devastated by superior
English forces at the Battle of Falkirk. Demoralised by the
defeat and the constant in-fighting of the Scottish nobility,
Wallace resigned his Guardianship, but vowed to fight on,
and Bruce was appointed Joint Guardian of Scotland along with
his greatest single rival within the country, John Comyn,
the Earl of Buchan.
 |
|
A
modern poster depiction of John Comyn - hasn't
he got a lovely long weapon?
|
|
Comyn too had his eye on the throne,
although ostensibly his support was for the return from exile
of Balliol. The two Guardians never saw eye to eye on anything
and before long the country was split into two warring political
factions, with Comyn boasting the far greater support.
At this point, knowing he was in severe
danger of being edged out entirely, Bruce did another U- turn,
and while Wallace and Comyn continued with the rebellion,
Bruce meekly and apologetically surrendered himself to Edward
and swapped his Lion Rampant for the three lions of the English
flag once more.
Edward, not wishing the return of Balliol
any more than Bruce did, accepted his old enemy's apology
magnanimously, preferring him as an untrustworthy ally rather
than a dangerous adversary. When Edward returned to Scotland
at the head of his army to crush the rebellion once and for
all in 1303, Robert the Bruce was at his side.
Rather than fight and surely lose,
Comyn negotiated a peace settlement with Edward, accepting
his "overlordship" of Scotland in return for a place
at the head of Scotland's new ruling council. Edward agreed
but, not without a hint of irony, also appointed Bruce onto
the Council, doubtless to act as his spy.
Wallace refused to accept the surrender
and carried the fight on with a guerrilla campaign against
English troops. This was an embarrassment to a Council that
supposedly now owed its allegiance to the English King and
so Wallace was shamefully betrayed and served up on a plate
to the drooling Monarch for execution as a traitor.
 |
|
Robert
the Bruce and his second wife Elizabeth de Burgh
(no relation to Chris)
|
|
England, and Edward Plantagenet, was
now truly the master of Scotland
Before very long, and seemingly putting
their differences to one side, Comyn and Bruce entered into
a secret conspiracy to rise up in rebellion once again when
the time was right, and began to lay the foundations for that
uprising. Changing sides once more would mean there was no
turning back for Robert. Edward would not be so forgiving
a second time.
Comyn, it is believed, pulled a sneaky
one and informed Edward of Bruce's rebellious intentions,
knowing that he would certainly be arrested and imprisoned,
if not executed for his treachery, in which case the way would
then be left open for him alone.
Bruce found out and confronted Comyn
in Greyfriars Church in Dumfries where a violent argument
broke out that left Comyn severely wounded, but still alive.
Several of Bruce's supporters then attacked Comyn with swords
and finished him off in front of the altar.
Under the circumstances, with the cat
now well and truly out of the bag, Bruce had only one way
to go and this time it really was shit or bust. With his father
now dead, and Comyn out of the way, the crown of Scotland
was his for the taking, and take it he did. Without the approval
of the Scottish Council, he was hurriedly crowned King of
Scots in front of just a handful of Scotland's nobility at
Scone.
Edward, not surprisingly, was absolutely
livid and vowed to exterminate the entire Bruce family. In
addition to confiscating their lands and estates on both sides
of the border, he butchered several of the menfolk and imprisoned
the women before setting off once again with an invading army.
Bruce, unable to rally support amongst
the Scottish nobles and excommunicated by the Pope for his
murder of Comyn was forced to go on the run, his dream in
ruins. Even the death of Edward before he crossed the border
with his army was of little solace to him, his son Edward
II, continuing the campaign.
 |
|
Bruce
and the spider
|
|
Scotland was back where it started,
an occupied country, with Bruce now an outcast and a fugitive.
A King by name, but forced to hide out in caves, this was
his lowest ever point. The story goes that, plunged into despair
at this severe dip in his fortunes, the dejected Bruce took
inspiration from watching the determination of a spider that
kept falling to the ground then picking itself up again in
attempting to build its web. It would be a damn good story
too, if it were true, but unfortunately Sir Walter Scott made
it up.
What is true, of course, is that Bruce
did persevere and after a remarkable campaign of guerrilla
warfare begun in 1307 he began to drive the English out of
the country and gathered the national support he required
to assert his rule. The Battle of Bannockburn was the turning
point in his campaign and proved to all who still doubted
him that here indeed was a man who could unite Scotland and
lead the nation to her rightful independence.
 |
|
The
inscription on this stone in Glen Trool reads
"Robert the Bruce, King of Scots, whose victory
in this glen over an English force in March 1307,opened
the campaign of independence which he brought
to a decisive close at Bannockburn"
|
|
In a quite remarkable display of machismo,
or sheer stupidity depending on your view, on the evening
before the battle, Bruce took up the challenge of an English
Knight, Sir Humphrey de Bohun, to fight the King's chosen
champion in one-to-one combat, by accepting the challenge
himself.
To the horror of his Generals, Bruce
took to the field to face his more heavily armoured and heavily
mounted opponent, who charged at the Scots King with his lance
extended. Bruce, remaining motionless, stood his ground and
at the last second neatly sidestepped the Knight with his
lighter, more nimble horse, burying his battle-axe into the
Knight's skull as he passed, to the cheers of his onlooking
army.
 |
|
Bannockburn
field and statue of Robert the Bruce
|
|
On his return to the front-line, still
being chastised by his advisors for such an act of unnecessary
foolhardiness, Bruce calmly commented that his only regret
was "the unfortunate loss of my good battle-axe."
The boost to his troops' morale upon
witnessing this can only be imagined.
Having won the decisive battle, the
Declaration of Arbroath in 1320 further asserted Scotland's
right to self-determination and perhaps just as importantly
in Bruce's eyes, established International and Papal recognition
of Bruce's right to be King.
England finally accepted those rights
in 1328 with the signing of the Treaty of Northampton, just
a year before Bruce died, apparently of leprosy.
In the period of relative peacetime
that followed Bannockburn, Bruce re-established law and order
throughout the land, instigated legal reforms and championed
the rights of the ordinary people in Scotland, and it is for
this, more than any of his battles, that he earned the love
of his subjects and the affectionate name of "Good King
Robert".
Had he lost, the history books would
probably have called him "Two faced Bob".
|