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The Battle of Ancrum Moor was fought during the War of the Rough Wooing. The Scottish victory put a temporary end to English depredations in the Scottish borders and lowlands.
Background to the War
CampaignHenry's reaction was to launch a ruthless war against Scotland. This attempt to force Scotland into alliance was known as the "Rough Wooing". He ordered the Earl of Hertford, his Warden of the Marches, to devastate Edinburgh, Leith and many other towns. Hertford dutifully laid waste to much of southern Scotland in two expeditions in 1544. The following year, an army under Sir Ralph Eure (alternatively spelt "Evers") continued to pillage in the borders. Perhaps their worst atrocity was the burning of Brumehous Tower, with the lady of the house and her children and servants inside. Their activities forced an unlikely alliance of two self-seeking Scottish nobles, the Earl of Arran, Regent for the infant Mary, and the Earl of Angus (whose estates had been razed, and family tombs vandalised, by Hertford). Joined by borderers under Scott of Buccleuch (who may have been the inspiration for their subsequent tactics), they moved to confront the English army near Jedburgh. The battleThe English Army consisted of 3000 German and Spanish mercenaries, 1500 English borderers under Sir Brian Layton and 700 Scottish borderers. As they settled into an encampment under Gersit Law, a small Scottish force made a feint attack and then retreated southwest towards Palace Hill. Much of the English force followed in pursuit. As they reached the top of Palace Hill, they were attacked by the whole Scottish army which had been hidden on the far side of the hill.
The English, who were in some disarray, were forced back by the initial Scottish attack. They tried to rally on the slope of Palace Hill, but the Scottish borderers with them now chose to revert to their former allegiance. The English army now broke, and was forced to scatter through a hostile countryside. ResultsThe English lost 800 men killed (including Eure and Layton) and 1000 taken prisoner. This temporarily stopped their harrying of Scotland. The war came to an end shortly afterwards on the death of Henry VIII, only to break out again with perhaps even more violence when Hertford, now Protector Somerset ruling on behalf of Edward VI, sought to impose his own political and religious settlement on Scotland. SourcesFamous Scottish battles, Philip Warner, Leo Cooper, ISBN 0-85052-487-3 A History of Scotland, R. L. Mackie
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