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Tour
Caerlaverock Castle
a Classic Tour of Scotland
Caerlaverock
Castle was built by the powerful Maxwell family in the late
13th century. The eastern Solway had alternated between English
and Scottish rule until the end of the 12th century, when it
finally came under the influence of the Normans. Then King Edward
I, known as 'Hammer of Scots', imposed English rule
and triggered the Wars of Independence. In 1300, Caerlaverock
became the focus of Edward's wrath and he laid siege with
an army of 87 knights and 3000 soldiers. Once the siege engines
arrived, the castle soon surrendered. Edward died nearby in
1307 - a monument in Burgh Marsh marks the spot. After winning
Scottish independence in 1314, Robert the Bruce ordered that
all border strongholds, including Caerlaverock, must be destroyed
to prevent them being used by an invading English army.
Two hundred years later, the rebuilt castle withstood the attention
of an invading English army led by James V who defeated the
Scots at the 'Battle of the Solway Moss'. After the
Union of the Crowns in 1603, the two kingdoms were finally united
under his son. However, the English-Scottish truce broke down
in 1640 and during that summer, Caerlaverock was besieged for
13 weeks by a Scottish army of Covenanters. After its surrender,
the Covenanters partially dismantled the castle and it fell
into decay, having stood guard over the Solway Firth for over
400 years.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
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