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The
Battle of Flodden or Flodden Field was fought in the county of
Northumberland, in northern England on September 9, 1513, between an
invading Scots army under King James IV and an English army commanded by
Thomas Howard. It ended in a bloody defeat for the ScotsThis
conflict began when King James declared war on England, to honour the Auld
Alliance; namely, to divert Henry VIII's English troops from their
campaign against the French king Louis XII. England was involved in a
larger conflict; defending Italy and the Pope from the French, (see
Italian Wars), as a member of the "Catholic League". James of Scotland
invaded England with an army of over 60,000 men. By the time he reached
the battlefield, however, this number had been reduced to around 30,000;
when they were met by an English force of about the same size.
The battle actually took place near the village of Branxton, in the county
of Northumberland, rather than at Flodden – hence the alternative name of
Battle of Branxton. The Scots had previously been stationed at Flodden,
near to Branxton.
The
battle was the climax of days of maneuvering. The English finally managed
to cross the River Till, and got behind the Scottish positions. The Scots'
cannon opened fire; but due to poorly-trained artillerymen, cumbersome
guns and damp powder, they mostly missed. The more limber, and much
better-trained English artillerymen then returned fire, with deadly
accuracy; blowing the Scottish guns and gunners off the field. The English
cannons and longbowmen then concentrated a furious fire upon the pikemen
of the Scottish schiltrons. This took a terrible toll, and caused the
Scots to charge down the hill and relinquish the defensive high ground, in
order to come to grips with the English, whose billmen wielded a
devastating weapon that was more than a match for the Scottish spears,
which had changed little since Bannockburn, and were better-suited for use
against cavalry charges than for infantry melees. In the bloody
slogging-match that characterised such warfare, the Scots were eventually
encircled, and cut to pieces.
The Scottish reserve, led by the Earl of Argyll, who was to pay for this
inaction with his head many years later, watched impassively as King James
and his army were destroyed. Another Scottish leader, the Earl of Home,
whose division early on routed that of Sir Edmund Howard but then remained
aloof for the rest of the battle, was also executed a short while later.
The king, many of his nobles, and over 10,000 Scottish men were killed.
The English losses are estimated at between 1,500 and 4,000.
Tactically, this battle was one of the first major engagements on
the British Isles where artillery would play a decisive role, and one of
the last decisive uses of English longbowmen.
Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Surrey, was Lieutenant General, and was largely
responsible for the Tudor victory for Henry VIII of England. Howard was
subsequently restored to his father's title of "Duke of Norfolk".
Skirmishes over the English-Scottish border had been taking place for
centuries; and this was perhaps the longest such 'war' on record.
There was not a noble family in Scotland who did not lose at least someone
at Flodden. They and the other dead are remembered by the pipe tune `The
Flowers of the Forest';
"We'll here nae mair lilting at our ewe milking,
Women and bairns are heartless and wae,
Sighing and moaning on a ilka green loaning,
The flowers of the forest are a wede away" |