Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297

FeR Miniatures SKU: MHB00028
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297
Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297

Sir William Wallace Stirling Bridge, 1297

FeR Miniatures SKU: MHB00028
Incl. VAT:  Regular price £44.00
Excl. VAT:  Regular price £36.67
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1:12 scale resin kit. sculpted by Ramón Martínez. Boxart by Alfonso Giraldes. Kit includes: 9 kit parts (including optional choice of sword and head)

WHY YOU SHOULD CONSIDER BUYING THIS BUST:

 Attention to detail and expressive portrayal of characters is always present in Ramón Martinez’s sculptures.
– Where is the kilt and the blue painted face? It was about time to do this important historical character accurately.
– Our signature resin quality allows you to get the figure clean and ready in almost no time, so you may invest your precious free time in what really matters: painting and having fun.

Sir William Wallace was a Scottish knight that gained national relevance during the early years of the First War of Scottish Independence (1296-1328).

After the death of Alexander III of Scotland, the succession to the throne was contested. That led to a period of unrest and almost a civil war. The Scottish nobility invited Edward I of England as arbiter to settle the succession and soon it became clear that the English king planned to transform Scotland into a vassal state, demanding that the nobles swear allegiance to him and asking for troops to serve in his war in France.

An uprising against the English was inevitable. Wallace joined it when he killed the sheriff of Lanark and raided the city of Scone. His highest moment came when, along with Andrew Moray, he successfully led an army at the Battle of Stirling Bridge (1297) and obtained a crushing victory over a more numerous English army.

He was then appointed Guardian of Scotland, but his luck was about to change. He was defeated at the Battle of Falkirk the following year, which led to the resignation of his duties, as his military prestige suffered badly. He was captured in 1305 and sent to London, where he would be tortured and executed. The man was dead, but the legend had just born.

William Wallace is the perfect example of how a historical character can be easily misrepresented by a major motion picture. Don’t get us wrong, we have nothing against Mel Gibson’s Braveheart, in fact, it is a fantastic movie, but the lack of accuracy around the main character always made us want to do a more correct representation of how he would have looked like.

Also, we took the chance to add an extra head and sword so you can create a generic knight of your choice. To illustrate it, Alfonso Giraldes did a fantastic second boxart using the alternative parts to recreate a Tuscan Knight from the Battle of Campaldino. The possibilities are endless.

Text courtesy of FeR Minitures


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