Sir Andrew Harclay - Earl Of Carlisle


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The wheel is endlessly turning, to raise men and women to riches fame and power, and then casting them down again....
Few medieval Englishmen can have embodied this concept more than Andrew Harclay.
Harclay was a little known Cumbrian squire who rose to be an earl - only to perish miserably less than a year later, as a convicted traitor.
Andrew Harclay suffered a terrible death by hanging, drawing and quartering.

Little is known about Andrew, until the year 1315, when he was already a battle-hardened knight, and a veteran of numerous campaigns against the Scots.

Then came a huge Scottish army, led by Robert the Bruce himself, intent on taking the town of Carlisle.
It is estimated the Scottish numbered around 10000 men.
Defending Carlisle’s two-mile wall perimeter were approximately 600 men.
An easy picking, the Scots may have thought.

Not only were the Scots far superior in number, but the defendants were short of supplies of all kinds - including weapons.
However, Andrew did his best.
He stockpiled rocks and arrows along the walls, knowing the Scots would try to scale them.
The Scots, in turn, were confident they’d overrun the walls.

After yet another attempt to scale the walls failed, the Scottish leaders decided to give up, and Robert the Bruce decided to return home.
The defence of Carlisle earned Sir Andrew Harclay some well-deserved fame, personal praise and a nice heavy purse from the king.
He also earned a lot of jealousy from other well-born knights in the region, who did not exactly warm to the scruffy and forthright Andrew.

Andrew’s absence gave those who disliked him, an opportunity to whisper their opinion in the royal ear - or at least in that of the up-and-coming royal favourite, Hugh Despenser.
The king however, contributed to the ransom.

Things were as calm as they could be, this close to the Scottish border.
Or maybe not....
The infected relationship between King Edward and Thomas of Lancaster exploded into a full-blown rebellion.

In March of 1322 he commanded the royalist forces that defeated Thomas of Lancaster and Humphrey de Bohun, at the Battle of Boroughbridge.
The rebellion was crushed, the king was victorious, and generous towards his loyal knight.
Sir Andrew was rewarded with the title of Earl of Carlisle.
Life, it seemed, was good.

Robert the Bruce was determined to use violence to force Edward II to the negotiating table.
For the people living along the Scottish border, life was difficult and frightening - and Andrew Harclay seems to have genuinely cared for them.

Many lost their lives, most through hanging.
A handful of men lost tjeir lives through the substantially more gruesome death of being hanged, drawn and quartered.

Andrew Harclay despaired of ever seeing some sort of permanent peace.
Andrew began his own, very private negotiations with Robert the Bruce....

Andrew must have been a fool to enter into an agreement with Robert the Bruce on behalf of England.
This was, in effect, treason.
It didn’t matter that Andrew's main concern seems to have been to create some sort of lasting peace - allowing the people of the north some respite from continuous raids and violence.

King Edward did have a lot to thank Andrew for, but ultimately no medieval king could tolerate such an affront to their authority.
Sir Andrew Harclay was arrested for treason.

Instead, he was ungirded of his earl’s belt and had his spurs struck off.
No longer neither a knight nor an earl, and despite his good intentions - Andrew Harclay was condemned to die a traitor’s death.

What he had done, and what he did, was for the sake of the greater good, wanting to broker a permanent peace between Scotland and England.
Once he’d said his piece, Andrew turned himself over into the hands of the exEcutioner.

At least as well as one can, when you are first hanged, and cut down while alive, and disembowelled in such a way, that you are still alive to see your intestines burned before you.
He was then b-headed.

The four parts of his body were dispersed around the country, and displayed in Carlisle, Newcastle, Bristol, and Dover.
Unbelievably, less than three months after Andrew Harclay's exEcution for trying to broker peace with the Scots - Edward II agreed on a thirteen-year truce with Scotland!

His sister petitioned the king to return the various parts of the body for a Christian burial, and in 1328 her request was granted.
In the reign of King Edward III, Harclay's nephew Henry approached the king in the hopes of having his uncle’s conviction overturned.
It didn’t happen, and so Andrew Harclay’s epitaph in the royal rolls is simply -
“lately the king’s enemy and rebel"
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The same fate that awaited Sir Andrew Harclay.
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