Recognised Scotland as an independent kingdom. Bruce would pay 40,000 marks[note 1] to the English, and the two royal families would codify their alliance by intermarriage.[3] The treaty suggests that Bruce and Harcaly would forcibly make Edward respect the treaty if necessary.[4]
Harclay is executed by King Edward II for treason on 3 March, due to signing a treaty without authority.[5]
Repeated failures by Edward II of England to prosecute those who broke the peace led to Bruce renewing the Auls Alliance.[7] The Engl;ish army was subsequently crushed in the Weardale campaign the following year.[8][9]
Following Bruce's successful Wear campaign and the devastation this wrought to the North of England,[12] King Edward had been deposed, and Isabelle and Mortimer knew they would not be able to prevent another major Scottish incursion into England.[11]
Full recognition by the English crown of Scottish independence, and Bruce as king.[11] Payment of £20,000 by the Scots to the English to keep the peace.[13] The Anglo-Scottish border to return to the extent it had been in the reign of Alexander III (1249–1286). Bruce's sonDavid to marry Edward's daughter Joan.[10]
The Scottish king, James I, was a captive of King Henry, so Scotland was governed by the regent, Robert, Duke of Albany. Douglas was also a prisoner, but his family controlled much of southern Scotland. When he felt this position was threatened, he concluded a truce with Henry.[15]
Douglas indentures that he would serve only Henry: "before all men and against all men", and although he excepted King James, he explicitly and pointedly did not excuse Albany. Douglas received his freedom in return.[15]
Douglas's lifetime
Two years later, Douglas and Albany agreed a peace. Douglas gained the remainder of southern Scotland not already under his control. England's Scottish policy in tatters.[15]
19 January 1431
The ongoing war with France was absorbing the majority of England's financial and military resources, which necessitated a peaceful northern border.[17]
A partial truce on land, a general truce on the sea.[17][note 2]
Meeting for redress of breaches of the truce to be held at Lochmaben Stone on 23 July for the West Marches and at Riddenburn on the East. Bishop Kennedy and Thomas Spens, Bishop of Aberdeen received pensions. Matrimonial ties to be discussed.[20]
^Summerson, Henry (2004). "Harclay , Andrew, earl of Carlisle (c.1270–1323)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/12235.
^Rogers, Clifford J. (2014). War Cruel and Sharp: English Strategy under Edward III, 1327–1360. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press. pp. 22, 22–23 n. 69. ISBN978-0-85115-804-4.
^Nicholson, Ranald (1974). Scotland: The Later Middle Ages. University of Edinburgh History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. p. 118. ISBN978-0-05-002038-8.
^ abcdNicholson, Ranald (1974). Scotland: The Later Middle Ages. University of Edinburgh History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. p. 119. ISBN978-0-05-002038-8.
^Rogers, Clifford J. (2014). War Cruel and Sharp: English Strategy under Edward III, 1327–1360. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press. p. 23. ISBN978-0-85115-804-4.
^Nicholson, Ranald (1974). Scotland: The Later Middle Ages. University of Edinburgh History of Scotland. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. pp. 119–121. ISBN978-0-05-002038-8.
^ abcdeGiven-Wilson, Chris (2016). Henry IV. Yale English Monarchs. New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 32. ISBN978-0-300-15419-1.