Battle of Dupllin Moor 12 th August 1332
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A short uphill walk on a farm track, with very pleasent views. A bit steep for pushing a buggy, someone will prove me wrong.
The location of the battle is not known but was probably fought across what is now the A9
DUPPLIN MOOR
In 1327 Edward II of England was deposed and replaced by the young Edward III, but with Roger Mortimer as the effective ruler. Robert the Bruce, the Scottish King, took this opportunity to raid into England. The ineffective English response was the disastrous Weardale Campaign of 1327 where a large English army failed to bring the Scottish forces to battle. This led Mortimer to agree, in the Treaty of Northampton, to the English crown renouncing all claims to Scotland. Though in return the Scots were to pay compensation to the various lords for the lands they had lost, these ‘dispossessed’ still sought the return of their estates in Scotland.
In 1329 Robert the Bruce died and was succeeded by his young son. Now was the opportunity for the dispossessed and for Edward Balliol, who claimed the crown of Scotland by the right of his father King John Balliol, who had reigned in Scotland until 1296. They gained the tacit support of Edward III of England for a ‘private’ invasion of Scotland. Henry Beaumont was the driving force behind the campaign, together with various other dispossessed lords. In 1332 Balliol’s army sailed for Scotland with an expeditionary force comprising largely English troops and some mercenaries. Balliol’s intention was to supplant as king of Scotland.
They landed on 6th August at Kinghorn (Fife), where they skirmished with and drove off local militia forces. They then marched to Dunfermline to replenish supplies and thence north towards Perth, where the Earl of Mar had mustered the northern Scottish forces in response. Balliol’s objective was to engage Mar before he could united with the Earl of March, who was advancing from the south with another army.
ACTION
The Scottish forces were camped two leagues from Perth and the men at arms held the bridge over the river Earn. The two armies were well aware of each other’s positions the day before the battle but in the night the English crossed the river by a nearby ford and attack a Scottish camp near Gask. The English then took up a position to the left of the Scots and holding the Moor.
The Scots drew up in either two or three divisions. The English, in an attempt to counterbalance the fact that they were heavily outnumbered, drew up behind a narrow passage which gave frontage of just 200 yards. They may have deployed in three lines with the archers on the flanks, and with the infantry in the centre perhaps 4 deep, with dismounted men-at-arms in the front three ranks and spearmen in the rear rank. Behind this they maintained a small, mounted cavalry reserve of about 40 German mercenaries. The lessons of Bannockburn, with its destruction of massed English cavalry by schiltrons of spears, had clearly been heeded by Beaumont. But the borrowing of Scottish tactics, with the use of spears, was not new. Harcla, another commander of the northern English Marches, had already applied similar tactics to great effect at Boroughbridge in 1322.
As in so many key battles of the following hundred years, the English forces took a defensive position and it was the Scots who advanced to the attack. They moved forward to engage in a wedge formation, led by Robert Bruce’s battalion, in what seems to have been a somewhat disordered attack. The Scots may not have been adequately armoured, for the arrowstorm from the English archers had a significant impact causing many wounds in the faces of the Scots front divisions. Despite this, Bruce’s schiltron came to close quarters and began to push back the English infantry, some 20 – 30 yards.
The English counterattacked at pushed of spear and with continuing action by the archers. This forced Mar to commit his rearguard battalion, seconding Bruce’s vanguard. But this was done in a disordered fashion, pressing behind them in the confined space rather than relieving them. Combined with the English push of spears and the continuing flights of arrows, Bruce’s battalion was squeezed between the enemy and their own reserve. Many of the Scots fell over in the crush. While the English maintained their battle line, the Scottish formation broke. Many of the Scots who had fallen in the crush, if not already suffocated, were now dispatched by the English infantry. Meanwhile the mounted men-at-arms drove forward in pursuit of the rear ranks of Scots, who had begun to retreat or rout. The combined losses to suffocation and the English swords were, according to various sources, exceptionally high.
Though several primary sources say that the battle lasted from sunrise through most of the day, this would be very exceptional as most battles seem to have lasted no more than three hours, some far less.
TROOPS
Beaumont was the driving force in Balliol’s army, a highly capable commander with good combat experience including the battles of Falkirk and Bannockburn, while the army of the dispossessed was clearly highly motivated. The Scottish army was considerably larger than the English, and fairly well equipped, though the losses to English archery may suggest that a considerable number of the Scottish troops lacked adequate head/face protection. The English sources probably fairly accurately record the English troop numbers and the Scottish losses, but that they vastly inflate the Scottish army.
Numbers
English: 500 men at arms, 1000 infantry/archers.
Scots: largely infantry, but primary sources vary wildly between 4000–24,000.
Losses
Scots: 1200 men-at-arms; 800 horse; 58 knights; 18 bannerettes; many common soldiers.
English: 2 knights, 33 soldiers but no archers.
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(Decrypt)
Haqre n ebpx orgjrra Clyba naq fznyy cbyr