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The Capitulation of Irvine

The submission of the Scottish nobles at Irvine during the First War of Scottish Independence

Following a standoff between Scottish and English forces at Irvine in July 1297, the leaders of the Scottish army who were in revolt against Edward I submitted to the English commanders in what became known as the “Capitulation of Irvine”.

In the Spring of 1297, several revolts had broken out across Scotland in response to Edward I of England’s dethronement of King John Balliol and his conquest and occupation of Scotland the previous year. In southwest Scotland, the rebellion was led by local magnates including James Stewart, High Steward of Scotland, Robert Wishart, Bishop of Glasgow, William “the hardy”, Lord of Douglas, Alexander Lindsay, Lord of Barnweill and Robert Bruce, Earl of Carrick.

Men of lesser standing such as Ayrshire knight William Wallace were also taking up arms in their own right and leading the lesser landowners and common folk.1 Wallace had begun his rising against the English in May 1297 when he and his followers attacked Lanark and killed the English sheriff of Clydesdale before he joined with William Douglas for an attack on Scone.

The nobles of the southwest gathered their forces near Irvine in Ayrshire and set up a camp northwest of the town on high ground at Knadgerhill, overlooking Irvine Loch. There was infighting among the leaders over who should take command and the direction of the upcoming campaign. Wallace might have travelled with William Douglas from Scone to the gathering at Irvine while he was en route to the Forest of Selkirk and perhaps left shortly after arriving due to the disagreements among the leadership.

Edward I was preparing for a campaign against the French in Flanders and he ordered John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey to take command and deal with the situation in Scotland. Hugh de Cressingham, the English treasurer in Scotland, set about raising a large force at Roxburgh for the pacification of the country and the northern barons Henry Percy and Robert Clifford were instructed to gather their forces at Carlisle and march against the rebellion in the southwest.

On 24 June 1297, Percy and Clifford issued summons for the levies of Cumberland to assemble at Carlisle for an expedition “against the enemies of our lord the king in Scotland”.2 With a force of horse and foot Percy and Clifford set off to confront the rebel lords in Ayrshire. Marching rapidly through Annandale and Nithsdale they entered Ayrshire and arrived outside Irvine on or before 7 July. They encamped to the south of the town on the open ground at Tarryholme between the River Irvine and the Annick Water.

Caught out by the rapid advance of the English forces and with dissension still rampant among the leaders, Wishart, Stewart and Bruce opted to negotiate with Percy and Clifford rather than risk a battle. The place chosen for the talks to be held was Irvine Castle (now Seagate Castle) and on 7 July a truce was agreed and the Scots aired their grievances over English governance which would be laid out in the first of two documents that would make up the Treaty of Irvine.

Two days of negotiations followed and on 9 July the Scottish lords affixed their seals to a second document which was their formal submission to Edward I and which brought to an end their uprising against him.

Sir Richard Lundie who is mentioned in the first document was so disgusted by the surrender that he promptly changed sides stating that “he could no longer war in company with men in discord and at variance”.

Wallace heard of the submission of the Scottish lords while he was in the Forest of Selkirk and placing the blame for the surrender on Bishop Wishart attacked his palace at Ancrum near Selkirk, plundering its valuable contents and carrying off the Bishop’s family and servants as captives. Wallace then headed north to Dundee where he joined forces with Andrew Moray who had been leading the resistance to Edward north of the Forth.

On 11 September 1297, Moray and Wallace defeated the forces of Surrey and Cressingham at the battle of Stirling Bridge. Lundie who had gone over to the English side at Irvine was present at Stirling Bridge and before the battle had offered to lead the English cavalry to outflank the Scots.

Notes:

  1. William Skene (ed), John of Fordun’s Chronicle of the Scottish Nation, (Edinburgh 1872), p 321. ↩︎
  2. Joseph Stevenston (ed), Documents Illustrative of the History of Scotland from the Death of King Alexander the Third to the Accession of Robert Bruce, (Edinburgh 1870), vol 2, p 186. ↩︎
  3. Ibid. p 192. ↩︎
  4. Ibid. ↩︎

Cite this article: Ritchie, N. (12 July 2024). The Capitulation of Irvine. https://www.scottishhistory.org/blog/capitulation-of-irvine/

Neil Ritchie
Neil Ritchie
Neil Ritchie is the founder and editor of ScottishHistory.org. Neil has a keen interest in the military history of Scotland and in particular the military history of the Jacobite risings. He is also the editor of other online publications covering military history, defence and security.

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