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Talk on The Bruce Campaign in Ireland 1315 - 1318

04 June 2016, 14:00, Dobbs Rooms, Town Hall, 11 Antrim Street, Carrickfergus

Runs to 04 June 2016

To commemorate the anniversary of the surrender of the Castle to the Scots in 1318, Matthew Warwick from the Ulster Scots Community Network will give an illustrated presentation on Edward Bruce’s campaign and his talk will highlight the early historic connections between Ulster and Scotland.

The talk will be held as part of the Bruce Festival 2016 in the Dobbs Room, Carrickfergus Town Hall on Saturday 4th June at 2pm.

This talk is free to attend.

On 25th May 1315, Edward Bruce sailed from Ayr to Larne Lough leading the 6,000 strong Bannockburn Army to their next challenge...

The connections between Ulster and Scotland date back millennia. The story of the campaign in Ireland led by Edward Bruce, brother of King Robert I, of 1315–18 is one of the most important early examples of shared Ulster-Scottish history. Though the story may have largely slipped from the popular consciousness, historians have long recognised that the Bruce campaign in Ireland was an event of far-reaching significance.

The story is a far from straightforward one and reflects all of the complexity of the relationships between these islands in the medieval period. For example, Robert Bruce was married to a daughter of Richard de Burgh, Earl of Ulster, the man who would be the Scottish army’s principal opponent in the north of Ireland. Robert Bruce was also the feudal lord of a large swathe of territory in County Antrim through his mother's family. There is even a suggestion that his younger brother Edward may have been fostered by an Irish family. At other times Scots fought Scots and Anglo-Normans battled Anglo-Normans.

Crucial to the Scots early successes was the support they received from a number of the Irish leaders, to some of whom the Bruces were related. The Scottish campaign in Ireland began less than a year after Robert Bruce's crushing victory at Bannockburn in June 1314. It was led by his brother Edward who seems to have needed little encouragement to take charge of the campaign. Indeed, many see him as being the prime instigator of it and that he was motivated by dynastic ambitions of his own. As John Barbour states in his epic narrative of 1375, The Brus, The History of Robert the Bruce King of Scots, Edward, ‘with great joy in his heart, and with the consent of the king, gathered to him men of great valour.’

 

 

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