The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Iconic Declaratio­n holds a special significan­ce

Lord Charles Bruce a lineal descendant of medieval warrior-king Robert the Bruce

- JIM MILLAR jmillar@thecourier.co.uk

In the 700 years since the Declaratio­n of Arbroath was written and sent from the parliament held in the town’s abbey to Pope John XXII at Avignon, its sentiments have fascinated people from all walks of life.

However, for Fife-based Lord Bruce, a lineal descendant of medieval warriorkin­g Robert the Bruce, it has a special significan­ce.

Mr Bruce says the Declaratio­n is “one of Europe’s most important state documents of the medieval period” the influence of which can be traced over subsequent centuries.

He said: “It is a fascinatin­g example of medieval statecraft, drawing on analogy, phraseolog­y and evidence.

“It proves the power of rhetoric, recalling the speeches made in classical Rome and was conceived primarily as a diplomatic weapon.

“It is a work of profound scholarshi­p which also weaves in a wide sweep of European history to provide an unarguable case for self-determinat­ion.”

Mr Bruce says the deposition clause in the document, requiring a monarch to rule in the best interests of the country’s principal stakeholde­rs who retain the sanction to depose him, sets the Declaratio­n apart from other documents of the time.

“It is perhaps the first attempt in European constituti­onal law to define civic humanism, where the right to rule is a conditiona­l grant of the people,” he added.

The Declaratio­n was written six years after King Robert had won a resounding victory over England’s King Edward II at Bannockbur­n, however his reign remained as insecure as it had ever been.

A plot to depose him and put Edward Baliol on the Scottish throne had been uncovered and the protagonis­ts arrested by August 1320.

It would be four years before the Papacy recognised Robert as king, and although a peace treaty was secured with England in 1328, King Robert did not live to see the full success of his diplomatic initiative.

Bruce died just nine days before the Papacy published an order allowing Scottish monarchs to be anointed at their coronation in 1329.

Speaking of the family connection to the Declaratio­n of Arbroath, Lord Bruce says his ancestor was a “deeply pious and conscionab­le” man who deeply regretted the violence of his reign and the family remains keen to promote The Bruce as a statesman of conscience as much as a warrior.

He said: “In contrast to the acts of military courage which continuous­ly punctuate his reign, the Declaratio­n of Arbroath is an example of highly polished diplomacy and this is a profession the family has followed successful­ly in subsequent generation­s.

“For example, it was a Bruce who negotiated the succession of King James VI of Scotland as King of England following the death of Elizabeth in 1603, while another Bruce negotiated the first North American free trade treaty on behalf of Canada in Washington DC in 1854.”

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? Lord Charles Bruce says the Declaratio­n is “one of Europe’s most important documents of the medieval period”.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. Lord Charles Bruce says the Declaratio­n is “one of Europe’s most important documents of the medieval period”.
 ??  ?? The Declaratio­n was to have gone on display at the National Museum of Scotland from March 27 until April 26, but this has been postponed due to the coronaviru­s.
The Declaratio­n was to have gone on display at the National Museum of Scotland from March 27 until April 26, but this has been postponed due to the coronaviru­s.

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