and
Isabella of Mar With the abdication of John Balliol, Scotland was effectively without a monarch.
Robert the Bruce swore allegiance to Edward at
Berwick-upon-Tweed but breached this oath when he joined the Scottish revolt the following year. In the summer of 1297 he again swore allegiance to Edward in what is known as the
Capitulation of Irvine. Bruce appears to have sided with the Scots during the
Battle of Stirling Bridge but when Edward returned victorious to England after the
Battle of Falkirk, Bruce's lands of
Annandale and
Carrick were exempted from the lordships and lands which Edward assigned to his followers. Bruce, it seems, was seen as a man whose allegiance might still be won. Bruce and
John Comyn (a rival for the throne) succeeded
William Wallace as Guardians of Scotland, but their rivalry threatened the stability of the country. A meeting was arranged at
Greyfriars Church, Dumfries which was neutral ground, but Bruce stabbed Comyn through the heart, The
Clan MacDougall, whose chief was the uncle or cousin of John Comyn who Bruce had murdered, surprised the Bruce and defeated him in what was known as the
Battle of Dalrigh. The king escaped but left behind what was described as a magnificent example of
Celtic jewellery, known as the
Brooch of Lorne and it became one of the Clan MacDougall's great treasures. Three years later Robert the Bruce led three thousand battle hardened veterans into Argyll against the MacDougalls. John MacDougall of Lorne set an ambush for them but in the ensuing
Battle of the Pass of Brander the MacDougalls were defeated and forced to flee. The MacDougalls' lands were then forfeited by the king and he gave them to the Campbells for their loyalty. Robert the Bruce led the Scottish army at the
Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 where the English were defeated. In 1334
Thomas Bruce, who claimed kinship with the royal house of Bruce, organized a rising in the Kyle, along with Robert Stewart (later
King Robert II) against the English. ==After Robert the Bruce==