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Scottish forces under Wallace and Moray defeat the English at the Battle of Stirling Bridge

On a September morning in 1297 C.E., a smaller Scottish army held the high ground north of the River Forth and waited. Below them, English knights and infantry filed two abreast across a narrow wooden bridge — and walked into one of the most tactically decisive ambushes of the medieval world.

Key facts

  • Battle of Stirling Bridge: Fought on September 11, 1297 C.E., the battle pitted a Scottish force estimated at 5,300 to 6,300 men against an English army of roughly 9,000 — yet the Scots won decisively by exploiting the geography of the river crossing.
  • Joint Scottish command: Leadership of the Scottish forces was shared between Andrew Moray, who had led a successful revolt across northern Scotland through the summer, and William Wallace — a partnership that mainstream retellings have often reduced to Wallace alone.
  • English tactical failure: Hugh de Cressingham, King Edward I’s treasurer in Scotland, rejected advice to use a ford two miles upstream where 60 horsemen could cross simultaneously, instead ordering a direct assault across the bridge — a decision that proved catastrophic.

What happened at the bridge

The River Forth near Stirling presented a natural chokepoint. The wooden bridge of 1297 C.E. — believed to have stood roughly 180 yards upstream from the 15th-century stone bridge still visible today — was wide enough for only two horsemen riding side by side. To the east, the river broadened. To the west lay the marshland of Flanders Moss. The bridge was the only practical crossing.

Surrey’s army had arrived at Stirling by September 9. He knew the terrain was unfavorable and delayed for two days, sending emissaries including James Stewart and two Dominican friars to negotiate. Wallace’s reported reply, preserved in the Chronicle of Hemingburgh, cut the diplomacy short: “We are not here to make peace but to do battle to defend ourselves and liberate our kingdom.”

When the English advance finally began on the morning of September 11, Wallace and Moray waited with deliberate patience — according to the Chronicle of Hemingburgh, until “as many of the enemy had come over as they believed they could overcome.” When approximately 2,000 English troops had crossed, the Scots spearmen came down rapidly from the high ground. They drove off a charge by the English heavy cavalry, counterattacked the infantry, and seized control of the near end of the bridge, cutting off any reinforcement from the south.

Trapped in the loop of the river, with no retreat and no relief possible, most of the English troops on the north bank were killed. Contemporary English chronicler Walter of Guisborough recorded losses of 100 cavalry and 5,000 infantry. Among the dead was Cressingham himself — whose decision to reject the flanking option had sealed the outcome.

The role of Andrew Moray

The story of Stirling Bridge has long been told as Wallace’s story alone — amplified by the 15th-century poet Blind Harry and, centuries later, by the 1995 film Braveheart. But Moray’s contribution was foundational. Through the summer of 1297 C.E., he had led a revolt that brought Urquhart, Inverness, Elgin, Banff, and Aberdeen under Scottish control before the two commanders united near Dundee and marched together to Stirling.

Moray was mortally wounded during the battle. He died by November 1297 C.E., never witnessing the aftermath of the victory he helped engineer. Historic Environment Scotland now recognizes the battlefield as a protected site under the Scottish Historical Environment Policy of 2009 — a formal acknowledgment that the ground where both men fought carries lasting significance.

Lasting impact

The victory at Stirling Bridge had immediate strategic consequences. The English were driven from most of Scotland. Surrey retreated toward Berwick, abandoning the Lowlands and leaving the garrison at Stirling Castle isolated. Scottish forces proceeded to raid as far south as Durham in northern England.

Wallace was appointed Guardian of the Kingdom of Scotland — a title that recognized him as the de facto head of a government resisting English occupation. It was a remarkable elevation for a man who was not a great lord but a knight of modest standing, and it signaled that the resistance movement had achieved something beyond a battlefield win: it had demonstrated that Scotland could function as a sovereign political entity.

The battle’s longer legacy flows through ideas as much as events. It fed Scottish national consciousness across the centuries that followed — through Blind Harry’s verse, through the Wars of Independence that continued under Robert the Bruce, and through the broader question of what self-determination looks like when a smaller nation resists a larger one. That question has never fully gone away. The Wallace Monument, built between 1861 and 1869 on Abbey Craig — the very high ground where the Scottish army gathered before the battle — stands as one of the most visited heritage sites in Scotland, drawing visitors who connect the 1297 C.E. moment to ongoing conversations about Scottish identity and governance.

The battle also holds a place in military history as a textbook example of using terrain to neutralize a numerically and technologically superior force. Military historians have noted that Wallace and Moray’s patience — waiting until exactly the right fraction of the enemy had crossed — required both tactical clarity and the ability to hold a large force steady under pressure. That kind of disciplined restraint is rarer than courage.

Blindspots and limits

The historical record of Stirling Bridge is overwhelmingly shaped by English chroniclers, and Scottish casualties — with the exception of Moray’s mortal wound — go entirely unrecorded. The ordinary Scottish spearmen who held the line and carried the fight have no names in any surviving account. Blind Harry’s celebrated verse, written nearly 200 years after the battle for the court of James IV, is acknowledged by historians to blend fact with invention freely — and much of what popular culture treats as history flows from that source rather than from contemporary evidence.

It is also worth stating plainly that the victory at Stirling Bridge did not end the First War of Scottish Independence. Edward I launched another invasion, and Wallace was defeated at the Battle of Falkirk in 1298 C.E. He was captured and executed in 1305 C.E. The independence Scotland eventually secured came later, under different leadership, and at enormous human cost.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Battle of Stirling Bridge

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