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Schlacht von Ancrum Moor

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Schlacht von Ancrum Moor
Teil von: Anglo-Schottische Kriege
Datum 27. Februar 1545
Ort Ancrum, fünf Kilometer nordwestlich von Jedburgh 55° 32′ 12″ N, 2° 36′ 27″ WKoordinaten: 55° 32′ 12″ N, 2° 36′ 27″ W
Ausgang schottischer Sieg
Konfliktparteien

Königreich Schottland

Königreich England

Befehlshaber

Earl of Arran
Earl of Angus

Sir Ralph Eure (†)
Sir Brian Layton (†)

Truppenstärke

ca. 2.500

3.000 Söldnerreiter
1.500 englische Border Reivers
700 schottische Border Reivers

Verluste

unbekannt

800 Gefallene, 1.000 Gefangene

Die Schlacht von Ancrum Moor wurde während der The Rough Wooing genannten Phase der Anglo-Schottische Kriege 1545 ausgetragen. Der schottische Sieg setzte den englischen Einfällen in der schottischen Grenze und den Lowlands ein kurzzeitiges Ende. Das Schlachtfeld wurde in das Inventory of Historic Battlefields in Scotland aufgenommen und von Historic Scotland gemäß dem Historic Environment (Amendment) Act 2011 geschützt.[1]

Hintergrund der Schlacht

Gegen Ende seiner Regentschaft, versuchte König Heinrich VIII., eine Allianz mit Schottland und die Heirat der gerade erst geborenen Maria Stuart mit seinem Sohn Edward herzustellen und insbesondere die Schotten zu veranlassen ihr traditionelles Bündnis mit Frankreich (Auld Alliance) aufzugeben. Er hatte die Unterstützung einiger schottischer Adliger, die in der Schlacht von Solway Moss (1542) gefangen genommen worden waren, und mischte Diplomatie mit der Androhung von Gewalt. Im Dezember 1543 beschloss jedoch das schottische Parlament nach viel interner Uneinigkeit, Heinrichs Avancen zurückzuweisen und stattdessen die Allianz mit Frankreich zu erneuern. Daraufhin befahl Heinrich, Schottland anzugreifen. Dieser Krieg zwischen Schottland und England wurde später als „Rough Wooing“ (dt.: Rüde Werbung) bezeichnet.[2]

Campaign

Henry's reaction was to declare war against Scotland. This attempt to cajole Scotland into alliance was another episode in England's long history of antagonism with her northern neighbour. Henry VIII desired a diplomatic marriage that would neutralise the effects of Scotland's own international relations on his borders. The war was later called the "Rough Wooing".

Henry ordered the Earl of Hertford to devastate Edinburgh, Leith and many other towns. Hertford dutifully laid waste to much of southern Scotland in two expeditions in 1544, burning Edinburgh in May.[3]

In 1545, an army under Sir Ralph Eure (alternatively spelt "Evers") continued to pillage in the Borders. Perhaps their worst atrocity was the burning of Brumehous Tower with the lady of the house and her children and servants inside.[4] The attacks had forged an unlikely alliance between the Earl of Arran, Regent for the infant Mary, and the Earl of Angus. These two Scottish nobles had long been bitter rivals for many years, and had even fought a pitched battle in the streets of Edinburgh in 1520. However, Angus's estates had been targeted during the recent border raids.[5] Angus learned that Eure had been granted some of his lands in the Scottish borders by Henry VIII, and he declared that he would witness the title deeds with a sharp pen and red ink.[4] Internal Scottish politics were set aside, Arran and his rival for power Mary of Guise were reconciled with the Earl of Angus and his brother George Douglas of Pittendreich at the Parliament of Scotland in December 1544, when the Douglases were pardoned for their previous treasons with England.[6]

The Scottish army consisted initially of between 300[4] and 1,000[7] "lances" under Angus, and a similar number of troops from Fife under George Leslie, 4th Earl of Rothes and Norman Leslie, Master of Rothes. They were joined by Borderers under Scott of Buccleuch, whose lands had also suffered devastation at Eure's hands. Together, they moved to confront the English army near Jedburgh.

Battle

The English Army consisted of 3,000 German and Spanish mercenaries, 1,500 English borderers under Sir Brian Layton and 700 "assured" Scottish borderers.[7] As they settled into an encampment under Gersit Law, a small Scottish force made a feint attack and then retreated southwest towards Palace Hill. Much of the English force followed in pursuit. As they crossed the top of Palace Hill and chased down the far side, they found that the whole Scottish army had been hidden on the far side of the hill.[7] The Scots had the advantage of surprise, and of the setting sun which was behind them, dazzling the English, and of the westerly wind which blew gunpowder smoke from arquebuses and pistols towards the English.[8]

A charge by Scottish pikemen drove the English back in disarray. Here the longer Scottish pikes were used to advantage;

"the Scottismen's speares war longer then the Inglismen's be fyve quareteris, or an elne, quhilk, when they joyned with the Inglishmen, they had thame all rivin doune before evir the Inglishmenis speares might touch thame."[9]

The ground was too uneven for the English to rally at the top of Palace Hill. As they tried again to rally on the eastern slope, the Scottish Borderers with them chose to tear off the red crosses which signified their adherence to England and revert to their former allegiance.[10] The English army broke and was forced to scatter through a hostile countryside.

Regent Arran visits the field

According to an English report, Regent Arran came to the battlefield and congratulated the Earl of Angus. He asked a prisoner to identify Ralph Eure's body. Arran wept, and said;

"God have mercy on him, for he was a fell cruel man and over cruel, which many a man and fatherless bairn might rue, and wellaway that ever such slaughter and bloodshedding should be amongst Christian men."[11]

Regent Arran's visit to the field was also mentioned by the 16th-century Scottish chronicle writers John Lesley and Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie, who have the Governor and Regent give thanks for the unexpected victory, where "so small a number discomfited so great a host and one so well appointed (equipped)."[12] As the modern historian Marcus Merriman notes, the size of the English battle group was rare, larger than any border raiding party, especially considering the winter conditions.[13]

Outcome

The English lost 800 men killed (including Eure and Layton) and 1,000 taken prisoner. This temporarily stopped their harrying of Scotland. News of the victory also induced Francis I of France to send troops to aid the Scots, although they achieved little.[8] The war came to an end shortly afterwards on the death of Henry VIII, only to break out again with perhaps even more violence when Hertford, now Protector Somerset ruling on behalf of Edward VI, sought to impose his own political and religious settlement on Scotland.

Fair maiden Lilliard

Plaque on Lilliards Stone
Lilliard's Stone on Lilliard's Edge

A monument on the site of the battle, also known as Lilliard's Edge, records the following traditional verse:

Fair maiden Lilliard
lies under this stane
little was her stature
but muckle was her fame
upon the English loons
she laid monie thumps
and when her legs were cuttit off
she fought upon her stumps.
- AD 1544 [14]

The monument was erected in the 19th century, although it replaced an earlier stone with the same inscription, which is recorded as being in pieces in 1743.[14] Lilliard is said to have fought at the battle following the death of her lover.[15] However, her story is entirely apocryphal, as the name of the location is recorded as "Lillesietburn" in the 12th century, and as "Lillyat Cros" in 1378.[14] The verse itself is based on the earlier English border ballad of Chevy Chase.[16]

Sources

Einzelnachweise

  1. Battle of Ancrum Moor | BTL2. Historic Environment Scotland, abgerufen am 1. Januar 2021.
  2. Warner, p.99
  3. Warner, pp.99-100
  4. a b c Fraser, p.260
  5. Reid, David, ed., David Hume of Godscroft's History of the House of Angus, vol.1 STS (2005), p.117
  6. Merriman, Marcus, The Rough Wooings, Tuckwell (2000), pp.157-8
  7. a b c Warner, p.100
  8. a b Fraser, p.261
  9. Lindsay of Pitscottie, Robert, Chronicles of Scotland, vol. 2, Edinburgh (1814), 441.
  10. Warner, pp.102-103
  11. Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, vol. 20 part 1 (1905), no.301
  12. Lindsay of Pitscottie, Robert, The History of Scotland, 1436–1565, Edinburgh (1778), p.289: Lesley, John, History of Scotland translated by Father Dalrymple, STS vol.2: Unpublished Latin exchequer records of the Regent's Household in the National Records of Scotland mention provisions for the household at Lauder and a celebration at Hume Castle after the battle, NRS E31/13 fol.258r:
  13. Merriman, Marcus, The Rough Wooings, Tuckwell (2000), p.359
  14. a b c Lilliard's Stone. In: CANMORE. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland, abgerufen am 9. Juli 2010.
  15. Groome, Francis H: Ancrum. In: Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland. 1892, S. 49, abgerufen am 9. Juli 2010.
  16. Mary Low: St. Cuthbert's Way. Wild Goose Publications, Glasgow, UK 2000, ISBN 978-1-84952-153-6, S. 88 (google.com [abgerufen am 30. August 2012]).


{{DEFAULTSORT:Ancrum Moor, Battle of}}
[[Category:Conflicts in 1545]]
[[Category:1545 in Scotland]]
[[Category:Battles of the Rough Wooing]]
[[Category:House of Douglas and Angus|*]]
[[Category:History of the Scottish Borders]]
[[Category:Inventory of Historic Battlefields in Scotland]]