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  1. The Battle of Falkirk (Scottish Gaelic: Blàr na h-Eaglaise Brice; Scots: Battle o Fawkirk), on 22 July 1298, was one of the major battles in the First War of Scottish Independence. Led by King Edward I of England , the English army defeated the Scots , led by William Wallace .

  2. Jul 15, 2024 · Battle of Falkirk (July 22, 1298), engagement fought between the army of King Edward I of England and Scottish resistance forces under the command William Wallace at Falkirk in Scotland’s Central Lowlands.

  3. Falkirk – In 1298, Edward I, returned to England and led an army north to Scotland to find and destroy Wallace’s army. Wallace had just adopted a new tactic for fighting heavy cavalry attack. The Scots had light horsemen, but not as many as the English heavy mounted knights, Wallace was outnumbered nearly 6 to 1.

  4. Feb 12, 2013 · IN JULY 1298, England’s Edward I met an army under the Scottish rebel William Wallace at Falkirk, in the central lowlands of Scotland. Between a small swamp and a forest, amid the mud and the screams, Edward defeated the warrior of Braveheart legend in one of the major battles of the First Scottish War for Independence.

  5. Betrayal by Scottish nobles jealous of his power forced William Wallace to fight the English at Falkirk resulting in the destruction of his army. In March 1298, following the English defeat at Stirling Bridge, William Wallace led a punitive raid into Northumberland.

  6. King Edward I of England's army was defeated by William Wallace and Andrew Murray at Stirling Bridge in 1297, Edward was determined to beat the Scots at the Battle of Falkirk on 22 July, 1298.

  7. Learn about the Epic Battle of Falkirk - Discover the role of William Wallace, King Edward I and Welsh Longbowmen during the Battle of Falkirk in 22 July 1298 during the Middle Ages!

  8. www.electricscotland.com › history › warsBATTLE OF FALKIRK.*

    A.D. 1298. THE defeat of the English at Stirling Bridge by Sir William. Wallace, on the 13th of September 1297, was heard by. Edward I. with the utmost exasperation, and he was in-duced to listen readily to proposals of a truce with France, Biographica Britannica. ; Lord Hailes' Annals of.

  9. www.thesonsofscotland.co.uk › thebattleoffalkirk1298The Battle Of Falkirk 1298

    In the early summer of 1298, King Edward I of England, the redoubtable 'Hammer of the Scots', assembled a huge army and crossed into Scotland. His express aim was to avenge the defeat at Stirling Bridge the previous September and to restore English control north of the border.

  10. Apr 7, 2023 · 22nd July 1298. The Battle of Falkirk. Two years into the First War of Scottish Independence, English king Edward I marched in the region of 14,000 troops and horsemen across the border at Roxburgh, determined to do battle with Scottish troops led by William Wallace.

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