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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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