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Robert the Bruce's Scottish army defeated a much larger English force under Edwa
1314 Event

June 24

Bruce Wins Bannockburn: Scotland Secures Independence

Robert the Bruce's Scottish army defeated a much larger English force under Edward II at the Battle of Bannockburn on June 23-24, 1314. Bruce chose his ground carefully, positioning his 6,000 men on boggy terrain near the Bannock Burn where English cavalry and archers could not deploy effectively. Scottish schiltron formations, dense hedgehog clusters of spearmen, repelled repeated English cavalry charges. When the English army broke, hundreds drowned trying to cross the burn in their heavy armor. Edward II barely escaped capture. The victory secured Scottish independence and Bruce's throne, though England did not formally recognize Scottish sovereignty until the Treaty of Edinburgh-Northampton in 1328. Bannockburn is commemorated annually as one of the defining moments of Scottish national identity.

June 24, 1314

712 years ago

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