The relations of England and Scotland were
never more friendly than in 1290, when the Scots paid Edward I.
the compliment of calling him to act as umpire between the
claimants for the crown of Scotland, on the death of Alexander
in. and of his little granddaughter, the "Maid of Norway." To
this girl, then a mere child, it had been arranged that Edward's
son should be married, and so fulfil the great dream of the
ambitious English king by uniting the two kingdoms.
Until the Union of the Crowns in 1707 Scotland had no enemy in
the world save England, and during the reigns of David I. and
her three excellent Alexanders she had been happy and
prosperous. Mr. Renwick says: "It is universally agreed that,
throughout her long career as an independent kingdom, no period
was more prosperous for Scotland than the century and a half
which elapsed between the accession of the first David and the
death of the last Alexander. . . . The Scottish monarchs ...
ruled over a united people from Maidenkirk to John o' Groats."
It is well to remember this, for Scotsmen are apt to despise
their early ancestors, and to believe that all good things
commenced in the reign of Robert Bruce. Yet many of our native
kings, like Brude or Bride of Columba's time, Constantine of
Brunanburh fame, and that grand old fighter, Malcolm Canmore,
showed sterling character and strength. The Alexanders and David
I. were indeed men of conspicuous wisdom and uprightness. Only
with the Norman and feudal taint came the tendency to tyranny so
familiar in England and in some of the later Scottish kings;
though it must be admitted that the Stewarts were conspicuously
superior, both in mind and manners, to the Plantagenet and Tudor
monarchs. Indeed, no king of the low mental calibre of the
Georges ever sat upon the Scottish throne. On this point the old
ballad put the feeling of the Scottish people admirably—
"Wha the deil hae we gotten for a king, But a wee, wee
German lairdie! When we gaed owre tae bring him hame, He
was delvin' in his kail yairdie. He was sheughin' kail, and
layin' leeks, Without the hose, and but the breeks; And up
his beggar duds he cleeks, This wee, wee German lairdie."
The laws of the Scots kingdom made kingly tyranny difficult,
just as the old Scottish pre-feudal laws made difficult the
tyranny of the great lords and chiefs. It was the feudal system
that made it easy in both countries. Save in the set-back due to
the Norse invasions, Scotland suffered no more terrible calamity
than the persecutions of Edward I. and his efforts to convert
the country into an English province. The only satisfaction is
that they ended in utter failure, and brought the commons into
the field, as men whose honour and weal were alike concerned in
keeping their country independent. This was a negative kind of
benefit, and it is probable that the same end would have been
far better served by other and less costly means; but it is a
benefit of which historians of a certain type have made much, as
they have of the Norse invasions—as though a great war can be a
benefit, can be anything other than a great calamity; as though
invasions by North American Indians could be anything less than
a great curse to a civilised community. What the Norsemen and
the feudal system robbed us of was a national culture which had
grown up during a thousand years, a culture which was our own,
which had received the imprint of our race, and which had
splendid prospects of development.
There was
little of patriotism in the thirteen candidates who came forward
to claim the crown of Alexander in. on his sad and sudden death
by the fall of his horse over the cliffs at Kinghorn in Fife.
Only two of them, indeed, had any real claim; but it suited
Edward's purpose to cause difficulty and confusion, so that in
making his award as umpire he might place the successful
candidate under an obligation to himself. It cannot be said that
the candidates were in any sense Scottish in feeling or
sentiment or education ; they all had a share of Scottish blood
in the female line. It was a dark hour for Scotland this when,
as the poet says, her "golde changed into lede." After eighteen
months of deliberation, Edward gave his award to John Baliol, a
man of weak character but not without courage. As soon as he
became king, Edward commenced to heap indignities upon him ;
assuming the character of an overlord, to which he had no tittle
of right, he commanded that any act of injustice, or complaint
should be referred to him by the King of Scotland, who must
appear before him personally at Westminster. Even Baliol, the "toom
tabard," could not stand this kind of degradation, and he threw
off his allegiance and invaded England.
Edward
had now got what he aimed at, and he marched north with a huge
army backed by a great fleet. Taking Berwick, then our first
seaport, he slew, in the streets of the town, no less than
seventeen thousand persons, and finally utterly routed Baliol's
army at Dunbar. He then marched north as far as Elgin, and made
himself master of the country. Baliol submitted and did penance
before the English knights in the churchyard of Strathcathro.
His crown was taken from his brow, and he was publicly
unfrocked, while he stood and admitted his guilt, dressed only
in his shirt and drawers. The crown he resigned, and he was sent
a prisoner to the Tower of London. The insult was deeply felt by
the Scottish people. Edward appointed the Earl of Surrey
Guardian of Scotland, filled all the castles with English
garrisons and the public offices with Englishmen, and took away
to Westminster the famous Stone of Destiny on which the Scottish
kings had been crowned from immemorial time. It is, however,
pretty clear that this "lawyer king," as he has been called, did
not remove the national documents as has been stated. Mr. Joseph
Bain has cleared this stain from his character. Fearing lest the
Scots should join Philip of France in his war against him, he
ordered that no Scotsman should be allowed to leave the kingdom.
This was in January 1296-7. In the winter of the same year a
young man, son of Sir Malcolm Wallace of Elderslie in Renfrew,
was insulted by the English in the streets of Lanark. With a
handful of men and his friend Sir John the Graeme (the remains
of whose castle may still be seen near Balfron) they fought
their way through the streets to his house, from which they
escaped into the woods. The English governor, Haselrig, knowing
that Wallace's young sweetheart, the heiress of the Bradfuites
of Lamington, had helped their escape, had her put to death; and
Wallace, the first of Scottish patriots, who had already been
engaged in fighting the invaders, came into prominence by the
revenge he exacted for this murder. He broke into the house of
the governor, Haselrig, at midnight, and, dragging him into the
street, had him instantly beheaded. The people of the town then
rose, and slew twelve-score of the men of Edward's garrison.
Some of the nobles now came over to the popular side. Amongst
them, the Steward of Scotland and Sir John Stewart of Bonkill
joined Wallace, who united his force, largely composed of Lanark
townsmen, with that under Sir William Douglas.
The Stewarts brought into the field the men of Bute and Arran,
the famous Brandani; and after the successful campaign in the
Glasgow neighbourhood, Wallace appears to have taken them, with
"Westland men all sturdy, stout, and bold, five hundred next,
Sir John the Graeme he got, Lundie five hundred more," in his
march through Glen-dochart to Brander and Loch Awe to trap the
Irish mercenary general, Mac Fadzean. Thence they seem to have
marched to Ard-chattan, and here held a kind of conference with
the West Highland leaders.
Carrick suggests
that it was owing to the growing strength of Wallace's force,
and possibly to his severe punishment of deserters of rank, that
some of the barons left him a little later.
These deserters included the best of the nobles, like Sir
William of Douglas, the Steward, Stewart of Bonkill, Robert
Bruce, Lindsay, and the Bishop of Glasgow, Wishart. Wallace
marched north, followed only by his poorer adherents, the free
yeomanry of Scotland. These, as Carrick says, were the tenants
and descendants of tenants of the crown and church lands, or
those who occupied farms on the demesnes of the barons, for
which they paid an equivalent rent in money or produce. They had
the power "of removing to whatever place they might think most
desirable, and owed no military service except to the king for
the defence of the country. Among them the independence of
Scotland always found its most faithful and stubborn supporters.
These liberi firmarii, for so they are called in the
Chartularies and Chamberlain's Accounts, were considered so
useful . . . that, during the minority of the Maid of Norway, a
sum of money appears to have been distributed among them as an
inducement to remain on the crown lands of Liberton and
Lawrence-toun, which they were preparing to leave in consequence
of a mortality amongst their cattle." These and the freemen of
the boroughs, rather than the cottars or villeins who followed
the barons, we are told, supplied the material out of which
Wallace recruited his ranks; and the extraordinary frequency
with which the Scottish nobles, including even the Steward and
Robert Bruce himself, changed sides, leaving Wallace for Edward
and Edward for Wallace, made little difference beyond disgusting
and disheartening the great leader.
At the
battle of Stirling Bridge it is probable that Sir John Menteith,
on whom the lordship of Arran had been conferred by the Steward,
and also Stewart of Bonkill, leader of the Arran men, were all
present. The Steward was now on the side of the English, but his
tenants were on that of the people. He played a curious part,
for, pretending to make peace for the English with the Scots, he
turned round upon them when the actual fighting began, and with
the Earl of Lennox assisted the Scots in pursuing and killing
the English who were trying to save themselves. It may have been
a deliberate trick on their part, but it was not an honourable
trick. In fact, never did the great mass of the Scoto-Norman
nobility show in a meaner light than all through this campaign
and at the great commoner's battle of Stirling Bridge, when
Wallace unaided, nay, hindered, by the nobility, utterly
annihilated a huge English army.
THE BRANDANES
AT THE BATTLE OF FALKIRK
The most famous
achievement of the Brandani was undoubtedly the prolonged
resistance and splendid devotion they showed at the battle of
Falkirk—a battle which, though it ended in defeat, was one of
the things of which Scotsmen may well be proud. There Wallace
was at his greatest and best, and there the commoners of
Scotland—small lairds, tacksmen, and "kindly tenants," and the
independent clansmen from the non-feudal, Gaelic-speaking
districts of Scotland—showed best their tenacity and their stern
bravery; for Falkirk, like later Poitiers, was essentially a
soldiers' battle. And of all the soldiers engaged in it, the
name of the "Brandanys" comes down to us as those who bore the
brunt of the fight. The subsequent references to them in the
story of Wallace shows in what high estimation they were held.
They it was who withstood and defeated the great attack of
Lincoln and Hereford, and the second onslaught by Bek and Bruce,
and they it was, "the men who would hazard anything," who at the
end of the fight were called upon when Wallace gathered a few
chosen men to guard the retreat of the remnant of his army. So
effective does their resistance and the generalship of Wallace
appear to have been in covering the retreat of his men, that
there was no rout or disorder or pursuit; though they were but a
handful, the English were glad to allow them to retire
unmolested; and it is certain that the Scots were able to bury
quietly the dead Sir John the Graeme, and possibly Bonkill, in
Falkirk graveyard before their march westwards upon Stirling. It
was, indeed, not till four days later that Edward entered that
town. He had won, but his army had had their fill of fighting,
and he knew it. The Lord of Arran was at this time, as we. have
said, Sir John Menteith, who was a Stewart; Blind Harry tells us
how he had joined Wallace:
"Sir John Monteith
was then of Arran lord, To Wallace came and made a plain
record, With witness there by his oath he him band [bound],
Faithful to keep to Wallace and Scotland."
Sir John, "the false Menteith," is one of the most famous
figures in Scottish history, as the man who later betrayed
Wallace to the English.
The lordship of the
island of Arran had been given to him by the Steward of Scotland
a very little earlier, but the Arran men followed his nephew
Bonkill, brother of the Steward, as the representative of Jane,
granddaughter of Angus, son of Somerled.
It is
curious that Menteith's brother was at this time governor of the
great castle of Rothesay in Edward's interest, while Brodick
castle was held by Menteith himself for the Scots. It is clear
that the natives were wholly and heartily in sympathy with the
popular cause, despite the fact that Rothesay was in the hands
of Edward.
The English army which marched on
Falkirk, according to English accounts, was a magnificent one :
it numbered over 123,000 men, including 3000 horsemen armed at
all points, and 4000 hobilers or light horse, while the footmen
numbered 80,000 ; but these were not all, for reinforcements
came up on the march. The army, moreover, included Edward's
splendid veterans who had done such service in the French war.
It was supported by a great fleet of vessels anchored in the
Forth, with which communication was quite easy by the river
Carron, then navigable right up to the present town of Falkirk,
Grahamston, and Bainsford—or more properly Briansford ; for the
name was taken from that of Brian le Joy, Prior of the Knights
Templars in Scotland, who joined Edward and was slain by
Wallace's own hand in Callendar Wood, near this spot. With him
were many of the Scottish nobles who had also joined Edward, and
one of them, the Earl of Angus, who was with Wallace, is said to
have sent secret information to Edward as to the position of the
Scottish army and of Wallace's intention to make a night attack.
So was Scotland betrayed on all sides by her Norman nobility.
On Edward's side were arrayed all the great
men of his realm, Lincoln and Hereford, Butler and Clifford,
FitzAlan and Fitz-Marmaduke, Hastings and Bruce.
The Scottish army numbered 30,000, and it had the fatal defect
of being almost without cavalry. Wallace was in favour of
avoiding so great an army, and adopting a waiting policy by
retiring north. There were serious dissensions amongst the three
leaders, and much jealousy. So the little army, consisting of
spearmen chiefly, paused on that historic plain, close to the
remains of the Roman city of Camelon—a plain which had been the
battleground of Scotland during so many ages. The three
divisions of the army were under Wallace, Comyn, and Sir John
Stewart of Bonkill. It is said that Stewart wished to take
supreme command, as brother to the High Steward, who was not
present; Comyn, again, claimed the command on account of his
near kinship to the throne ; while Wallace declined to surrender
his authority. One remark of Stewart's, quoted by Blind Harry,
is of interest, as it shows, whether Stewart actually made it or
not, that the retainers of the peers had joined the popular
cause independently of their feudal superiors—
"Then of your men be not so vain, but mind Had each his own
there would be few left."
"If every nobleman
in Scotland were to claim his part of those vassals which now
follow your banners, your own personal retainers would make but
a sorry appearance in support of your high pretensions."
Comyn deserted at the beginning of the
battle, taking with him 10,000 men ; leaving Stewart with his
Selkirk archers and his Arran and Bute men, and MacDuff with the
men of Fife, to bear the brunt of Hereford's attack. Stewart,
according to Blind Harry, met the advancing division of 30,000
men with his 10,000:
". . . the brave Stewart
stood so fierce and hot, That Hareford's men lay dead upon
the spot. When spears were broke, boldly their swords they
drew, And many thousand of the Southron slew. The rest
they fled unto their king with grief, Who sent ten thousand
for a fresh relief."
The Brandani fought on
though their leader fell early in the day, and Wallace,
according to Blind Harry, said—
"They have
done well in that fellon stoure; Rescue them now, and take a
high honour."
They had withstood the onset of
a whole division, and being freemen, lairds, and free clansmen,
and not feudal serfs or vassals, they were used to acting
independently, and so, though leaderless, fought on. Wyntoun
says:
"The Scottis thare slayne were in that
stoure; There Jhon Stwart apon fute, Wyth him the
Brandanys thare of Bute."
It has been always a
sore thing for Scottish historians to believe that Bruce,
afterwards the good king, was on Edward's side at that great
fight: it is humiliating, but the fact was evidently too
universally known during Bruce's own lifetime to be suppressed.
Fordun makes it quite clear, and he wrote about the year 1380,
or only some fifty years after the death of Bruce, and must have
been born not more than fifteen or twenty years after that
event, when the story of the great struggle was in every one's
mouth. He says :—
"While the Scots were
holding their ground invincible, and could not be broken by
either force or stratagem, this Robert of Bruce, with a body of
men commanded by Antony de Bek, taking a long circuit round a
mountain, attacked the Scots in the rear. Thus the Scots, whose
ranks were impenetrable and invincible in front, were cunningly
vanquished in the rear." Blind Harry gives the same account.
Wyntoun also, who wrote in 1426, would no doubt have been glad
enough to suppress facts which soiled the character of so
popular a hero as Bruce, had it been possible to do so. It
remained for later historians near to our own day to attempt the
task, but, however unpalatable,
"Truth will
stand though all things failin'."
Blind Harry
tells how the Brandani stood over their fallen leader:
"Sir John the Graym, and mony worthy wicht, Wepyt in woe for
sorrow of that sicht, When Bruce his battaill apon the
Scottis straik, Thair cruel com made cowards for to quake;
Lord Cumyn fled to Cummyrnauld away. About the Scottis
the Suthernes lappit they The men of Bute before thair lord
thai stud, Defendand him, when fell streams of blood,
Were there about in floodis where they went. Bathed in blood
was Bruce's sword and dress, Through fell slaughter of
trewmen of his own. Soon to the death the Scots were
overthrown.
So, exposed to the famous bowmen
of England, and surrounded by the men of Bruce and Bek, the
close-locked, invincible schiltrons of Brandanes were mown down
till they lay heaped up like a wall around their fallen leader.
Then Wallace gathered his knights, and, ordering his army to
retire towards the Torwood, where they would be protected from
Edward's cavalry and bowmen, to cover their retreat—
"He and Sir John the Graham, and Lauder then, Stayed with three
hundred stout West Countrymen, Expert in war would hazard
anything."
So much the great leader thought of
our forbears of the West, to whom went the chief honours of that
fatal day, though justice has never been done to the fact.
It was at this time that the good Sir John the Graeme fell, in a
conflict, it seems, between the few knights of Wallace's force
and those accompanying Bruce's party. The Scottish host, or what
was left of it, retired to the Torwood above Larbert on Carron
side, and Bruce is described as returning to Edward's tent where
he,.
"Sitting down in his own vacant seat,
Call'd for no water, but went straight to meat. Tho' all his
weapons and his other weed Were stained with blood,
yet he began to feed; The Southron lords did mock him in
terms rude, And said, behold yon Scot eats his own blood!
The king he blenched at this so home a jest, And caused
bring water to the Bruce in haste; They bade him wash, he
told them he would not, The blood is mine, which vexes most
my thought."
HOW THE BRANDANES COVERED THE
RETREAT
According to Carrick's account, made
up from the English writers, who do not differ materially from
the foregoing, the Scottish army, which principally consisted of
spearmen or lancers, was arranged in four divisions or
schiltrons. "Those in the centre held their long spears
perpendicular, and stood ready to fill up a vacancy, while each
intervening rank gradually sloped their weapons till they came
to a level. The front rank kneeling, and the whole closely
wedged together, presented to the enemy the appearance of four
enormous, impenetrable porcupines, the space between each being
filled up with archers." Seeing the strong appearance of the
Scots, the king desired to wait, but gave way to the opinions of
his followers, and sent forward the Earls of Lincoln and
Hereford with a squadron of 30,000 men. Their progress, however,
was retarded by an extensive morass, which covered the front of
the Scots and obliged their enemies to make a circuit to the
west. While thus employed, the powerful squadron under Bishop
Bek of Durham managed to get in front of the enemy. Bek,
however, on observing the formidable appearance of his
opponents, wished to delay the charge till supported by the
column under the command of the king. "Stick to thy mass,
Bishop," said Ralf Basset of Drayton, "and teach us not what to
do in the face of an enemy." "On, then," said Bek; "set on in
your own way ; we are all soldiers to-day, and bound to do our
duty." At this his men rushed forward, and "became engaged with
the first schiltron, which was almost simultaneously attacked on
the opposite quarter by the division of Lincoln and Hereford
which had cleared the morass. The cavalry of the Scots, and a
large body of the vassals of John Comyn, immediately wheeled
about, and left the field without awaiting the attack. The
schiltrons of spearmen, however, stood firm, and repulsed all
efforts of their numerous and heavy-armed assailants, who
recoiled again and again before the mass of spears. Baffled in
their attack, Edward's cavalry charged upon the archers, who,
less able to stand their ground against the weight of their
mail-clad adversaries, gave way. In the confusion, Sir John
Stewart of Bonkill was thrown to the ground, while attempting to
rally his followers, the archers of Selkirk, and, though many of
them rushed forward to his assistance, their exertions were in
vain: their gallant leader fell surrounded by the bodies of his
faithful tenantry."
Though heavy squadrons of
cavalry were continually pushed forward against the Scottish
spearmen, "still they maintained their ranks, and displayed such
admirable discipline and stubborn resolution, that Edward,
convinced of the inability of breaking their array, suspended
the charges of his horsemen, and ordered all his archers and
slingers to advance." Of these, it is interesting to note,
40,000 Welsh archers refused to act against the Scots. Langtoft
says :
"The Walsch folk that tide did nouther
ille nor good; They held them alle beside, upon a hille they
stood. Where they stood that while, tille the battle was
done."
Of the Scottish spearmen he says :
"Ther foremast conrey, their backs together set, Their
speares poynt over poynt, so sare and so thick, And fast
together joined, to see it was ferlike. As a castle they
stood, that were walled with stone, They wende no man of
blood through them should have gone; These folk was so big,
so stalwart and so clean, Their foyntes forward prikelle,
nohut would they vvene, That if all England from Berwick
unto Kent, The therein men fond had been thither sent,
Stenth should none have had, to perte them through- oute, So
were they set sad with poyntes round about."
The schiltron formation, we are told, was well adapted for
defence, and, despite their small number and the vast odds
against them, had they been supplied with a good detachment of
cavalry to have scattered the terrible archers of Edward, they
would have probably held their ground. As it was, they were
exposed to clouds of arrows and other missiles till they were
reduced, it is estimated, to a fourth of their number, while the
chosen English cavalry which had previously tried to move them,
sat on their great horses and quietly waited till the cloth yard
arrows had done what they, the veterans of the French war, had
failed to do. And so the lads of Argyll and Arran and Bute, of
Lanark and the Lennox, of Ayr and Renfrew, of Fife and
Strathearn and Stirlingshire,—an army which, by the way, would
be composed almost entirely of Gaelic - speaking persons, — was
gradually mown down till the field was encumbered with their
dead, to the number of 15,000 out of an army of 20,000—15,000 of
the finest soldiers Europe could then produce.
THE BRANDANES AT PERTH
Sir John the Graeme was
buried in the old graveyard of Falkirk, where his grave may
still be seen. There the late Marquis of Bute erected a monument
to Stewart of Bonkill and the Brandanes, though it is probable
that Stewart himself was actually buried in Bute.
After the battle, the leaders had to hide ; for Edward's armies
went through all the land, and Scotland lay at his feet. For six
months she was almost conquered. Bute and Arran were once more
regarded as the safe refuges of the patriotic party, and
"The earl Malcolm and Campbell part, but let In Bute,
succour with Synclar for to get."
and
"Adam Wallace, and Lyndsay of Cragye, Away they fled by
nicht upon the sea; And Robert Boid, which was baith wyss
and wicht; Arane they took to fend them at their micht."
During Wallace's absence in France, the Scots fought and won the
important threefold battle of Roslin, which was then the talk of
Europe, and which had given so much encouragement to the Scots.
Neither Wallace nor " the Westland men " were present at this
battle, of which an excellent account has been written by the
late Mr. E. Bruce Low. In July 1300 Edward again set out to
conquer Scotland with a magnificent army; and again in 1302,
after a short truce, when Wallace gathered his old friends,
Seton, Lauder, and Lundy from the Bass, where they were in
hiding, and the Earl of Lennox, Sir Neil Campbell, and the
Brandanes from Bute and Arran. For the Brandani had not yet had
their fill of fighting, though there was many a sore heart in
Arran and Bute, and for many a day Falkirk was remembered by the
vacant places it had left.
"The Iordis then
and good Synclair Soon out of Bute they made a ballinger
For good Wallace."
And some time later, when
they had no men with which to attack Perth, Wallace says:
"In to the North therefore let us bound, In Ross ye know,
good men a strength have made, Here then aff us + they will
come without delay; Also in Bute the bishop good Sinclair,
(Fra he get wit he comes without mar) Good Westland men
of Arane and Rauchle, If they be warned they will all come
to me."
So—
"Byscop Synclar
intill all haste him dycht Com out of Bute with seemly men
to sicht; Out of the isles of Rauchle and Aran."
They appear to have been with Wallace in his adventures till his
capture by means of Sir John Stewart of Menteith, but we have no
details of their doings. The great patriot wascaptured on 5th
August 1305. Attempts have been made to whitewash Menteith, but
the fact remains that he, a friend, a brother in arms, who had
been ardently on the side of the people and the independence of
Scotland, hunted down and, by a low trick, betrayed the patriot
who had saved her alike from Edward and from the Scoto-Norman
nobles.
EDWARD'S VENGEANCE
According to Hemingford's Chronicle, about this time Thomas
Bisset of the Glens, in Ireland, lord of the island of Rathlin,
which had given so many men to the support of Wallace, and later
sheltered Bruce, landed in Arran with a large force, and held it
for Edward. Bisset's tenure, however, seems to have been a short
one, for in 1306 Sir John Hastings was made Governor of Brodick.
In the year previous Wallace had been taken and executed, and
Edward also executed an extraordinary number of Bruce's friends,
including his brothers Neil, Thomas, and Alexander, his
brother-in-law Christopher Seton, and Simon Fraser, the
brilliant soldier but extraordinary renegade of Roslin.
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