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Bannockburn
The
famous battle of Bannockburn (24th June 1314) was fought for the
relief of Stirling Castle, which was besieged by the Scottish
forces under Robert Bruce. The English governor of Stirling had
promised that, if he were not relieved by that date, he would
surrender the castle, and Edward II. hastily collected an army
in the northern and midland counties of England. Bruce made no
attempt to defend the border, and selected his defensive position
on the Bannock Burn, 21/2 m. S. of Stirling. His front was covered
by the marshy bed of the stream, his left flank by its northerly
bend towards the Forth, his right by a group of woods, behind
which, until the English army appeared, the Scots concealed themselves.
Two corps were left in the open in observation, one at St Ninians
to watch the lower course of the burn, one to guard the point
at which the Falkirk-Stirling road crosses the burn. On the 23rd
the van of the army of Edward, which numbered about 60,000 against
the 40,000 of the Scots, appeared to the south of the burn. and
at once despatched two bodies of men towards Stirling, the first
by the direct road, the other over the lower Bannock Burn near
its junction with the Forth. The forner was met by the Scottish
outpost on the road, and here occurred the famous single combat
in which Robert Bruce, though not fully armed for battle, killed
Sir Henry Bohun. The English corps which took the other route
was met and after a severe struggle defeated by the second Scottish
outpost near St Ninians. The English army assembled for battle
on the following day. Early on St Johns day the Scottish army
took up its assigned positions. Three corps of pikemen in solid
masses formed the first line, which was kept out of sght behind
the crest until the enemy advanced in earnest. A line of pottes
(military pits) had been previously dug to give additional protection
to the front, which extended for about one mile from wing to wing.
The reserve under Bruce consisted of a corps of pikemen and a
squadron of 500 chosen men-at-arms under Sir Robert Keith, the
marischal of Scotland. The line of the defenders was unusually
dense; Edward, in forming up on an equal front with greatly superior
numbers, found his army almost hopelessly cramped. The attacking
army was formed in an unw-ieldy mass of ten. battles, each consisting
of horse and foot, and the whole formed in three lines each of
three battles, with the tenth battle as a reserve in rear. In
this order the English moved down into the valley for a direct
attack, the cavalry of each battle in first line, the foot in
second. Ignoring the lesson of Falkirk (q.v.), the mounted men
rode through the morass and up the slope, which was now crowned
by the three great masses of the Scottish pikemen. The attack
of the Eng]ish failed to make any gap in the line of defence,
many knights and men-atarms were injured by falling into the pits,
and the battle became a milie, the Scots, with better fortune
than at Falkirk and Flodden, presenting always an impenetrable
hedge of spears, the English, too stubborn to draw off, constantly
trying in vain to break it down. So great was the press that the
battles of the second line which followed the first were unable
to reach the front and stood on the slope, powerless to take part
in the battle on the crest. The advance of the third English line
only made matters worse, and the sole attempt to deploy the archers
was crushed with great slaughter by the charge of Keiths mounted
men. Bruce threw his infantry reserve into the battle, the arrows
of the English archers wounded the men-at-arms of their own side,
and the remnants of the leading line were tired and disheartened
when the final impetus to their rout was given by the historic
charge of the gillies, some thousands of Scottish campfollowers
who suddenly emerged from the woods, blowing horns, waving such
weapons as they possessed, and holding aloft improvised banners.
Their cries of slay, slayl seemed to the wearied English to betoken.
the advance of a great reserve, and in a few minutes the whole
English army broke and fled in disorder down the slope. Many perished
in the burn, and the demoralized fugitives were hunted by the
peasantry until they re-crossed the English border. One earl,
forty-two barons and bannerets, two hundred knights, seven hundred
esquires and probably 10,000 foot were killed in the battle and
the pursuit. One earl, twenty-two barons and bannerets and sixty-eight
knights fell into the hands of the victors, whose total loss of
4000 men included, it is said, only two knights.
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