<p><a href="/tags/otd/" rel="tag">#OTD</a>, 24 June, in 1314, the Scottish army under King Robert I destroyed a much larger English invasion force at Bannockburn, in one of the most decisive battles in medieval history. In 1793 Robert Burns composed “Scots Wha Hae”, originally entitled “Robert Bruce’s March To Bannockburn”</p><p>⚔️🧵</p><p>1/5</p><p><a href="/tags/scottish/" rel="tag">#Scottish</a> <a href="/tags/literature/" rel="tag">#literature</a> <a href="/tags/bannockburn/" rel="tag">#Bannockburn</a> <a href="/tags/battleofbannockburn/" rel="tag">#BattleofBannockburn</a> <a href="/tags/14thcentury/" rel="tag">#14thcentury</a> <a href="/tags/medieval/" rel="tag">#medieval</a> <a href="/tags/history/" rel="tag">#history</a> <a href="/tags/18thcentury/" rel="tag">#18thcentury</a> <a href="/tags/robertburns/" rel="tag">#RobertBurns</a></p>
battleofbannockburn
<p>Here lies our land: every airt<br>Beneath swift clouds, glad glints of sun,<br>Belonging to none but itself…</p><p>—Kathleen Jamie, “Here lies our land”</p><p>This poem was commissioned in 2014 to mark the 700th anniversary of the battle of Bannockburn – fought <a href="/tags/otd/" rel="tag">#OTD</a>, 24 June, 1314. The poem is inscribed on the Bannockburn monument.</p><p><a href="https://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poem/here-lies-our-land/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poem/here-lies-our-land/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.</span><span class="invisible">uk/poem/here-lies-our-land/</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/scottish/" rel="tag">#Scottish</a> <a href="/tags/literature/" rel="tag">#literature</a> <a href="/tags/poem/" rel="tag">#poem</a> <a href="/tags/poetry/" rel="tag">#poetry</a> <a href="/tags/bannockburn/" rel="tag">#Bannockburn</a> <a href="/tags/battleofbannockburn/" rel="tag">#BattleofBannockburn</a></p>