Grave of William the Lion, Arbroath Abbey
Posted in History, Scotland at 12:00 on 8 July 2025
We had meant to visit Arbroath Abbey for some time but did not actually do so till last year. (We had tried the year before but the Abbey was undergoing some restoration work so access was limited and we decided against it.)
William the Lion was the longest reigning king of Scotland before the 1603 Union of the Crowns. He was the first Scottish king to arrange an alliance with France. His epithet ‘the lion’ did not relate to military prowess but rather to his banner the red lion rampant on a yellow background, still the banner of Scottish monarchs though frequently used as a symbol of Scotland itself and often brandished at sporting events.
Domestically his reign saw legal and local government reforms but disputes with English kings and his attempts to regain the Kingdom of Northumbria were not so successful.
William is credited with founding the Abbey at Arbroath, so to find his grave there is not surprising.
Tags: Arbroath, Arbroath Abbey, Kingdom of Northumbria, lion rampant, Union of the Crowns, William the Lion


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10 July 2025 at 19:00
[…] wasn’t just William the Lion’s grave I photographed at Arbroath […]