Stirling Bridges

A bridge has spanned the River Forth at Stirling for centuries. Not the same one obviously but the most famous of them was the one where William Wallace won his great victory over the army of Edward I of England (Edward Longshanks) at the eponymous battle in 1297.

The “old” bridge that still survives now carries foot traffic only. It was built 500-600 years ago. It is a lovely structure of four arches and three supports, here shown from the “east” bank.

Old Stirling Bridge

These are the approaches from the west. Note the cobblestones:-
Old Stirling Bridge Approaches

This is the old bridge from the modern road bridge:-
Old Stirling Bridge From Modern Bridge

And this is a view from the “west” bank. The Wallace Monument can be seen as a distant spire beside the lamp standard at the extreme right of the bridge as seen here:-
Old Stirling Bridge Spans

Two “modern” bridges also cross the Forth close by. This is the railway bridge from the modern road bridge:-
Railway Bridge at Stirling

The road bridge is in the foreground here with the railway bridge supports visible through its arches:-
Modern Stirling Bridges

The Wallace Monument from the old bridge:-

Wallace Monument

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  1. Denis Cullinan

    Terrific photographs. They have real archival value.

    ——-Denis Cullinan

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