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Was Robert the Bruce a Traitor to Scotland and Wallace? The Truth About Braveheart 

Celtic History Decoded
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Was Robert the Bruce a Traitor to Scotland and Wallace? The Truth About Braveheart
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Chapters:
0:00 The Truth About Braveheart
1:08 Bruce Sides with England
3:23 Did Bruce Betray Wallace?
5:20 Bruce Stabs His Rival, John Comyn
6:53 Was Bruce a Traitor?
In the film Braveheart, Robert the Bruce betrays William Wallace at the Battle of Falkirk. During a dramatic scene that reveals the betrayal, an anonymous English knight is stripped of his helmet after an exchange with Wallace, and is shockingly revealed to be Bruce. What a traitor, a…. Damn you Bruce.
We know however that Braveheart is no historical gospel. It may be good entertainment, perhaps really good entertainment after a few drams (or bottles of Bucky for those less civilised in the crowd), but it’s not historically accurate, and there is no evidence that supports the betrayal scene in the film.
Yet, when it comes to Bruce, I must not be the only person who has a lingering thought in the back of their mind that there was more to Bruce than the simplistic national hero argument. Who was this man, and is there any truth to the notion that was a traitor to Wallace and Scotland?
One thing that is clear about Bruce and his family is that they had clear political aspirations and were more willing to make concessions and change allegiances than others would be. In fact, early in the First Scottish War of Independence, Bruce and his father sided with England, no doubt as part of a political calculation, although Bruce did quickly switch allegiance to the Scottish side. Then in 1304, Bruce once again pledged fealty to Edward I, although he may have been forced to do so, as Wallace had been crushed and the spirit of rebellion was weak in Scotland at that moment.
These political calculations however speak to the broader fact that Bruce was a noble politician and member of a powerful family that had long-held aspirations for power. The desire for power did not start with Robert the Bruce. For instance, Bruce’s grandfather, Robert de Brus, the 5th Lord of Annandale and a feudal lord, was a claimant to the Scottish throne during the Great Cause. The Cause was sparked after the death of the 7-year-old Queen Margaret in 1290, who was destined for the Scottish throne, result in 13 different claimants vying for power, including Bruce’s grandfather. Following an arbitration process that lasted a few years and was led by none-other than Edward Longshanks, hardly an impartial arbitrator, John Balliol became King of Scots in 1292 and reigned until 1296. Bruce’s grandfather had missed his opportunity to be King of Scotland.
Did Bruce betray Wallace?
First things first, the scene described earlier in Braveheart at the Battle of Falkirk is not supported by any historical evidence. One episode that has drawn some criticism from the purists however relates to Bruce’s treatment of Wallace’s capturer. In 1305, Wallace was captured by John Menteith, a Scottish nobleman and keeper of Dumbarton Castle. Wallace was then handed over to the English, and went on to be hung, drawn, and quartered.
Sources:
Scotsman - Robert the Bruce: myths busted www.scotsman.com/whats-on/art...
Robert the Bruce, Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_...
Smithsonian Magazine, The True Story of Robert the Bruce, Scotland’s ‘Outlaw King’ www.smithsonianmag.com/histor...
Creative Commons Imagery:
Sodacan commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license. creativecommons.org/licenses/...
Colin Smith / The Maid of Norway / CC BY-SA 2.0 commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... creativecommons.org/licenses/...
#RoberttheBruce #WilliamWallace #Scotland

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5 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 26   
@celtichistorydecoded
@celtichistorydecoded 2 года назад
What’s your thoughts on Robert the Bruce? Please let me know in the comments below…
@lisajadoobirsingh4007
@lisajadoobirsingh4007 3 месяца назад
I’d like to know the hereditary of the Bruce’s, especially Robert’s mother’s line.
@jmartin0805
@jmartin0805 2 года назад
The altar incident with Comyn always intrigued me. Surely Comyn didn’t arrive alone. How did that not result in a skirmish between Comyn’s men and Bruce’s? What did Comyn’s people claim afterward? Some things don’t seem to add up about it.
@qetoun
@qetoun 2 года назад
One of the big historical 'what ifs' is...what if Robert had conquered England and Wales in 1314?
@celtichistorydecoded
@celtichistorydecoded 2 года назад
It certainly is, I will need to explore that more in a future video.
@carmichael3594
@carmichael3594 3 месяца назад
Bigger what ifs is what if king Edward 1st had more years left to live? The fight for Scottish independence would had looked different especially the battle of Bannockburn. Edward 1st would not had been so undisciplined as his son was
@historystuff243
@historystuff243 2 года назад
Bruce defected back to Edward I in 1302, not 1304. He was not forced: Bruce was influenced by the potential return of John Balliol to Scotland, backed by a French army. This would have ruined his hopes of becoming King of Scots. He gave not two hoots about William Wallace.
@yusufali3062
@yusufali3062 2 года назад
well said
@greighamilton7335
@greighamilton7335 Год назад
Bruce was watched over by longshanks and never even met wallace
@cyrilagnew7651
@cyrilagnew7651 2 года назад
I traced my ancestry back to Robert The Bruce....he was my 22nd great grandfather
@michaelbarclay1280
@michaelbarclay1280 2 года назад
there will be a barclay somewhere in the mix
@waynemcauliffe2362
@waynemcauliffe2362 2 года назад
I love Braveheart but yeah the history is dodgy.Thanks mate.
@celtichistorydecoded
@celtichistorydecoded 2 года назад
I love Braveheart also mate, but they do turn Bruce into a bit of a villain at points. It's good for Bruce's story arch in the film I suppose though
@waynemcauliffe2362
@waynemcauliffe2362 2 года назад
@@celtichistorydecoded Yeah still a entertainer
@bri_____
@bri_____ Год назад
"no man holds his own flesh and blood in hatred, and I am no exception. I must go and join my own people and the nation in which I was born. Choose now whether you go with me, or depart." Robert the Bruce.
@bryanmcghee3213
@bryanmcghee3213 Год назад
lol
@michaelwhite8031
@michaelwhite8031 Год назад
You have to remember Bruce was a Norman.
@MrVal024
@MrVal024 3 месяца назад
Aye. I'm from Normandy and love the historical connections between Normandy and Scotland.
@sharihutton9717
@sharihutton9717 6 месяцев назад
I think he was a traitor
@bryanmcghee3213
@bryanmcghee3213 Год назад
Bobbie Bruce's Dad was Norman Saxson? It was staged,it was all in bigger picture.
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