The Scotsman

William Wallace’s story as it has never been told before

● Details of hero’s death revealed as document goes on show for first time

- By GEORGE MAIR newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Visitors to the National Wallace Monument in Stirling can now view the details of the medieval freedom fighter’s gory death – and the cost of his execution – for the first time.

Facsimile copies of letters and documents relating to the 13th-century patriot were commission­ed as part of a £1.1 million restoratio­n and refurbishm­ent project at the attraction to mark its 150th anniversar­y this year.

Among the star attraction­s that went on display for the first time when the tower reopened to the public on Friday is the English Exchequer Pipe Roll for 1305, which describes Wallace’s execution and sheds light on how he was regarded in England.

The document reveals how Wallace’s execution cost the sum of “61 shillings and ten pence”. The amount, worth around £2,150 in today’s money, was equivalent to almost a year’s wages for a skilled tradesman or the price of three horses in 1305.

The document also shows how Wallace’s trial was designed to demonstrat­e King Edward I’s power and act as a warning to other “rebels” who might challenge his authority.

The authors describe the Scottish hero as “a robber, a public traitor, and outlaw, an enemy of and rebel against the king, who falsely sought to call himself king of Scotland”.

They recount how Wallace “slew the king’s officials in Scotland and also led an army in hostility against the king”.

And in gory detail, they record Wallace’s gruesome

death. The document states he was “drawn, hanged, beheaded, his entrails burned and his body quartered whose four parts were despatched to the four principal towns of Scotland”.

Other documents in the new display include the Lubeck Letter of 1297, written to the merchants of Lubeck in Germany by Wallace and Andrew de Moray to declare Scotland open for business following the Battle of Stirling Bridge.

The so-called “Safe Conduct”, written in favour of Walits

lacebyking­philipivof­france to his agents in Rome in 1300 is also on exhibit.

Ken Thomson, from Stirling District Tourism, which runs the historic attraction, said: “The English Exchequer records show us how much Wallace’s execution cost, but also let us see what the English authoritie­s thought of Wallace.

“With so few documents surviving from that time, this facsimile copy is really important and it provides visitors with a much better understand­ing

of how he was treated.” The National Wallace Monument was closed to the public for more than two months while a £550,000 refurbishm­ent of its three internal galleries was carried out.

The new installati­ons are intended to tell the story of Scotland’s national hero “better than ever before”.

Lyndsey Bowditch, a director of Edinburgh exhibition designers Studioarc, who took on the challenge of redevelopi­ng the interiors, said the pipe roll copy could be the first of kind ever made from the original kept at the National Archives in Kew.

She said: “In exploring what we actually know about Wallace, we commission­ed a series of facsimiles – based on the actual documents, reproducin­g them as closely as possible to the originals.

“The English Exchequer’s pipe rolls were enormous documents, metres long, kept rolled up and literally stored in pipes.”

“Withsofewd­ocuments surviving from that time, this facsimile copy ... provides visitors with a much better understand­ing of how he was treated” KEN THOMSON Stirling District Tourism

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 ??  ?? 0 Abby Richards with the Edward I English Exchequer pipe roll from 1305, which reveals the details of Sir William Wallace’s execution
0 Abby Richards with the Edward I English Exchequer pipe roll from 1305, which reveals the details of Sir William Wallace’s execution

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