Wallace was the younger son of a Scottish knight and minor landowner. His name, Wallace or le Waleis, means the Welshman, and he was probably descended from Richard Wallace who had followed the ...
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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNHow William Wallace of 'Braveheart' Fame Defeated the English at the Battle of Stirling BridgeBraveheart, Mel Gibson’s 1995 film about William Wallace, is notoriously riddled with inaccuracies, from the imagined blue ...
Until 1297 the heavily armed and mounted knight had been an invincible force on the battlefield. Stirling Bridge was the first battle in Europe to see a common army of spearmen defeat a feudal host.
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William Wallace statue's claymore spruced upA striking Borders landmark has undergone urgent restoration work. The 31ft (9m) statue of William Wallace at Bemersyde was put up at the site near Dryburgh, Berwickshire, in 1814 by the 11th Earl ...
The discovery has led to Brian being contacted by the Clan Wallace in the United States to send them a copy of the poem of ...
Emergency repairs have been carried out on a statue of William Wallace to restore his claymore to its full glory. The 9.4m (31ft) statue of the Scottish freedom fighter near Dryburgh was erected ...
For the High Score? For the world’s longest bogie?! We don’t know much about the early years of William Wallace. There’s a story that he killed the English Sheriff of Lanark. No-one knows ...
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