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Wallace’s Execution
Louise Yeoman


William Wallace’s early successes did not last. His
co-commander Andrew Murray died, leaving Wallace alone as Guardian of the
Kingdom to face a superior English force under Edward I himself at the
battle of Falkirk in 1298. He lost. His credibility ruined,Wallace
resigned the Guardianship, but did not give up the fight. He never
surrendered to Edward and Edward always excepted him from any offers of
clemency. Having served Scotland abroad by diplomacy in France,Wallace
returned to Scotland. On 3 August 1305 he was betrayed to the English and
captured. On 23 August he was executed.
What follows comes from an 18th-century transcript of a medieval
manuscript from the Sir Robert Cotton collection, which was lost in a fire
in 1731. It is a contemporary record of Wallace’s ‘trial’ and sentence in
London before an English court acting on behalf of a king whose authority
Wallace never recognised. It is a translation from the original Latin.
William Wallace, a Scot, and born in Scotland, a prisoner for sedition,
homicides, plunderings, fire-raisings, and diverse other felonies came
and, after the same justices had read out how the aforesaid lord the King
had in hostile manner conquered the land of Scotland over John Balliol,
the prelates, the earls, the barons and other enemies of his of the same
land, in forfeiture of the same John, and by the conquest of him had
submitted and subjugated all the Scots to right of ownership and his royal
power as their King, he had received in public the homages and pledges of
the prelates, the earls, the barons and very many others, and he had made
his peace to be proclaimed throughout the whole of the land of Scotland.
He had appointed and set up the Guardians of that land, appointing the
sheriffs, the provosts, the bailies and other ministers of his, in his
place, to maintain his peace and give justice to all whomsoever according
to the laws and customs of that land. The aforesaid William Wallace,
forgetful of his fealty and allegiance, raised up all he could by felony
and premeditated sedition against the same lord the King, having united
and joined to himself an immense number of felons, and he feloniously
invaded, and attacked the Guardians and ministers of the same King,
feloniously and against the same lord the King’s peace, insulted, wounded
and killed William de Heselrigg, sheriff of Lanark, who [ ] the
appointments of the said King in the regular meeting of the county court,
and afterwards in contempt of the same King without reason fought against
the same sheriff whom he had killed.
Thenceforth with the entire multitude of those who adhered in arms to him
and to his felony, he invaded the towns, the cities and the castles of
that land, and had his letters [orders] sent throughout the whole of
Scotland, as if they were the letters of the superior of that land. He
held and appointed parliaments and conventions after all the Guardians and
ministers of the aforesaid lord the King of the land of Scotland had been
evicted by William himself, and unwilling to restrain himself to so much
wickedness and sedition, decreed to all the prelates, earls and barons of
his land who adhered to his party, that they were to subject themselves to
the fealty and dominion of the King of France, and they were to press for
help towards the destruction of the kingdom of England. Taking some also
from his accomplices with him he invaded the kingdom of England, as in the
counties of Northumberland, Cumberland and Westmorland, and all whom he
found there who were in the fealty of the King of England, he feloniously
put to death in various ways.
He feloniously and seditiously slaughtered religious men and monks
dedicated to God, and burnt and laid waste churches constructed for the
honour of God and the saints, together with the bodies of the saints and
other relics of them that had been honourably collected therein; he spared
no-one who spoke the English language, but afflicted all, old men and
youths, wives and widows, children and babes in arms with a more grievous
death than could be considered. And so, every day and every hour, he
seditiously and feloniously persisted in contriving the death of the same
lord the King, and the destruction and the manifest weakening of the crown
and his royal majesty. And it is clear that after such outrageous and
horrible deeds, the aforesaid lord the King, together with his great army,
had invaded the land of Scotland and had defeated the aforesaid William,
who was bearing his standard against him in mortal warfare, and other
enemies of his, and had granted his true peace to all from that land and
had mercifully taken the aforesaid William Wallace back into his peace,
the said William seditiously and feloniously, whole-heartedly and
undauntedly persevering in his above noted wickedness, disdained to submit
himself to the aforesaid lord King’s peace and to come forth to it, and so
was publicly outlawed in the court of the same lord the King as traitor,
robber and felon, according to the laws and customs of England and
Scotland.
It is clearly both unjust and in disagreement with English laws and it is
held true that anyone thus outlawed and placed outside the laws and not
afterwards restored to his peace, is committed to the forfeiture of his
own status or accountability. It is considered that the aforesaid William,
for the open sedition which he had made to the same lord the King by
felonious contriving, by trying to bring about his death, the destruction
and weakening of the crown and of his royal authority and by bringing his
standard against his liege lord in war to the death, should be taken away
to the palace of Westminster as far as the Tower of London, and from the
Tower as far as Allegate [Aldgate], and thus through the middle of the
city as far as Elmes, and for the robberies, murders and felonies which he
carried out in the kingdom of England and the land of Scotland he should
be hanged there and afterwards drawn. And because he had been outlawed and
not afterwards restored to the King’s peace, he should be beheaded and
decapitated.
And afterwards for the measureless wickedness which he did to God and to
the most Holy Church by burning churches, vessels and shrines, in which
the body of Christ and the bodies of the saints and relics of the same
were wont to be placed together, the heart, liver, and lung and all the
internal [parts] of the same William, by which such evil thoughts
proceeded, should be dispatched to the fire and burned. And also because
he had committed both murders and felonies, not only to the lord the King
himself but to the entire people of England and Scotland, the body of that
William should be cut up and divided and cut up into four quarters, and
that the head thus cut off should be affixed upon London bridge in the
sight of those crossing both by land and by water, and one quarter should
be hung on the gibbet at Newcastle upon Tyne, another quarter at Berwick,
a third quarter at Stirling, and a fourth quarter at St John’s town
[Perth] as a cause of fear and chastisement of all going past and looking
upon these things &c.
Translated by J. Russell from Documents Illustrative of Sir William
Wallace, His Life and Times, ed. Joseph Stevenson, Maitland Club, 1841.
This History Lesson Comes With Thanks To Louise Yeoman
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