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  1. Robert the Bruce, who took up arms against both Edward I and Edward II of England and who united the Highlands and the Lowlands in a fierce battle for liberty: and a humble Lowland knight, Sir William Wallace. Sir William Wallace 1272 – 1305. Wallace killed the English Sheriff of Lanark who had apparently murdered Wallace’s sweetheart.

  2. But in 1297, an increasingly disillusioned Bruce shifted his allegiance to Scottish rebel William Wallace. Forever cemented (erroneously) in popular imagination as a blue paint-covered...

    • 'Braveheart' Deals in Stereotypes
    • 'Braveheart' Is Full of Misogyny
    • 'Braveheart' and Its Bollocks Battles
    • Wallace’s Death in ‘Braveheart’ Is Not Accurate & That’S A Good Thing

    When one pictures a Scot, the image typically depicted is one of a working-class, kilt-wearing ruffian playing bagpipes. If that were indeed true, then Braveheart has arguably the most realistic portrayal of Scots on film. Only it's not. A young Wallace and his family, in the film, are poor farmers living in a Highland glen. In actuality, Wallace w...

    Women do not fare much better in the film. Wallace's wife Murron MacClannough (Catherine McCormack) is publicly executed in the film. That event did happen, and while it wasn't the catalyst of Wallace's vendetta against the English, it was the straw that broke the back. The indignity around the figure is that Murron wasn't even her name. Her real n...

    The strength of Braveheart is in its depiction of the historicbattles between the Scottish and the English, appropriately grand and bloody in equal parts. But, yet again, another aspect of the film that plays fast and loose with the facts. The image of Wallace prepared for battle with blue woad face paint and a long sword is a striking image, but t...

    Charged with treason, Wallace was sentenced to be hanged, drawn, and quartered. The film doesn't seem to hold back in detailing the gruesome execution, but the truth is the real execution was far, far worse than what appears on-screen. Four different horses, one per limb, dragged Wallace for miles to his execution. He was hanged almost to the point...

    • Lloyd Farley
    • Mel Gibson
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  4. As Earl of Carrick, Robert the Bruce supported his family's claim to the Scottish throne and took part in William Wallace 's revolt against Edward I of England.

    • Never the twain shall meet. Although they were alive at the same time, and William Wallace was Guardian of Scotland immediately before Robert the Bruce, there is no evidence that the two ever met.
    • Not an axe-ident. The poet John Barbour wrote that Bruce broke a favourite axe killing Henry de Bohun in single combat at the Battle of Bannockburn. Accounts tell that the English knight lowered his lance and charged at Bruce.
    • Family reunion. Bruce’s victory at Bannockburn in 1314 enabled him to demand the return from English captivity of his wife Elizabeth, his daughter Marjorie, his sister Christina, and Robert Wishart, bishop of Glasgow.
    • The Peerage of Scotland. Robert the Bruce was Earl of Carrick from 1292 to 1313. This title is now held by Charles, the Prince of Wales.
  5. May 27, 2021 · In "Braveheart," the movie depicts Robert the Bruce betraying Wallace at the fateful Battle of Falkirk, where the kilted rebel was routed by the English. But Brown says such a meeting likely never happened. What's true is that Robert originally backed Wallace's rebellion before capitulating to Edward I in exchange for keeping his lands.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BraveheartBraveheart - Wikipedia

    He also connects with Robert the Bruce, a contender for the Scottish crown. Upon returning to England and confronting his son, Longshanks sends Isabella to negotiate with Wallace as a distraction from the arrival of Longshanks' forces. After meeting Wallace, Isabella becomes enamored with him.

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