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Andre de Moray
(William
Wallace's Forgotten Soldier)

In
the month of March 1297, young Andrew de Moray, only recently married,
escaped from imprisonment by Edward I in England. His father, Sir Andrew de
Moray, and his uncle were still held in the Tower of London, along with many
other Scottish knights who had earlier shown a tendency to revolt, and had
been captured and taken to England as assurance against further uprisings.
He headed back to the family lands in Moray, and raised the standard of
revolt. Inverness Castle was at this time in the hands of the English, and
the leader of the Inverness burgesses was a man named Alexander Pilche. He
led a force of the burgesses to Avoch Castle, where the revolt was being
raised, and joined de Moray, becoming his trusted lieutenant. The force
began a series of raids against the English in the area, and caused so much
strife that Edward's Lieutenant of Moray, Sir Reginald le Chen, sent a plea
to Edward for help in putting down the uprising. Following a conference at
Inverness Castle with his subordinates, de Moray's force besieged Urquhart
Castle. Thanks to an influx of provisions, the siege of Urquhart Castle did
not succeed, and Andrew's army left the area having neither won nor lost.
De Moray now divided his forces into two separate bands, one operating out
of Avoch Castle and the other from Balconie Castle, which
had been taken from the Countess of Ross. She had sided with the English,
her husband being held hostage in the Tower of London, and she it was who
had re-supplied Urquhart Castle. This was her payment for choosing the wrong
side! De Moray's army wreaked havoc on the English positions in the North,
killing many of Edward's officials, or capturing them and throwing them into
prison. At the same time, Robert Bruce was operating against the English in
Ayrshire, and William Wallace was becoming a factor in Argyll.
Meanwhile, Edward I made a deal with some of the Scottish knights and nobles
in his prisons. He was about to embark on a military campaign to Flanders,
so he offered the captive Scots their parole if they agreed to accompany his
army. Many of them took him up on his offer, among them John Comyn, Earl of
Buchan, John Comyn of Badenoch, Alexander de Balliol, Alexander, Earl of
Menteith, Reginald de Crauford, and a few others. These departed for
Scotland under safe conduct to make themselves ready to accompany Edward on
his campaign to Flanders. En route, they were overtaken by a messenger sent
to catch up with them and deliver Edward's orders to raise all their forces
and suppress the revolt led by Andrew de Moray. The Comyns were in a dilemma
over this, King John (Balliol) having recently resigned the throne, and the
Comyns being in contention with the Bruces over the line of succession. They
decided to carry out Edwards orders following a meeting in Aberdeen, Bruce
and Sir William Douglas having been recently defeated in battle at Ayr.
De Moray was
not idle whilst all this unfolded, having burnt the Castle of Duffus, and
then moved to Boharm, to await the oncoming English army. His forces
positioned themselves on a wooded hillside above a ford on the River Spey,
and waited to ambush their foes. On seeing the size of the force sent
against them, they decided to withdraw without battle, and shadowed the
array from Elgin to Inverness. Safe for the time being within the walls of
Inverness Castle, Edward's cohorts gathered to themselves the remaining
forces in the Highlands still considered loyal to his cause, principally Sir
William de Fitzwarine, Constable of Urquhart Castle, John of the Aird, and
the Countess of Ross, with their respective feudal retainers. Here again, as
with the Comyns and Mar, the enthusiasm of these new recruits for the task
at hand was doubtful. Aberdeenshire had been left denuded of English forces
whilst all this had been going on, and the Scots there rose against the
invaders. The Comyns and Sir Gartenet of Mar readily agreed to abandon the
mission against their kinsman and set out with their followers for Aberdeen.
Andrew de Moray watched the last of the English forces leave Inverness, and
immediately set about recapturing the castles held for Edward in the region,
including Inverness, Urquhart, Nairn, Forres and Elgin. They even captured
Sir Reginald le Chen, Edward's guardian of Moray, and held him prisoner for
a time. Aberdeen fell to the rebels, the Scots were in complete control of
the north east, and all the direct result of Andrew de Moray's brave
actions.
The Lothians were now under English control, and Robert Bruce, with Sir
William Douglas, Sir Alexander Lindsay, and the Bishop of Glasgow (Wisehart),
had capitulated to the English without a sword being raised at Irvine in
Ayrshire on 7 July, 1297. The large English force which precipitated Bruce's
surrender had joined up with another English army coming north through the
Lothians. Andrew de Moray and William Wallace now represented the only two
principal forces in opposition to Edward, and the Battle of Stirling Bridge
was just a few short weeks away.
Whilst de
Moray was conducting his campaign in the north, Wallace had led his forces
out of Selkirk forest and into Argyll to face an army under MacFadyen, an
Irish ally of Edward whose band included a large number of Irish and smaller
number of Scots. After an arduous march, Wallace's men fell on MacFadyen's
forces near Loch Dochart. Wallace prevailed, and MacFadyen escaped with 15
men to a cave at Craigmore. Duncan of Lorne, a loyal ally of Wallace,
pursued him there and slaughtered MacFadyen and his men. Following the
MacFadyen affair, Wallace marched his men through the central Highlands to
Perth and won the city back for Scotland using siege engines for the first
time. Thence, he advanced on Cupar and continued north for Aberdeen. Along
the way, he attacked Dunnottar castle, where he ordered the slaughter of
4,000 English troops who were trying to escape. Wallace reached Aberdeen
when the Scottish uprising was in full flower. Sir Henry de Latham, the
Englishman who had been left in charge of Aberdeen Castle, had gone over to
the Scottish side and put the castle in the hands of the Scots. When Wallace
arrived, the English were preparing to leave by sea, but Wallace's army fell
on the English fleet at low tide and destroyed the ships laden with English
troops and supplies.
Wallace and his army then marched south again to lay siege to Dundee, which
was more stoutly defended than either Perth or Aberdeen. It was at this
point, in August of 1297, that Earl Warrene bestirred himself at Edward's
urging to bring the Scottish uprising to an end. He assembled a large army
of mounted knights and foot soldiers and marched for Stirling, intending to
reinforce this very strategic and nearly impregnable fortress and thence to
relieve the siege of Dundee. On hearing that the English army was marching
north from the borders, Wallace took most of his men and departed the siege,
leaving Alexander Scrymgeour and a small force behind to finish the job.
Wallace and de Moray must have been in constant communication as these
events unfolded, probably with the assistance of the Scottish churchmen who
played such an important role in the War of Independence. The two armies
joined together at some point (time and place still unknown) and took up
battle positions north of the Forth near Stirling.
Most historians attribute the strategy of the battle to young Andrew de
Moray. While this is pure speculation, there is some reason to believe it
was de Moray who positioned the Scottish forces to take advantage of the
bridge and swampy ground where the English army went down. Pitched battle
was not Wallace's way; he was a guerrilla fighter. De Moray, in spite of his
youth and lack of direct experience, would perhaps have known more about
large battle strategy as a member of the high nobility. Wallace's poor
choice of ground at Falkirk a year later is often cited as proof that it was
de Moray who worked out the battle plan at Stirling Bridge. Whatever the
case, the two commanders carried Scotland on their youthful shoulders on
that day, 11 September, 1297. They had little support from the magnates of
Scotland. They had only a smattering of lesser nobles and a large force of
the commoners of the realm to command.
With 13,000 heavy horse and 60,000 foot, the English forces should have
easily carried the day against the ragtag forces of de Moray and Wallace.
However, the arrogance of the corpulent churchman Cressingham overruled the
cautious deliberations of Warrene, and the cavalry crossed the bridge to be
slaughtered at the hands of the highly motivated Scots. The hated
Cressingham was among the fallen English on that day, and it is well known
that, after the battle when his obese corpse was discovered among the dead,
the Scots mutilated his body and stripped it of his skin. The Lanercost
Chronicler maintains that, "Of his skin William Wallace caused a large strip
to be taken from the head to the heel, to make therewith a baldrick for his
sword."
How
de Moray received the fatal wound he incurred during the battle is not
recorded, but it is known that he lived for several weeks after the battle.
Nor is it on record that he attended the Scottish council at Perth in
October where he and Wallace were jointly named "leaders of the army of the
realm of Scotland." Both received their knighthood at around this point
also, presumably in recognition of their services to Scotland at this fatal
juncture. It was also during this period that the famous letter bearing both
leaders' signatures went out to the mayors of Lubeck and Hamburg, informing
those cities that Scotland had been "recovered by war from the power of the
English". Her ports were once more open to the trade which had flourished
prior to Edward's usurpation. Two additional letters under joint signature
went out from Hexham on 7th November 1297. In all three letters, the order
of the names appears the same: "Andrew de Moray and William Wallace, leaders
of the army of the kingdom of Scotland." The name of Andrew de Moray no
longer appears after this date, and it is to be assumed that he died shortly
thereafter.
Wallace left to carry the war to the English. Andrew's father and uncle were
still held in the Tower of London during the revolt in the north, both of
them dying there under conditions of extreme severity imposed by Edward.
Another of young Andrew's uncles served the rebellion admirably in the
person of David de Moravia, who, as a member of the "church militant" rose
quickly from a parson of Bothwell in 1296 to Bishop of Moray in 1299. He
figured prominently, along with Bishop Lamberton, in the story of Robert the
Bruce. And, finally, de Moray left a son who fought valiantly and
effectively against Edward III when he renewed his grandfather's quest to
reduce Scotland to a vassal state of England.
There is no doubt that Andrew de Moray, had he lived to continue the
struggle, would have shared the spotlight with Wallace, and perhaps even
have eclipsed Wallace as the leading hero of the Scottish War of
Independence. He is directly responsible for the heroic uprising in the
north, indirectly responsible for the overthrow of the English in
Aberdeenshire, and one of two great leaders who defeated English chivalry at
the Battle of Stirling Bridge.
Information derived from "The Scottish Wars of
Independence", by Evan Macleod Barron, published in 1914.

 Doon by Stirling Brig,
The Wallace lay a-hiding,
As the English host,
Frae the sooth cam riding,
Lood the River Forth,
Atween them baith was roaring,
Nerra were the sides,
O' the Brig o' Stirling.
Watching frae the the wid,
Wallace and the Moray,
As the English cam,
Wi' the Earl o' Surrey,
Ane by ane they crossed,
As the bridge was birlin,
Still they onward cam,
Ower the Brig o' Stirling.
Wallace gied a shout,
Oot his men cam rinning,
Stopped the English host,
On the Brig o' Stirling,
Cressingham turned roon,
The Brig was sma' for turning,
Moray cut him doon,
On the Brig o' Stirling.
A' the English men,
Ran intil each other,
Nane could turn aboot,
Nane could gae much further,
Some fell ower the side,
An' in the Forth were drowning,
Some were left to die,
On the Brig o' Stirling
Surrey he was wild,
Couldnae ford the river,
Wished wi' a' his micht,
That the Brig was bigger,
Then he rade awa',
Lood the man was cursing,
Wallace and his men,
And the Brig 0' Stirling.
Jim McLean, Published by Duart Music London

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