What was the significance of the 1298 battle of Falkirk on the life of William Wallace?
William Wallace was the first Scottish champion in a vicious war of independence from England . Wallace was a national leader who represented Scottish resistance. He was there for his country when his country needed him most. Wallace was an outlaw, a freedom fighter. The battle of Falkirk was William Wallace’s biggest defeat. The all mighty English army, with King Edward the first at its head, proved to be too much for Wallace. Wallace’s demise on the 23rd of August 1305 sparked a hunger for freedom in the people of Scotland that they still fought for freedom for many more years. William Wallace was born circa 1272. Despite Williams’s prominence as a national hero, historically he is a shadowy figure, ill
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Wallace was born in the southwest of Scotland and he was the second son of an unimportant knight. At the time of Wallace’s birth Scotland was a prosperous country. There was no war with England but soon disaster struck and the Scottish King Alexander the third had died and with his only heir dead a king had to be chosen and they wanted Edward the first to intervene and help with the crisis. The picked the wrong man, Edward the first was a ruthless leader, he was an expansionist. The crisis gave him the chance to bring Scotland into his empire under the pretext of preventing civil war. King Edward took control of Scotland. He made the Scottish nobles acknowledge him as their feudal overlord. William Wallace’s efforts to free Scotland from English rule came just a year after the country lost’s its freedom. William Wallace