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Group: Pontus, Diocese of
People: John Burgoyne
Topic: Asian Art: 1252 to 1396
Location: Turbessel Kilis Turkey

Scottish barons charged with protecting the Anglo-Scottish …

Years: 1388 - 1388

Scottish barons charged with protecting the Anglo-Scottish border retaliate in 1388 against recent incursions by their English counterparts.

James, the thirty-year-old second earl of Douglas, together with the Earl of Moray, leads the Scots against a very large large English hunting party upon a parcel of hunting land (or chase) in the Cheviot Hills, hence the term, Chevy Chase.

The hunt is led by twenty-four-year-old Henry “Hotspur” Percy.

The Scottish Earl of Douglas had forbidden this hunt and interpretsit as an invasion of Scotland.

In response he attacked, causing a bloody battle after which only one hundred and ten people survive.

Born May 20, 1364, at Alnwick Castle in Northumberland, the eldest son of Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, and Margaret Neville, daughter of Ralph de Neville, 2nd Lord Neville of Raby, and Alice de Audley, young Henry had been knighted by King Edward III in April 1377, together with the future Richard II and Henry IV.

He was in Ireland in 1380 with the Earl of March, and in 1383 traveled in Prussia.

He was appointed warden of the east march either on July 30, 1384 or in May 1385, and in 1385 had accompanied Richard II on an expedition into Scotland.

Sent to France in April 1386 to reinforce the garrison at Calais, he led raids into Picardy, and between August and October 1387 he was in command of a naval force in an attempt to relieve the siege of Brest.

In appreciation of these military endeavors he is in 1388 made a Knight of the Garter.

Reappointed as warden of the east march, he commands the English forces on August 10, 1388, against James Douglas, 2nd Earl of Douglas, at the Battle of Otterburn.

The English troops press so closely that, fearful of slaying their own in the gathering dusk, they loose few arrows at the Scots.

One arrow, however, finds Douglas, who, mortally wounded, instructs his soldiers to raise his standard and to keep his death a secret until victory is achieved.

His followers rally and kill twenty-seven hundred English soldiers as they flee in retreat.

Hotspur is captured and later ransomed for a fee of seven thousand marks.