Wallace was born in around 1270,
probably near Ellerslie (now Elderslie), in Ayrshire,
Scotland. His father was Sir Malcolm Wallace, Laird of
Elderslie and Auchinbothie, a small landowner and
little-known Scottish knight. [Note: in 1999 the seal of
Sir Wallace was translated from the archaic latin. On
his seal it says he is the son of 'Alan'.] His mother is
believed to have been the daughter of Sir Hugh Crawford,
Sheriff of Ayr, and he is thought to have had an elder
brother, also called Malcolm. Because he was the second
son, William did not inherit his father's title or
lands.
At the time of Wallace's birth,
Alexander III had already been on Scotland's throne for
over twenty years. His reign had seen a period of peace,
economic stability, and prosperity and he had
successfully fended off continuing English claims to
suzerainty. King Edward I (known as Edward "Longshanks")
came to the throne of England in 1272, two years after
Wallace was born.
There is almost no reliable
information about William Wallace's early life. He is
said to have spent his childhood at Dunipace, near
Stirling, under the supervision of his uncle, who was a
priest. Wallace probably led a comfortable and peaceful
life as the son of a nobleman. He and his brother
Malcolm must also have trained in the martial arts of
the time, - including horsemanship and swordsmanship.
Contemporary chroniclers say that William was a large,
powerful man. He reportedly stood more than six and a
half feet tall, - a veritable giant at a time when the
average height of an infantryman was only slightly more
than five feet.
Carrick, in his Life of Sir
William Wallace of Elderslie, consolidates some of
the available historical descriptions of Wallace as
follows:
"His visage was long,
well-proportioned, and exquisitely beautiful; his eyes
were bright and piercing, the hair of his head and beard
auburn, and inclined to curl; that on his brows and
eyelashes was of a lighter shade. His lips were round
and full. His stature was lofty and majestic, rising
head and shoulders above the tallest men in the country.
Yet his form, though gigantic, possessed the most
perfect symmetry, and with a degree of strength almost
incredible, there was combined such an agility of body
and fleetness in running that no-one, except when
mounted on horseback, could outstrip or escape from him
when he happened to pursue."

In 1286, by the time he was about
sixteen, Wallace may have been preparing to pursue a
life in the church. In that year, Alexander III died
after riding off a cliff during a wild storm. None of
Alexander III's children survived him. After his death,
his young granddaughter, Margaret, the 'Maid of Norway',
was declared Queen of Scotland by the Scottish lords,
but was still only a little girl of 4 who was living in
Norway. An interim Scottish government run by
'guardians' was set up to govern until Margaret was old
enough to take up the throne. However, Edward I of
England took advantage of the uncertainty and potential
instability over the Scottish succession. He agreed with
the guardians that Margaret should marry his son and
heir Edward of Caernarvon (afterwards Edward II of
England), on the understanding that Scotland would be
preserved as a separate nation.
Margaret fell ill and died
unexpectedly in 1290 at the age of 8 in the Orkney
Islands on her way from Norway to England. 13 claimants
to the Scottish throne came forward, most of whom were
from the Scottish nobility.
Scotland was essentially occupied
by the English at this time, and was beset by its own
internal conflicts. The various aristocratic Scottish
guardians of the throne plotted against one another,
variously aligning themselves with King Edward or
defying their loyalty to him when it suited them. At the
same time English troops, including mercenaries and
frequently disgruntled Welsh and Irish conscripts,
operated freely throughout Scotland from stockaded camps
and fortified garrisons. Civilian life was precarious,
and abuses by the occupiers against the common people
were rife. The Scottish nobles did little to maintain
the rule of law and protect Scots from atrocities.
In this climate of lawlessness,
William Wallace's father was killed in a skirmish with
English troops in 1291. It is likely that the death of
his father at the hands of the English contributed to
Wallace's lifelong desire to fight for his nation's
independence. However, little is known about Wallace's
life during this period, except that he lived the life
of an outlaw, moving constantly to avoid the English,
and occasionally confronting them with characteristic
ferocity.
Carrick's describes Wallace's
skills as a warrior:
"All powerful as a swordsman
and unrivalled as an archer, his blows were fatal and
his shafts unerring: as an equestrian, he was a model of
dexterity and grace; while the hardships he experienced
in his youth made him view with indifference the
severest privations incident to a military life."
In the absence of a clear
successor to the Scottish throne, the claimants to the
Scottish throne requested Edward I's arbitration. The
three main candidates were all descendants of David,
Earl of Huntingdon, who was the brother of William the
Lion, king of Scotland from 1165 to 1214. John de
Balliol was the grandson of David's eldest daughter;
Robert
de Bruce was the son of David's second daughter, and
John de Hastings was the grandson of David's youngest
daughter. In 1292, Balliol was chosen as king by a
special commission one half of whose whose members were
chosen by Bruce and the other half by Balliol.
Balliol took an oath of fealty,
paid homage to Edward, and was accepted in Scotland.
However, Edward I's motives had not really been to help
the Scots as an arbitrator. He saw himself as the feudal
superior of the Scottish crown, and wished to install a
Scottish monarch whom he could manipulate.
Edward underestimated the Scots'
belief in their own sovereignty. When he sought to exert
his suzerainty by taking law cases on appeal from
Scottish courts to his own court in England, and by
summoning Balliol to do military service for him against
France, he turned the Scottish throne against him. In
the meantime, England had been at war with France. In
1295, a treaty was negotiated between Edward I and the
French that provided for the marriage of John de
Balliol's son Edward to the French King's niece. Edward
demanded the surrender of three castles on the Scottish
border and, on John's refusal, summoned him to his
court. John did not obey, and war was inevitable.
Edward marched north with his
armies. After a five-month campaign, he conquered
Scotland in 1297. Following his victory, he appointed
his own agents to enforce peace in Scotland. He deposed
and imprisoned John de Balliol and declared himself
ruler of Scotland. He also had the Stone of Destiny, the
coronation stone of Scone, taken south to Westminster.
The government of Scotland was placed in the hands of
Englishmen led by Hugh Cressingham, the Earl of Surrey.
Outside the south-east corner of
Scotland, there was widespread disorder, and defiance
against the English was increasing. Wallace was involved
in a fight with local soldiers in the village of Ayr.
After killing several of them, he was overpowered and
thrown into a dungeon where he was slowly starved.
Wallace was left for dead, but sympathetic villagers
nursed him back to health. When he had regained his
strength, Wallace recruited several local rebels and
began his systematic and merciless assault on the hated
English and their Scottish sympathisers.
As his support grew, Wallace's
attacks broadened. In May 1297, with as many as 30 men,
he avenged his father's death by ambushing and killing
the knight responsible and some of his soldiers. Now, he
was no longer merely an outlaw but a local military
leader who had struck down one of Edward's knights and
some of his soldiers. William Wallace had become the
king's enemy.
Although most of Scotland was in
Scottish hands by August 1297, Wallace successfully
recruited a band of commoners and small landowners to
attack the remaining English garrisons between the
Rivers Forth and Tay. Wallace and his co-leader, Sir
Andrew de Moray, marched their forces towards
Stirling Castle, a stronghold of vital strategic
importance to the English. The English commanders must
have been falsely confident that the upstart Scots would
retreat or surrender. On Sept 11, 1297, the English army
under John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey, confronted him
near Stirling. Wallace's forces were greatly
outnumbered, but Surrey had to cross a narrow bridge
over the River Forth before he could reach the Scottish
positions. Wallace's men lured the English into making
an impulsive advance, and slaughtered them as they
crossed the river. English fatalities are reported to
have approached 5,000, gaining Wallace an overwhelming
victory. He had shown not only that he was a charismatic
leader and warrior, but also that his tactical military
ability was strong. Never before had a Scottish
army so triumphed over an English aggressor. Wallace
captured Stirling Castle and for the moment Scotland was
almost free of occupying forces.

Stirling Bridge
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At the time of the battle of
Stirling Bridge, Wallace and de Moray were both in their
late twenties. Neither could yet claim to be Scottish
national heroes, and they were not recognised by their
aristocratic enemies in Scotland as anything more than
local commanders. Under Wallace, the Scots, - commoners
and knights, rather than nobles, - were united in a
focused fight for freedom from foreign rule. Whereas the
Scottish nobility had usually given in to English
demands for allegiance, Wallace's patriotic force
remained unequivocally dedicated to the struggle for
Scottish independence.
In October of 1296, Wallace
invaded northern England and ravaged the counties of
Northumberland and Cumberland. Upon returning to
Scotland early in December 1297, he was knighted and
proclaimed guardian of the kingdom, ruling in Balliol's
name. In less than six years, he had risen from
obscurity to become Sir William Wallace, holder of one
of the most powerful posts in the kingdom. Nevertheless,
many Scottish nobles lent him only grudging support, and
he had yet to meet Edward I in a head-on confrontation.
Wallace's acclaim following the
battle of Stirling Bridge was short-lived. Edward
returned to England from campaigning in France in March
1298. On July 3 he invaded Scotland, intending to crush
Wallace and all those daring to assert Scotland's
independence. On July 22, Edward's 90,000-strong army
attacked a much smaller Scottish force led by Wallace
near Falkirk. The English army was at a technological
advantage. Its longbow-men decimated Wallace's spearmen
and cavalry by firing scores of arrows over great
distances. As many as 10,000 Scots may have been killed.
Although Edward failed to subdue Scotland completely
before returning to England, Wallace's military
reputation was ruined. He retreated to the thick woods
nearby and resigned his guardianship in December. He was
succeeded as guardian of the kingdom by Robert de Bruce
(later King Robert I) and Sir John Comyn "the
Red".

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From the autumn of 1299 until
1303, nothing certain is known about Wallace's
activities. There is some evidence to suggest that he
went to France with several loyal supporters on a
diplomatic mission to seek support from King Philip IV.
Philip may have furnished him with letters of
recommendation to Pope Boniface VIII and King Hakon of
Norway. Then, in 1303, the Treaty of Paris effectively
ended hostilities between England and France.
Having made peace with the French,
Edward renewed his conquest of Scotland in earnest. He
captured Stirling in 1304, and although most of the
Scottish nobles pledged allegiance to the English crown,
he continued to pursue the outlaw Wallace relentlessly.
Edward's refusal to acknowledge Wallace as a worthy
enemy from a separate country meant that the English
could officially regard Wallace as a traitor to the
English nation.
On Aug 5 1305, Wallace was
betrayed by a Scottish knight in service to the English
king, and arrested near Glasgow. He was taken to London
and denied the status of a captured soldier. He was
tried for the wartime murder of civilians (he allegedly
spared "neither age nor sex, monk nor nun").
He was condemned as a traitor to the king even though,
as he correctly maintained, he had never sworn
allegiance to Edward.
On 23rd August 1305, he
was executed. At that time (and for the next 550 years),
the punishment for the crime of treason was that the
convicted traitor was dragged to the place of execution,
hanged by the neck (but not until he was dead), and
disembowelled (or drawn) while still alive. His entrails
were burned before his eyes, he was decapitated and his
body was divided into four parts (or quartered).
Accordingly, this was Wallace's fate. His head was
impaled on a spike and displayed at London Bridge, his
right arm on the bridge at Newcastle-upon-Tyne, his left
arm at Berwick, his right leg at Perth, and the left leg
at Aberdeen. Edward may have believed that with
Wallace's capture and execution, he had at last broken
the spirit of the Scots. He was wrong. By executing
Wallace so barbarically, Edward had martyred a popular
Scots military leader and fired the Scottish people's
determination to be free.
Almost immediately, Robert I the
Bruce revived the national rebellion that was to win
independence for Scotland. He succeeded and was crowned
king of Scotland in 1306.
On his way to reconquer Scotland,
Edward died near Carlisle.
Several hundred years later in the
19th century, statues commemorating Sir
William Wallace were erected overlooking the River Tweed
and in Lanark. In 1869, the 220-foot high National
Wallace Monument was completed on a hill near Stirling.
This huge tower now dominates the area where the Scots
fought their most decisive battles against the English
in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries at Stirling
Bridge and Bannockburn.