Help


from Wikipedia
« »  
Stirling was of vital strategic importance and its loss would be a serious embarrassment to the English.
The time allowed in the Bruce-Mowbray pact was ample for Edward to gather a powerful army.
According to the historian and poet John Barbour, King Robert Bruce rebuked the folly of his brother, even though Dundee had probably fallen to the Scots through a similar arrangement in 1312.
Mowbray had a breathing space and looked forward to the summer of 1314.
In England, Edward and his barons reached an uneasy peace and made ready.

1.866 seconds.