Insurrection

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Insurrection Page 58

by Robyn Young


  The Prophecies of Merlin are real. They were written by Geoffrey of Monmouth in the twelfth century, who claimed to be translating from an earlier source. Along with his hugely popular The History of the Kings of Britain, the Prophecies were in wide circulation and Edward is known to have owned copies. The Last Prophecy, as it appears in the novel, is my invention; however, Monmouth suggested that there were others written. At the end of his History, Monmouth, writing of the Saxon invasions, speaks of an angelic voice that tells the Britons they will not rule their kingdom any more until a certain time when the relics of the saints are gathered. The four relics I focus on all existed. Edward did seize the Crown of Arthur, but earlier than portrayed, during the conquest of 1282–84. Likewise, he took the Stone of Destiny from Scone, although the coronation chair that housed it at Westminster was made a few years later. When reading that passage in Monmouth’s History and looking at Edward’s actions during the invasions of Wales and Scotland – the taking of sacred and royal regalia – the two certainly seem connected. Edward was well known for his fascination with all things Arthurian. He and Queen Eleanor reburied the bones of Arthur and Guinevere in an elaborate ceremony at Glastonbury Abbey. Along with other nobles of the time, he organised popular Round Table jousts and had his own Round Table made. You can see it today in Winchester Castle. The Knights of the Dragon are fictitious, but the members are real.

  Robert’s experiences in Wales are pure fiction, although he is thought to have spent some time at Edward’s court during this period and it seems he may have become close with a number of young English nobles. His father and an uncle had fought for Edward in the 1282–84 conquest of Wales and owed military service for their English lands, so I didn’t feel it too large a leap to place Robert in Edward’s army. The 1295 uprising and campaign are mostly based in fact, although Madog’s brother Dafydd and the execution are fictional.

  Many smaller details have been tweaked or altered, either for ease of reading or to suit fictional elements of plot and character. For instance, William Douglas’s first wife was the sister of James Stewart, but by the time we meet him he was married to an Englishwoman. Likewise, Robert’s father married again after Marjorie of Carrick died. The Setons aren’t thought to have been related despite sharing the same name, but it made more sense to portray them as such. John Comyn the Younger and other Scottish nobles did serve Edward in France, but not until after 1296. Humphrey de Bohun’s father didn’t die at Falkirk, but soon after. For those who wish to gain more insight into the period, please consult the bibliography.

  Robert the Bruce’s story is complex, not simply due to the vagaries of history. There is none of the black-and-whiteness of Wallace about him. He is grey; a changeable, often intangible figure, flitting from one side to the other during the Wars of Independence, disappearing at points into the mists of obscurity before reappearing, suddenly and vividly, to shift the direction of the whole struggle. It was never going to be an easy tale to tell. But in its complexity, in Robert’s – some might say – perfidiousness lie the real essence and beauty of his story: the remarkableness of human frailty and human strength, the capacity to change, to falter, to adapt, and for one man, against all odds, to steer the course of his own destiny, and with it that of a nation.

  Robyn Young

  Brighton

  May 2010

  CHARACTER LIST

  (* Indicates fictitious characters, relationships or groups)

  *ADAM: Gascon commander

  ADAM: cousin of William Wallace

  *AFFRAIG: wise woman from Turnberry

  ALEXANDER II: King of Scotland (1214 – 49), named Robert’s grandfather as his heir, but later had a son who succeeded him as Alexander III

  ALEXANDER III: King of Scotland (1249–86), brother-in-law of Edward I by his first marriage; his wife and children died before him, forcing him to name his granddaughter, Margaret, as his heir

  ALEXANDER BRUCE: brother of Robert

  ALEXANDER MACDONALD: son and heir of Angus Mór MacDonald

  ALEXANDER MENTEITH: son and heir of Walter Stewart, Earl of Menteith

  ALEXANDER SETON: lord from East Lothian and *cousin of Christopher Seton

  ANGUS MÓR MACDONALD: Lord of Islay

  ANGUS OG MACDONALD: youngest son of Angus Mór MacDonald

  *ANDREW BOYD: one of Robert’s vassals in Carrick

  ANDREW MORAY: led the rebellion in the north of Scotland against Edward I in 1297

  ANTHONY BEK: Bishop of Durham

  AYMER DE VALENCE: son and heir of William de Valence, cousin of Edward I and a *Knight of the Dragon

  *BRIGID: niece of Affraig

  CHRISTIAN BRUCE: sister of Robert, married Gartnait of Mar

  CHRISTOPHER SETON: son of an English knight from Yorkshire and *cousin of Alexander Seton

  *DAFYDD: brother of Madog ap Llywelyn

  DAVID OF ATHOLL: son of John, Earl of Atholl

  DERVORGUILLA BALLIOL: mother of John Balliol

  DONALD OF MAR: Earl of Mar, Robert’s father-in-law by the marriage of his daughter

  DUNGAL MACDOUALL: *son of the steward of Buittle, becomes captain of the army of Galloway

  EDMUND: Earl of Lancaster, younger brother of Edward I

  EDWARD I: King of England (1272–1307)

  EDWARD OF CAERNARFON: son and heir of Edward I

  EDWARD BRUCE: brother of Robert

  EGIDIA DE BURGH: sister of Richard de Burgh, married James Stewart

  ELEANOR BALLIOL: sister of John Balliol, married John Comyn II

  ELEANOR OF CASTILE: first wife of Edward I, and Queen of England

  ELIZABETH (BESS): daughter of Edward I

  ERIC II: King of Norway, father of Margaret, the Maid of Norway

  *EVA OF MAR: daughter of Donald, Earl of Mar

  FLORENCE: Count of Holland

  GARTNAIT OF MAR: son and heir of Donald, Earl of Mar, married Christian Bruce

  GILBERT DE CLARE: Earl of Gloucester

  GILBERT DE LA HAY: Lord of Erroll

  *GILLEPATRIC: vassal of Robert’s father

  GRAY: friend of William Wallace

  GUY DE BEAUCHAMP: son and heir of the Earl of Warwick, and a *Knight of the Dragon

  *HELENA: daughter of the Earl of Warwick

  HENRY III: King of England (1216–72)

  HENRY PERCY: Lord of Alnwick, grandson of John de Warenne, and a *Knight of the Dragon

  HESILRIG: English Sheriff of Lanark

  HUGH DE CRESSINGHAM: English royal clerk, later Treasurer of Scotland

  HUMPHREY DE BOHUN: Earl of Hereford and Essex, and Constable of England

  HUMPHREY DE BOHUN: son and heir of the Earl of Hereford and Essex, and a *Knight of the Dragon

  ISABEL BRUCE: sister of Robert, marries Eric II and becomes Queen of Norway

  ISOBEL OF MAR: daughter of Donald, Earl of Mar, and Robert’s first wife

  JAMES DOUGLAS: son and heir of William Douglas, and nephew of James Stewart

  JAMES STEWART: High Steward of Scotland

  JOAN DE VALENCE: sister of Aymer de Valence and cousin of Edward I, married John Comyn the Younger

  JOHN OF ATHOLL: Earl of Atholl and Sheriff of Aberdeen, married a daughter of Donald, Earl of Mar, making him Robert’s brother-in-law

  JOHN BALLIOL I: Lord of Barnard Castle, fought for Henry III at the Battle of Lewes

  JOHN BALLIOL II: son of John Balliol of Barnard Castle, Lord of Galloway and brother-in-law of John Comyn of Badenoch, became King of Scotland (1292–96)

  JOHN COMYN I: fought for Henry III at the Battle of Lewes

  JOHN COMYN II: Lord of Badenoch and Justiciar of Galloway, brother-in-law of John Balliol and head of the Red Comyns

  JOHN COMYN III (the Younger): son and heir of John Comyn II and Eleanor Balliol, married Joan de Valence

  JOHN STEWART: brother of James Stewart

  JOHN DE WARENNE: Earl of Surrey

  *JUDITH: wet nurse to Robert’s daughter

  *KATHERINE: maid to
Robert’s wife

  LLYWELYN AP GRUFFUDD: Prince of Wales, killed during the 1282–84 conquest

  MADOG AP LLYWELYN: leader of an uprising against Edward I in Wales

  MALCOLM: Earl of Lennox

  MARGARET: half-sister of Robert from his mother’s first marriage

  MARGARET (THE MAID OF NORWAY): granddaughter and heir of Alexander III, she was named Queen of Scotland after his death, but died on the voyage from Norway

  MARGUERITE OF FRANCE: sister of Philippe IV, second wife of Edward I and Queen of England

  MARJORIE BRUCE: daughter of Robert and Isobel of Mar

  MARJORIE OF CARRICK: Countess of Carrick, Robert’s mother

  MARY BRUCE: sister of Robert

  MATILDA BRUCE: sister of Robert

  NAVRE: Bishop of Bergen

  NEIL CAMPBELL: a knight from Lochawe

  NIALL BRUCE: brother of Robert

  *NES: squire to Robert

  PATRICK OF DUNBAR: Earl of Dunbar

  PHILIPPE IV: King of France (1286–1314)

  RALPH DE MONTHERMER: royal knight and a *Knight of the Dragon

  RICHARD: Earl of Cornwall

  RICHARD DE BURGH: Earl of Ulster and a lieutenant of Edward I

  ROBERT BRUCE V: Lord of Annandale and grandfather of Robert, competed for the throne

  ROBERT BRUCE VI: Earl of Carrick and father of Robert, he resigned the earldom to his son, and became Lord of Annandale on his father’s death

  ROBERT BRUCE VII: son and heir of the Earl of Carrick

  ROBERT CLIFFORD: royal knight and a *Knight of the Dragon

  ROBERT WINCHELSEA: Archbishop of Canterbury

  ROBERT WISHART: Bishop of Glasgow

  SIMON DE MONTFORT: Earl of Leicester, led a rebellion against Henry III

  THOMAS BRUCE: brother of Robert

  THOMAS OF LANCASTER: son and heir of Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, nephew of Edward I, and a *Knight of the Dragon

  *WALTER: knight of Carrick, Robert’s banner-bearer

  WALTER STEWART: Earl of Menteith

  WILLIAM COMYN: fought for Simon de Montfort at the Battle of Lewes, head of the Comyns of Kilbride

  WILLIAM DOUGLAS: Lord of Douglas, father of James

  WILLIAM LAMBERTON: Bishop of St Andrews

  WILLIAM ORMESBY: English Justiciar of Scotland

  WILLIAM DE VALENCE: Earl of Pembroke, half-uncle of Edward I, and father of Aymer

  WILLIAM WALLACE: leader of the Scottish rebellion against Edward I in 1297

  YOLANDE OF DREUX: second wife of Alexander III and Queen of Scotland

  *YOTHRE: instructor to Robert

  GLOSSARY

  AILETTES: (meaning little wings): worn on the shoulders and painted with the knight’s coat of arms, usually made of flat pieces of wood or leather.

  AKETON: see gambeson.

  BRAIES: undergarments worn by men.

  CHAUSSES: mail stockings.

  COIF: a tight-fitting cloth cap worn by men and women, it could also be made of mail and worn by soldiers under or instead of a helm.

  CROWN OF ARTHUR: a coronet worn by the princes of Gwynedd, most notably Llywelyn ap Gruffudd who styled himself Prince of Wales. Edward I seized the crown along with other important Welsh relics during the 1282–84 conquest and sent it to Westminster Abbey.

  CURTANA: also known as the Sword of Mercy because of its symbolically broken tip, it was thought to have belonged to St Edward the Confessor and became part of the English royal regalia used in coronations.

  DESTRIER: a warhorse.

  DIRK: Scots for dagger.

  FALCHION: a short sword with a curved edge.

  FOSSE: a ditch or moat.

  GAMBESON: a padded coat worn by soldiers, usually made of quilted cloth, stuffed with felt or straw.

  GEOFFREY OF MONMOUTH: thought to have been a Welshman or Breton by birth, Monmouth resided in Oxford during the twelfth century, where he was possibly a canon of St George’s College. Later, he became Bishop of St Asaph. He wrote three known works during his life, the most famous being The History of the Kings of Britain of which the Prophecies of Merlin became part, followed by The Life of Merlin. Despite mixing established British history with romantic fiction, Monmouth presented his writings as fact and many readers of his works took them as such, accepting King Arthur and Merlin as historical figures. Monmouth’s works, although criticised by some of his contemporaries, were hugely popular during the medieval period and from his The History of the Kings of Britain sprang the immense canon of Arthurian literature that graced Europe over the following centuries. Chrétien de Troyes, Malory, Shakespeare and Tennyson were all influenced by his work.

  HAUBERGEON: a shirt of mail, usually shorter than the hauberk.

  HAUBERK: a shirt or coat of mail with long sleeves.

  HOBBY: a type of riding horse, usually small and swift.

  HUKE: a hooded cloak.

  JUSTICIAR: a chief justice official. In Scotland there were three justiciars during the period: those of Galloway, Lothian and Scotia.

  LISTS: the enclosure where a tournament or joust takes place.

  MAGNATE: a high-ranking noble.

  MOTTE: a castle or keep built on a mound, often surrounded by a bailey.

  PALFREY: a light horse used for everyday riding.

  PRIMOGENITURE: the right of the first-born to inherit.

  PROPHECIES OF MERLIN: written by Geoffrey of Monmouth during the twelfth century. Originally composed as a separate volume, the Prophecies were later incorporated into his The History of the Kings of Britain. According to Monmouth he was translating the work into Latin from an older text. Monmouth has been credited as being the creator of Merlin, but it is now believed he derived this enigmatic figure from earlier Welsh sources.

  QUARREL: an arrow for a crossbow.

  QUINTAIN: a target used by soldiers to practise skill at arms, usually in the form of a wooden post with a shield attached to a movable beam that can be struck by the lance.

  ROUNCY: a type of riding horse.

  SCHILTROM: a defensive ring, usually composed of spearmen.

  SIEGE ENGINES: any machine used to attack fortifications during sieges, such as mangonels, trebuchets and perriers.

  SOLAR: an upper, usually private room.

  STONE OF DESTINY: also called the Stone of Scone, it was the ancient seat used in Scottish coronations. Thought to have been brought to Scone in the ninth century by Scotland’s king, Kenneth mac Alpin, its origins are unknown. It was seized by Edward I during the 1296 invasion and taken to Westminster Abbey where it was set in a specially designed throne and became part of the English coronation ceremony. It remained there until 1950 when four students stole it and returned it to Scotland. It was later sent back to England, before being officially presented to Edinburgh Castle in 1996, where it remains on display. It will be returned to Westminster for future coronations.

  SURCOAT: a long sleeveless garment usually worn over armour.

  VASSAL: a retainer subject to a feudal superior, who holds land in return for homage and services.

  VENTAIL: a flap of mail that can be pulled up and secured to protect the lower half of the face during combat.

  SUCCESSION TO THE SCOTTISH THRONE

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Ashbee, Jeremy A., Conwy Castle, Cadw, 2007

  Barber, Richard, The Knight and Chivalry, The Boydell Press, 1995

  Barbour, John, The Bruce (trans. A.A.M. Duncan), Canongate Classics, 1997

  Barrow, G.W.S., Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland, Edinburgh University Press, 1988

  Barrow, G.W.S., The Kingdom of the Scots, Edinburgh University Press, 2003

  Beam, Amanda, The Balliol Dynasty 1210–1364, John Donald, 2008

  Chancellor, John, The Life and Times of Edward I, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1981

  Cummins, John, The Hound and the Hawk, the Art of Medieval Hunting, Phoenix Press, 2001

  Daniell, Christopher, Death and Burial in Medieval England 1066–1550, R
outledge, 1997

  Edge, David, and Paddock, John M., Arms and Armour of the Medieval Knight, Bison Group, 1988

  Fawcett, Richard, Stirling Castle (Official Guide), Historic Scotland, 1999

  Gravett, Christopher, Knights at Tournament, Osprey Publishing, 1988

  Gravett, Christopher, English Medieval Knight 1300–1400, Osprey Publishing, 2002

  Houston, Mary G., Medieval Costume in England and France, Dover Publications, 1996

  Hyland, Ann, The Horse in the Middle Ages, Sutton Publishing, 1999

  Impey, Edward, and Parnell, Geoffrey, The Tower of London (Official Illustrated History), Merrell, 2006

  Kieckhefer, Richard, Magic in the Middle Ages, Cambridge University Press, 2000

  Mackay, James, William Wallace, Braveheart, Mainstream Publishing, 1995

  McNair Scott, Ronald, Robert the Bruce, King of Scots, Canongate, 1988

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  Monmouth, Geoffrey of, The Vita Merlini (trans. John Jay Parry), BiblioBazaar, 2008

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  Morris, J.E., The Welsh Wars of Edward I, Sutton Publishing, 1998

  Morris, Marc, A Great and Terrible King, Edward I and the Forging of Britain, Hutchinson, 2008

  Nicolle, David, The History of Medieval Life, Chancellor Press, 2000

  Oram, Richard, The Kings and Queens of Scotland, Tempus, 2004

  Rixson, Denis, The West Highland Galley, Birlinn, 1998

  Spufford, Peter, Power and Profit, the Merchant in Medieval Europe, Thames and Hudson, 2002

  Tabraham, Chris, Scotland’s Castles, Historic Scotland, B.T. Batsford, 2005

  Tabraham, Chris (ed.), Edinburgh Castle (Official Guide), Historic Scotland, 2003

  Talbot, C.H., Medicine in Medieval England, Oldbourne, 1967

  Taylor, Arnold, Caernarfon Castle, Cadw, 2008

  Yeoman, Peter, Medieval Scotland, Historic Scotland, B.T. Batsford, 1995

  Young, Alan, Robert the Bruce’s Rivals: The Comyns, 1212–1314, Tuckwell Press, 1997

 

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