Scotland

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chronology of events in Scottish history

 

 

 

  

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Headlines are in brown.

Dates are in red.

Hyperlinks to other pages are in dark blue.

References and citations are in turquoise.

Context and local history are in purple.

Geographical context is in green.

 

 

1230

 

An idea of modern Scotland evolved in the early thirteenth century. In 1230, the kingdom of Moray in the north was taken.

 

1249

 

Alexander III of Scotland was crowned. He married one of the daughters of Henry III. He did homage to the King for his territories in England, though not Scotland.

 

1286

 

Alexander III was killed in a riding accident. With a lack of successors, Edward I of England arbitrated and chose John Balliol, Lord of Galloway, who was most likely to toe the English line.

 

1296

 

The French raised in Kent, and Edward I demanded assistance from his Scottish vassals, but instead they made an alliance (“the Auld Alliance”) with France.

 

The Scots crossed the Tweed and started the “Scottish Wars of Independence”, a precursor to the Hundred Years War with France. The Scottish raiders were defeated and Berwick was brutally burned. The Stone of Destiny was removed to Westminster from Scone.

 

1297

 

William Wallace, a knight, led an uprising. He raided deep into England. Edward I, after making peace with the French, committed a large force to Scotland and defeated Wallace at Falkirk. He was tried for treason and executed at Smithfield.

 

Many Scottish Lords paid homage to Edward, including Robert de Brus, a descendant of the Norman and Anglo Saxon nobility with lands in Scotland and England (for instance lands at Skelton and Cleveland where Farndales would later settle).

 

1298

 

Robert de Brus murdered John Comyn and proclaimed that he was king of Scots.

 

1314

 

The English army under Edward II was defeated at Bannockburn on 24 June 1314, which would become an end to English ambitions in Scotland.

 

1320

 

The Declaration of Arbroath appealed to the Pope to assert the Scots as a holy people, with a right to independence under Robert as King – “We fight not for glory, nor riches, nor honours, but for freedom.”

 

1329

 

After another invasion of England, Robert Bruce died in 1329.

 

1332

 

Edward Balliol was crowned King of Scotland with English support. Balliol ceded Lothian and Berwick to England and p[aid homage to Edward as overlord.

 

The Bruce family were supported by France.