English Third Invasion of Scotland
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Was a military campaign undertaken by Edward I of England to continue gains from the 1298 invasion.
Chronology
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June 1300: Edward I, also known as Edward Longshanks, was the King of England who led the campaign into Scotland in 1300. Caerlaverock Castle was a strategically important fortress in the region of Annandale and Galloway, which fell under English control as a result of the invasion.
January 1302: In 1301, the English armies led by King Edward I and his son Prince Edward met at Linlithgow to winter.
February 1302: In January 1302, King Edward I of England agreed to a nine-month truce with King John Balliol of Scotland. This truce was part of ongoing negotiations between the two kingdoms during the First War of Scottish Independence.
October 1300: In 1300, King Edward I of England arranged a truce with the Scots on 30 October after facing lack of success in the occupied regions. This allowed him to return to England from the ongoing conflict with the Kingdom of Scotland.
October 1301: Bothwell conquered by Kingdom of England.