The Battle of the Stirling Bridge, a great
Scottish victory against English invaders,
was fought near the Abbey Craig on the
River Forth.
Following the defeats at Berwick and
Dunbar in 1296, which resulted in the depo-
sition of King John Balliol and the imposi-
tion of English rule by King Edward I
(Longshanks), rebellion broke out across
Scotland. Enthusiastic volunteers, led in the
northeast by Andrew Murray (de Moray)
and the southwest by William Wallace,
achieved numerous successes.
The combined armies, probably number-
ing just a few thousand men, gathered on
the far side of the Forth. An English Army
of about 300 horse and 10,000 infantry,
commanded jointly by the Earl of Surrey
and Hugh de Cressingham, Edward's Gov-
ernor and Treasurer of Scotland respective-
ly, approached and crossed the wooden
Stirling Bridge.
The Scots waited until about half were
across then fell upon these and slaughtered
them. Cressingham was among the dead
while Surrey fled back to England.
Scottish losses were few though Murray
was fatally wounded. Wallace, who would
become a legendary patriot of Scottish na-
tionhood, went on to recapture Berwick
and raid into English Northumberland.
Shortly thereafter, he was knighted and
made Guardian of Scotland. He would soon
face a reckoning with the enraged Edward
Longshanks, who had returned from
fighting in France, at the Battle of Falkirk
in July 1298.
~ www.electricscotland.com
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