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Since his death, the Wallace story has been one to inspire, and the cult of Wallace has travelled far beyond Scotland itself, perhaps more so now than ever before.
Yet little of Wallace's life is known. The sources are few and have been distorted over nearly seven centuries through a rush of ballads, penny histories and poems.
This book, based on original research by Scottish historian Graeme Morton, is the first to examine fully both the contemporary sources that are available and the way the many strands of the Wallace myth have been constructed, communicated and appropriated from his death right up to the present day.
Wallace's story has been employed by many groups to support their cause: the proletarian hero, the workers' inspiration, the feminist icon, the supporter and the opponent of union with England since 1707 and the Scottish Parliament of 1999 (the slogan of the SNP being "We're winning with Wallace").
Graeme Morton examines the myth's gradual development, from the medieval Scottish chronicles, through the anti-English fire of Blind Harry's fifteenth-century verse, to a study of the modern 'Braveheart effect'.
This is the story of a great legend, and why he still appeals to many of us. An essential study for specialists and indeed anyone fascinated by the man himself, it shows that the myth is as mush the reality as the truth. Now available in paperback.
Why not view our pictures of Scotland's National Wallace Monument in Stirlingshire via the Photo gallery
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