On 22 June the same year, a small Scots force was beaten by
George Dunbar, the Earl of March's son, at the
Battle of Nesbit Moor. Douglas led a punitive raid with
Murdoch of Fife, Albany's son, as far as Newcastle to avenge the battle. At the head of 10,000 men he laid waste to the whole of Northumberland. March persuaded
Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, and his son
Harry "Hotspur" Percy to lie in wait for the returning Scots at
Wooler. Once Douglas' men had made camp at Millfield, relatively low ground, the English army rushed to attack. The Scots did, however, have keen sentries and the army was able to retreat to the higher ground of Homildon Hill and organise into traditional
schiltron formations. Douglas had not learnt the lessons that had defeated his great-uncle at the
Battle of Halidon Hill seventy years previously, and the schiltrons presented a large target for the English
Longbowmen, and the formations started to break. A hundred men, under
Sir John Swinton of the
Swintons of that Ilk, chose to charge the enemy saying: "Better to die in the mellay than be shot down like deer". All perished. It has been suggested that Douglas hesitated to signal the advance of his main force, and when he did, it was too little too late. Douglas' mauled army met the as-yet unbloodied English men at arms and was routed. Many of Douglas' leading captains were captured, including his kinsman
George Douglas, 1st Earl of Angus,
Thomas Dunbar, 5th Earl of Moray and Murdoch of Fife. Douglas himself was captured, having been wounded five times, including the loss of an eye, despite the fact that allegedly Douglas' armour had taken three years in its construction. after having fought gallantly on the field and personally killing
Edmund Stafford, 5th Earl of Stafford and
Sir Walter Blount. Douglas had again tasted heavy defeat.
Prisoner of King Henry Douglas was now a captive of King Henry. The cost of the ransom of the Scots nobles taken at Homildon was proving hard for the impoverished Scots exchequer. When
Prince James of Scotland was captured en route to France by English pirates in 1406, the position seemed impossible. The aged King Robert III died of grief it is said soon after. The Kingdom of Scots was now in the hands of the Duke of Albany
de facto. ==Return to Scotland==