What makes william wallace a good leader




















Indeed, the mood today is one of caution and concern. We all need a dose of positivity in our zoom meetings, conference calls, emails and phone calls. Positive thinking is a mental and emotional attitude that focuses on the right side of life and believing that we can overcome obstacles, challenges in life; and indeed, we can!

Positive leadership is a choice. It starts with a positive self-talk. Cultivating positive relationships with employees and customers helps to lower our level of stress, as well as the stress of others and helps to improve our concentration, allowing us to keep our eye on the future.

Each time we genuinely connect with another individual, the pleasure-inducing hormone oxytocin is released into the bloodstream, helping to reduce anxiety and improve our focus. By leaning and depending on each other we will come out stronger as leaders and individuals.

We all need to ignite hope through words and actions. Positive leaders generate positive thoughts and energy. It takes less energy physically and emotionally to see the positives in life and business. He used emotion and standards to define the role of his troops employees.

He was a dynamic and sympathetic leader. We have in the past and will in the future stand up to challenges and move forward with clear focus and passion. We rally with great conviction.

It is simply in our DNA! He is however, able to motivate his men to battle for their freedom due to his strong, unwavering vision. He valued performance, not titles and was unwilling to compromise on his values. Wallace was able to get his troops to see this vision and believe in it enough to sacrifice their lives.

He was a leader, which was why his legacy lasted. March 17, September 3, Because of his long legs, he got the nickname "Longshanks". He married Eleanor of Castile at an early age. He loved her so much that when she died in in Wales, he had erected a cross at each site where her body was set down during the journey back to London. Those crosses were called "dear queen" crosses. It is said that he had a cruel streak. Maybe the death of his wife contributed to this streak.

But even though he had such character faults. He was a very strong ruler, who strengthened the authority of the English monarchy. Edward made advantages for England in France and Wales; he tried to subdue Scotland as well, but in Scotland he was not so fortunate like in Wales, where he assigned the royal lands to the future of his son Edward II, who became the first Prince of Wales.

He was still having war against the Scottish when he died in two years after Wallace's execution. However, his obsession with oppressing the Scottish earned him the nickname "Hammer of the Scots" Scotorum malleus that someone carved after his death on his tomb. Edward II, the first Prince of Wales, was a very tragic and weak figure.

He inherited many problems from his father's reign, which were furthered by his weakness as king, he was betrayed by his nobles, and eventually murdered by his wife Queen Isabella in He was born in Wales in The young prince was raised under the domination of his mother, before she died in He suffered very much on the death of her.

He had no surviving brothers and his father was not often at home. When his father was there, he was known to have vent his anger on his son. Some chroniclers think that this caused Edward to become very reliant upon his friends, especially Piers Gaveston perhaps the model for his friend lover Philip in the film and the Despensers. His father did not like his friends, nor did he trust him. Because of that he had not given him a lot of opportunities to get some experiences in governing.

Therefore, he wasn't versed enough, when he started ruling his kingdom. Then he lost the reign over Scotland, when the Scottish triumphed at Bannockburn in This was a very big defeat to his reputation. After Bannockburn, the English nobles were so angry with Edward, that they started a rebellion against him under the leadership of the earl of Lancaster.

Edward and his new friends, the Dispensers, were able to fight back and to win this civil war He executed Lancaster for this rebellion. Despite his success to defend his crown, he continued angering his nobles.

His weakness as king was too big. Like shown in the film, Edward II was allegedly homosexual. His lover Piers Gaveston , was killed by his nobles some years after Edward I's death. This marriage was arranged in the interest of politics by Edward I.

That is why they were quite unhappy with each other. There is no historical evidence that the Princess and Wallace have ever met.

Edward III was born seven years after Wallace's death. As Edwards ruling problems grew and his nobles were more and more disgusted with him, Isabella further alienated herself from her husband. Eventually she fled to France, taking her son with her. In , when her husband was at his lowest point with his nobles, Isabella and her lover Roger Mortimer invaded England and captured Edward. He was hold as prisoner for a few month and then murdered.

It is likely, that his wife murdered him. For a time Isabella kept some power after her husband's death. Once her son was crowned Edward III, she sank into the background. The character of Murron is also based on a true historical figure.

Only the name was changed. Her real name was Marion Braidfoot. She was William Wallace's wife. They were married in secret, because William didn't want to share her with an English Lord ius prime nocte. The Sheriff of Lanark murdered her, in order to arrest Wallace, because of his force against the English.

In the Hollywood film, Wallace was first shown as a peaceful man, who wanted to have a family. Then he was forced to fight, by killing his wife very brutally.

This was the release for his attitude to fight for his nation's independence. In reality he was already fighting against the English when Marion Murron was murdered.

There are almost no other information about Marion Braidfoot. The English were soundly defeated and Edward barely escaped capture. The film Braveheart gave the impression that the Scots only decided to fight instead of agreeing to humiliating English terms, at the last moment. This is not the case. On the contrary, Bruce challenged the English to meet him by mid-Summersday , or Stirling castle the last castle in Scotland still to be garrisoned by English troops would be taken.

The English marched north, in an attempt to save the castle He wanted to make sure his forces were mobile, since immobility had proved the undoing of the Scottish army under Wallace at Falkirk.

He organised his horsemen into a light cavalry of about who faced the heavily armoured English cavalry. There were 4 Scottish Divisions of foot soldiers, and a few archers from Ettrick Forest. They were determined as patriots to defend the Independence of Scotland under Bruce's great leadership.

The fact that the Scottish nobles, knights, landowners and tenant farmers fought on foot together with their men made for a more cohesive force than the English army which was less democratic. Most of the English leaders were in the cavalry, leaving the infantry at a disadvantage. Bruce prepared the battle field by digging rows of camouflaged pits and laying calthrops to maim the cavalry horses. On the 23rd June, lightly armed Scots numbering 7, faced an English army of 20, The battle began.

Bruce's army were drawn up in mighty 'shilterns' like in Braveheart , to stop the cavalry charging at the undefended troops. The day passed without any real gains on either side. Bruce began to realise that he could lose this battle. Battle of Dunbar.

Date - Combatants - Gaurdians of Scotland. He was a weak King, but he was a King nonetheless, something Scotland hadn't had since Edward I of England, having already conquered Wales, set his eyes on Scotland.

In , he marched North with an army of 30, infantry and cavalry. He invaded Scotland. He first arrived at Berwick, Scotland's main trading town. He sacked the town, mercilessly killing practically the whole town's population. He then marched to Dunbar and defeated a Scots army sent to meet him. Scotland was now in Edward's hands.

He marched to Scone pro. He asserted hi domination by touring scotland, removing relics that were special to Scotland, and subduing uprisings. Edinburgh castle was garrisoned with English troops for the first time in it's history. Battle of Falkirk. After Wallace's victory at Stirling, he was knighted and given the title 'Gaurdian of Scotland'. Edward I, on the other hand, was in Flanders, hoping to secure new land for the English crown. On hearing of the defeat of his entire northern army, he headed home.

He then marched north with 87, troops. Wallace could only muster about one third of that. When Edward arrived in Kirkliston, he considered retreating after he saw the lothians had become a desert. However, two Scottish knights sent a message to him, betrying Wallace's whereabouts. The following day, Edward's army rode to Falkirk where they attacked the Scots.

The Scottish knights also betrayed Wallace, turning and riding from the field at the vital moment. Like most of the Scottish nobles, they would rather have fought for the English where they believed chivalry was best served. The Scots army suffered severe slaughter.



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