Hint | Answer | % Correct |
---|---|---|
King who is the subject of the module | Edward I | 100%
|
His father | Henry III | 100%
|
Edward's grandfather who was forced to sign the Magna Carta in the First Barons' War | John | 94%
|
Scottish rebel who defeated the English army at the Battle of Stirling Bridge in 1297 | William Wallace | 88%
|
First Norman King of England; Edward's great-great-great-great-grandfather | William the Conquerer | 82%
|
Ancient, possibly mythical, king who inspired many of Edward's actions | King Arthur | 71%
|
Scottish noble who Edward feared may start a civil war; he later became the King of Scotland | Robert the Bruce | 71%
|
Edward's son who was made Prince of Wales after the Welsh princes were defeated; he was engaged to marry the Queen of Scotland (who died at the age of seven) before she died | Edward of Caernarfon (Edward II) | 65%
|
Rebel who led the Second Barons' War against the above | Simon de Montfort | 65%
|
Granddaughter of the above who was heir to the Scottish throne but died before she could be crowned | Margaret, Maid of Norway | 47%
|
King of Scotland who died in 1286 | Alexander III | 41%
|
King of France who tried to make Edward pay homage for his land in France in the 1290s; Edward refused and his land was confiscated | Philip IV | 41%
|
Edward's first wife | Eleanor of Castile | 35%
|
King of Scotland chosen by Edward after the death of the above; he later invaded England and was subsequently captured by Edward and forced to abdicate | John Balliol | 35%
|
Low-ranking official in the government of Edward's father who acted as regent when Edward was on Crusade and later became Chancellor | Robert Burnell | 29%
|
Friar who developed the scientific method and argued that the Bible was the source of all understanding and should be studied in its original language | Roger Bacon | 29%
|
Edward's representative in Scotland in the late 1280s (he was English) | Antony Bek, Bishop of Durham | 24%
|
Master Mason responsible for the building of the 'Ring of Iron' castles in Wales, which include Caernarfon Castle and Beaumaris Castle | James of St. George | 24%
|
Prince of Wales who refused to pay homage to Edward in 1275, who Edward subsequently fought several wars with | Llywelyn ap Gruffudd | 24%
|
Family of bankers from Lucca who Edward got to organise his tax collection; they also collected £211,000 of duties | The Riccardi | 24%
|
Brother of the Prince of Wales who was awarded much of his land in the Treaty of Aberconwy | Dafydd ap Gruffudd | 18%
|
Archbishop of Canterbury appointed in 1279; he was concerned about Edward borrowing money from the Jews and Edward was concerned about him overusing powers such as excommunication | John Peckham | 18%
|
Leader of the English forces in the Battle of Dunbar, 1296 | John de Warenne, Earl of Surrey | 12%
|
Archbishop of Canterbury appointed in 1293; he refused to pay more than 10% tax for a war and although Edward settled the dispute he eventually forced the Archbishop into exile for allegedly plotting a rebellion | Robert Winchelsea | 12%
|
Other Scottish rebel who worked with the above but died at the Battle of Stirling Bridge | Andrew Moray | 6%
|
Pope who told the above to do his work in secret | Clement IV | 6%
|
Baron who along with the above wrote a list of demands on Edward including lowering taxes | Earl of Hereford | 6%
|
Influential religious thinker who was at Oxford University for some of Edward's reign; he had been expelled from Paris after a dispute with the French king and the Pope | John Duns Scotus | 6%
|
Commander in the Battle of Orewin Bridge in 1282, in which the Prince of Wales was killed | John Giffard | 6%
|
Marshal of England who refused to supply Edward with soldiers unless Edward would also be fighting in the battle | Roger Bigod | 6%
|
Other family of bankers who Edward made a deal with after the above became bankrupt, which was partially Edward's fault | The Frescobaldi | 6%
|
King of Norway with whom the King of Scotland signed a treaty in the mid-1290s, guaranteeing protection from Edward | Erik II | 0%
|
Norwegian king who supported the rebellion in Scotland | Haakon V | 0%
|
Author of the book 'De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae', which was published in 1235 and argued that mens rea, or criminal intent, should be considered in criminal justice | Henry de Bracton | 0%
|
Copyright H Brothers Inc, 2008–2024
Contact Us | Go To Top | View Mobile Site