Librería Samer Atenea
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Kálamo Books
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Librería Kolima (Madrid)
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The Failed Bruce Invasion of Ireland, 1315-1318Between 1315 and 1318, Edward Bruce, brother of Scottish King Robert the Bruce, led a remarkable military campaign that nearly overthrew English rule in medieval Ireland. Landing with six thousand Scottish veterans fresh from their triumph at Bannockburn, Edward swept through Ulster, defeated every Anglo-Norman army sent against him, and was crowned High King of Ireland by enthusiastic Gaelic princes who saw him as their deliverer from colonial oppression. For three dramatic years, it appeared that Ireland might achieve independence centuries before it actually did, united with Scotland in a pan-Celtic alliance against English domination.Yet the campaign ended in catastrophic failure at the Battle of Faughart, where Edward died leading a desperate charge against overwhelming odds. The campaign’s destruction, combined with the Great Famine that ravaged Europe during these same years, devastated Ireland’s economy and population while paradoxically enabling a Gaelic cultural and territorial recovery that permanently weakened English control outside Dublin. This forgotten medieval episode reveals the fragility of English colonial power, the challenges of building kingdoms through military conquest, and the complex dynamics of resistance, collaboration, and cultural transformation that would shape Irish history for centuries to come.