‘Real-life Game of Thrones’ Scots history show stars °®Âþµº academic
A major BBC history series focusing on Scotland’s clans features expertise from a senior °®Âþµº academic.
A major BBC history series focusing on Scotland¡¯s clans features expertise from a senior °®Âþµº academic.
BBC One¡¯s , described as ¡°the real life Game of Thrones¡±, includes analysis from Professor Richard Oram, Dean of °®Âþµº¡¯s Faculty of Arts and Humanities.
Presented by Neil Oliver, the three-part series showcases ¡°a blood-soaked saga of battles and feuds, loyalty and betrayal, love and death set against the country's wild mountains and glens¡±.
In this first episode, Neil followed the clans as they rallied behind Robert the Bruce in his against-all-odds bid to win Scotland's crown. Describing one bloody and dramatic clash, Professor Oram said: ¡°The Scots army doesn¡¯t even have an opportunity to assemble, to even put a reasonable type of defence.
Professor Richard Oram, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Humanities
¡°It¡¯s caught unawares as the English heavy armour ¨C the knights on horseback ¨C come thundering through the encampment.
¡°Bruce¡¯s army is shattered, scatters in all directions. There are heavy casualties and Bruce is left with a small hard-core of his inner retinue and they escape westwards.¡±
Professor Oram also highlighted the important role of poetry in conveying key messages, including how to organise militarily, in medieval times. And he described Bruce¡¯s reorganisation of his soldiers into mobile infantry, increasing their effectiveness.
Episode two will chart the rise of Clan Stewart to become Scotland's royal dynasty, in a blood-soaked tale culminating with the dramatic assassination of King James I below a tennis court in Perth, 1437.
The final show will reveals how the clans plotted against Mary Stewart, Queen of Scots, ultimately leading to her beheading.