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The Battle of Rosslyn, 1303by John Ritchie, Tuesday, 27 April 1999
In the thirteenth century Scotland although an independent country,
suffered from a feudal system that crippled its economy, reducing the
country to a series of warring states due not only to Clan battles for
land and wealth in the North, but continual oppression by the English in
the Lowlands. Scotland, was divided into the Highlands north of Perth,
and the Lowlands from Perth to the border, mostly garrisoned by the
English army or Scottish lords who had been forced to give their
allegiance to Edward the first, the English King. After the tragic death
of King Alexander at Kinghorn, Edward the first, always cast an
avaricious eye towards Scotland, his chance came after the demise of the
little Maid of Norway.
No fewer than thirteen noble claimants to the crown of the northern
kingdom had come forward; the land was threatened by vicious civil
war.
The Lords of Scotland appealed to Edward that he might graciously
arbitrate, he accepted, with gilded crown and chain in hand; the Lion
would now adjudicate the Unicorn Edward as regal bearer of this
self-sought Scottish manacle was more than willing to apply it; he
demanded that on the 10th of May 1291, at his castle at Norham, the Lords
of the north attend him. For the purpose of a hearing of the primary
claimants, now reduced to eight. The long adjudication began, the
Scottish people had desired a King with nothing but Celtic blood and one
of undivided loyalty, this was declared the issue of Edward's mandate to
arbitrate.
Weeks passed, and the finalists were reduced to the families of Balliol
and Bruce.
The Scots Lords now painfully aware of their feet on alien soil and
foreign king deciding the fate of their crown silently watched as the
two remaining claimants in turn swore to abide by Edwards's decision as
their liege and sovereign Lord of the land.
Edwards's final favour fell upon his dependent John Balliol. With this
choice the Unicorn was finally chained and the die cast for a suicidal
war of escape from England's strangling chains. The smile on the teeth
of the Lion was warm for his new Scottish subjects as John Balliol was
crowned the puppet king at Scone on November the 30th, 1292. Dutifully,
Balliol appeared later to do homage to Edward at Newcastle bearing with
him the ancient seal of Scotland.
Shock however, attended the faces of his faithful followers as Edward
took the old and regal seal in
his hands and broke it into four pieces and ordered that they be placed
in the English treasury as a token of his English dominion. This act
gave Edward the first the legal right to Scotland under Norman Law.
However, Scotland's law even then, differed from English law, in that it
was the people in the form of the Scottish parliament that made the law
in Scotland and not just the King. Edward had always been aware that in
order to rule and hold Scotland that he had to give lands in England to
the Scottish nobles and effect marital unions between the daughters of
Scottish noble families to his Norman English Lords, this was
not acceptable to the Scottish nobility.
When a marriage was arranged between Balliol's son and the Count of
Anjou's daughter, one of Edward's French enemies. Edward was so
infuriated that he sent an English force into Scotland in 1296. Berwick
was the first town in Scotland, Edward hung over 10,000 of its
inhabitants from their own doorframes to show what he was capable of,
giving a clear message to all that might oppose his will.
Edward made the captured Scottish nobles swear Fealty and allegiance to
the English crown before they were released, this they did with tongue
in cheek, and were allowed to return to their lands.
King John Balliol or Toom Tabard as he became known was forced to
abdicate.
Scotland was left without a king.
Sir John Seagrave, who was Edward's governor General to the
``Province'' of Scotland, was also the English commander of Edinburgh
castle. He had more than a passing interest in Lady Margaret Ramsay
of Dalhousie and was a frequent visitor to the Ramsay castle, but
the Lady Margaret's favour was the young
Henry St.Clair of Rosslyn.
This obviously caused a problem for Seagrave.
In the turbulent year of 1297, the young Henry St.Clair was elevated to
the rank of Knight by Sir Symon Fraser, many Scottish lords were present
at the ceremony including
William Wallace,
Guardian of Scotland, Lady
Margaret Ramsay was appointed Queen of the day as part of the ceremony
for the new Knight. During the proceedings news reached Rosslyn, that an
English army was marching on Stirling, Wallace called a war council of
those present, then set off for Stirling with young Sir Henry St.Clair
at his side. The two armies met on the 13th of September, greatly
outnumbered and ill-equipped, the Scots under Wallace's tactical
brilliance achieved a great victory, Sir Henry St. Clair in command of
the Scots cavalry played his part well, taking out the archers and
routing the English force. When late in the year 1302, Sir John Seagrave
received the information that Sir Henry St. Clair was about to marry
Lady Margaret Ramsay, he became incensed and sent a letter from his base
in Carlisle to Edward asking for his permission to invade Scotland, this
was expediently granted, and in the middle of February 1303, an English
force of 30,000 men crossed the border into Scotland under
the cover of darkness, avoiding the warning beacons being lit on the
border hills, they succeeded in reaching Melrose. Where Seagrave split
the force into three equal parts, in order to attack three different
targets.
The English invading forces had managed to get fairly close to their
objectives, before news reached Prior Abernethy of Mount Lothian who
dispatched riders to alert important leaders such as Sir William Wallace
near Paisley, Sir John Comyn near Glasgow, Sir Symon Fraser of Neidpath,
Somerfield of Carnwath, Simon of the Lee, The Flemming of Cumbernauld
and the Knights of the Hospital at Torphicen urging them to muster at
Biggar with all speed. Prior Abernethy, who was the Cistercian prior of
Mount Lothian, the western outpost or gate of Balentradoch, the Templar
headquarters in Scotland. Abernethy may have been a Templar knight
before becoming a Cistercian Prior.
By the afternoon of the 23rd of February 1303 some 8,000 Scots had
rallied to the call of arms.
Overall command of the Scottish forces was offered to Sir William
Wallace, but was declined by him because of his earlier defeat at the
battle of Falkirk in 1298 when the battle was lost due to the
abandonment by many Scottish nobles and their forces believing that
Wallace had designs on the vacant Scottish throne.
The battle of Falkirk was the epitome of Scotland at this time, jealousy
and divisionism ruled. Wallace had lost many close friends and allies at
Falkirk; his reaction was to give up his title of Guardian of
Scotland.
Sir Symon Fraser was appointed supreme commander of the Scottish forces,
on Wallace's recommendation. All knights involved confirmed this.
Abernethy whose knowledge of the terrain was second to none being his
ecclesiastical see, guided the troops during the night of the 23rd/24th
of February across the difficult terrain to the area of the valley of
the north Esk river between Penicuick and the village of Roslin.
Three thousand troops under the command of Sir John Comyn went into
hiding in the woods on the west bank of the river Esk. The remaining
five thousand crossed the river and circled to the southeast commanded
by Sir Symon Fraser but, guided by the knowledgeable Prior. They formed
a large crescent battle formation behind the English encampment of Sir
John Seagrave on the high ground east of the river. Gradually tightening
the crescent as they crept stealthily forward on the sleeping
encampment the early morning was dark and cloudy so the Scots soldiers
were able to contain the element of surprise, without being challenged
until the very last moment the Scots fell upon the sleeping English
soldiers, with such ferocity that many were killed in their sleep.
The English losses were so great and so sudden that Seagrove soon
realised that further resistance would result in total annihilation of
his soldiers and he surrendered himself and the survivors of his mangled
force to Sir William Wallace and pleaded for quarter, the remaining
English soldiers followed their commanders orders and lay down its
weapons. They had sustained severe casualties many of the wounded died
before the dawn broke.
This was how the first phase of the battle was won by the Scots at very
little cost to themselves in the form of fatalities or wounded. The few
Scots that were wounded were tended to by the women of the Sinclairs of
Rosslyn in the grounds of the castle, which was where the present chapel
now stands.
The castle also provided a hasty meal, before the victorious soldiers
took up their second battle positions to the northwest of Roslin. On the
advice of Sir William Wallace they formed a line of battle on the summit
of the Langhill.
They did not have long to wait; the second English force under the
command of Ralph de Confrey was seen to approach from the direction of
the Ramsay's castle of Dalhousie where they had abandoned their
siege.
Having virtually no knowledge of the area or terrain, the English army
charged up the Langhill to be met by volleys of arrows from the Scottish
archers, which broke the charge and threw the English force into total
confusion, resulting in the charging English soldiers wheeling towards
the north, not realising that they were heading towards a steep ravine
with a stream at its foot. Because of the force of the weight of their
own troops in retreat, it caused a juggernaut effect. Most of the force
plunged down the ravine to their deaths. The Scots pikes and archers
drove them like sheep to their deaths. Others continued to fall or be
pushed over the precipice on top of the troops and horses that had
already fallen, resulting in the burn being choked with dead and dying
soldiers.
Heavy cavalry horses, soldiers with weapons and equipment became a
deadly entangled mass. Ralph de Confrey the commander of the force died
with his men at the bottom of the ravine. The carnage was so terrible
that very few survived this overwhelming defeat. The Scots hearing of
the approach of the third section of the English force killed most of
their English captives from the second encounter to stop them joining
the third force. Chivalry was abandoned in favour of expediency.
Abernethy had been aware of the possibility of such an eventuality. In
the morning before the second engagement he had sent a small party of
his Cistercian brothers to erect a huge St Andrews cross, made of wood
and canvas on the highest point on the Pentland hills. Being February
the sun was low in the sky and set behind the hill illuminating the
cross on the hill, giving it the appearance of a fiery cross.
The Prior gave the exhausted Scots soldiers an inspiring oration,
reminding them of Edward and England's persecution of Scotland, talking
of the massacre of Berwick and the desecration of Scone Abbey and the
history of the Scots nation.
As soon as he observed the cross was in place he instructed the Scots
army to turn towards the Pentlands pointing out the cross saying that it
was a sign from the Lord of Hosts that they were fighting under the
banner of heaven. They knelt in prayer, the prior giving them
benediction and absolving them from their sins.
This so inspired the Scots troops that the fatigue fell from them and
they approached the next battle, refreshed if not physically certainly
spiritually. The English third group under the command of Sir Robert
Neville had come from Borthwick castle near Catcune in the valley of
Gorebridge, by way of Rosewell marching along the river valley.
Again the Scots army made use of the physical geography. The third part
of the English army made its way to Roslin unaware of the destruction of
Ralph de Confreys force. They travelled along the cart-road, which
followed the glen. The Scots had positioned themselves at Mountmarle
which looked down on the road to the west and right of the English
force, to the east and left of the English soldiers were
Sir John Seagrave and Ralph de Manton, the English paymaster and other
captured knights who survived were ransomed. Soldiers who were captured
were released without their weapons and allowed to return south of the
border after they had sworn an oath never again to take up arms against
Scotland.
So ended one of the greatest battles of the
wars of Scottish independence,
which without doubt had a significant effect on the Scots
at that time, never before had such a small Scots Army triumphed over an
English army of such numbers, the odds were almost four to one in the
English favour. The Scots had used their local knowledge of the physical
geographical landscape of Roslin Glen and the surrounding area as the
main weapon in their armoury, that combined with the tenacity and
courage of the Scots soldiers had won the day.
It is not a battle that is well known in Scottish history; due
principally to the fact that the Comyns had taken part in the battle
and
the Bruce had not. It is always interesting to note that history is
written by the winner, and it is possible that in recording Scotland's
wars of independence, the battle of Roslin was emitted. However as if by
divine right, we still have to this day in Roslin, names like the
Killburn at the foot of Langhill brae, the Hewin near Mountmarle,
Stinking rigg, and Shinbanes field, a
name which derived from when it was being ploughed in the nineteenth
century, five cartloads of bones were dug up and reburied.
In a direct line east to west, running from Mountmarle to Carnethy hill
(a corruption of Abernethy) we come across the village of Glencourse or
its earlier name Glencross a reference no doubt, to the cross built by
the clever Priors monks.
Only in retrospect can the battle of Roslin be placed in its rightful
place in the history of Scotland's struggle for independence, and the
confidence that it gave this small but defiant Nation to retain the goal
of travelling along its own god given path to its own destiny, secured
on
Bannockburn field. J.R. Last changed: 00/02/23 19:20:47 ![]() |