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In 1995, Mel Gibson and Icon Productions
released Braveheart, which was nominated for 61 awards
and won 31 of those, including Oscars for Best Picture
and Best Director.
If there had been an award for least historically
accurate movie, it would have won that as well.
The timeline is wrong, the events they got right
are depicted wrong, the look of it is laughably wrong,
and there are some artistic choices
they made regarding the characters that are wrong.
In 1276, when the story began, the film
shows Scotland struggling to determine
who would be the king after the deaths of Alexander
III and his three children.
The thing is, all four people were actually alive and 1276.
In fact, the king wouldn't die for another 10 years.
In 1286, the rebellion started, but it
didn't start the way the movie would have us believe.
In the film, William Wallace's father Malcolm
was among those Scots lured to a fake Scottish summit only
to be attacked by the British.
Malcolm's death was the first spark of young William's hatred
for England.
But in reality, there was no summit.
That inciting incident in the life of the protagonist
was a total fabrication.
In 1297, the Scottish fought the British
in the Battle of Stirling Bridge.
That made its way into the film, but why
did they show the battle without including the titular bridge?
The real life bridge created a bottleneck
that was essential to the Scots' strategy.
Also in 1297, Wallace's men raided several cities
in Northumberland, which is in the northeast of England.
The film showed the Scots sacking York,
which is over 100 miles south.
In 1298, the Battle of Falkirk took place.
During the film version, Irish soldiers
were inspired by Wallace and his men,
so they abandoned their post with the British
and joined the Scots.
The real battle didn't include any Irish.
Now, let's take a look at the costuming.
In the 1300s, kilts weren't a thing.
Those didn't come into fashion until around the 1600s.
The men would have been dressed in tunics and hosen,
maybe even baggy shorts called braies.
Scottish males at the time wouldn't
have had long hair, since that would
have been considered feminine.
And if they had, they certainly wouldn't have spruced it up
with pretty braids and adornments.
Now, let's address the blue face paint.
In the fourth century, one could find
a warrior sporting such paint, or more likely,
tattoos on the battlefield.
Those warriors were Picts, the people
indigenous to the British Isles over 1,000 years
before the events of Braveheart took place.
In the mid-1700s, bagpipes were banned as an instrument of war.
That didn't stop the movie from talking
about bagpipes being illegal some 400 years before the ban.
At least the errors found on the Scottish soldiers
were matched by the British soldiers,
who were wearing matching uniforms that
didn't exist at the time.
What also didn't exist at the time was a pagan British king.
Edward I was very much a Christian
who even participated in the Crusades.
Let's look at the film's depiction of Edward II
homosexuality.
It's unclear whether he had sexual relationships with men,
and we don't know if his father knew or cared about it.
But the fact is he was married.
He and his wife had tension, but that didn't stem
from him finding her repulsive.
He had four kids with her.
Other than Isabella, the person most associated with Edward
was Piers Gaveston, whom the movie shows
being thrown out of the window to his death
by Edward's father.
That simply didn't happen.
William Wallace never seduced Edward's wife Isabella.
She never met him and was only 13 when he died.
Isabella and Edward didn't marry until several years after that.
And for the biggest fact bending of all--
William Wallace wasn't referred to as "Braveheart."
In 1329, that honor was bestowed upon Robert the Bruce, whom
the movie erroneously suggested was involved in Wallace's
capture and execution.
He was called Braveheart because, as per his wishes,
his heart was posthumously removed
so it can be taken on a crusade before being
buried in Scotland.
What else did they get wrong about William Wallace?
His dad was probably Alex Wallace, not Malcolm Wallace.
Regardless, neither died when William was young,
and they were both minor nobility rather than commoners,
as portrayed in the movie.
Since William wasn't orphaned as a child,
he didn't have to go live with his uncle Argyle, which
is just as well, because Uncle Argyle didn't exist.
William's wife Murron, existed, except her name was Marion.
That fudging makes sense because Murron is
the Gaelic version of the name.
And yes, she was killed by the British,
but it wasn't after an assault by a British soldier.
It was because she housed her fugitive husband after he
ran from a marketplace brawl.
William was also killed by the British in 1305,
and this is one example where the movie actually toned it
down for some reason.
He wasn't just hanged, disemboweled, drawn,
and quartered.
He was also dragged naked through the streets for six
miles, fully emasculated, forced to watch
while his intestines were burned,
and then his heart and head were removed.
His head was displayed on London Bridge
while his other parts were displayed all over London.
And that's the real story of William Wallace.
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