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Bannockburn, Glasgow Road, Bannockburn Heritage Centre, Robert The Bruce Statue
Statue (20th Century), War Memorial (20th Century)
Site Name Bannockburn, Glasgow Road, Bannockburn Heritage Centre, Robert The Bruce Statue
Classification Statue (20th Century), War Memorial (20th Century)
Alternative Name(s) Bannockburn Battlefield; Whins Of Milton; Borestone Brae; Statue Of King Robert I
Canmore ID 239484
Site Number NS79SE 15.02
NGR NS 79488 90691
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/239484
- Council Stirling
- Parish St Ninians
- Former Region Central
- Former District Stirling
- Former County Stirlingshire
NS79SE 15.02 79488 90691
For (surrounding) Rotunda, see NS79SE 15.03.
Bronze statue to King Robert the Bruce.
Information from RCAHMS (DE), March 2003.
Publication Account (1997)
Although protected since 1932 by the National Trust for Scotland, the site of the Battle of Bannockburn was only developed in a representational and monumental manner in the 1960s. In 1962, under NTS auspices, the site was landscaped and the circular, concrete Rotunda erected, to focus on visitors' attention on Stirling Castle as the English army's objective, and Pilkington Jackson was commissioned by the King Robert the Bruce Memorial Committee to make a massive bronze equestrian statue of the King (unveiled 1964). The information centre was opened in 1967 by William Ross, Secretary of State for Scotland. (Fig 4.3).
Information from 'Rebuilding Scotland, 1945-75', (1997).
Watching Brief (10 August 2011 - 11 October 2011)
NS 7964 9057 A programme of work consisting of a GPR survey, evaluation and watching brief was undertaken, 10 August–11 October 2011, in the car park of the existing Bannockburn Heritage Centre in advance of the construction of a new heritage centre. The trial trench evaluation consisted of the excavation of ten trenches, covering 360m2, equivalent to 15% of the development area. The trenches were placed in a diagonal pattern across the site and also targeted anomalies identified by the GPR survey. The watching brief monitored the excavation of one borehole and eight test pits. No significant archaeological features were recorded.
Archive: RCAHMS (intended)
Funder: The National Trust for Scotland
GUARD Archaeology Ltd, 2011
Information also reported in Oasis (guardarc1-115070) 27 August 2012