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DNS Resolutions
Date
IP Address
2018-12-29
46.249.204.7
(
ClassC
)
2024-09-18
94.136.170.26
(
ClassC
)
Port 80
HTTP/1.1 301 Moved PermanentlyDate: Wed, 18 Sep 2024 10:38:09 GMTServer: ApacheLocation: https://robroyston.org/Content-Length: 231Content-Type: text/html; charsetiso-8859-1 !DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC -//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN>html>head>title>301 Moved Permanently/title>/head>body>h1>Moved Permanently/h1>p>The document has moved a hrefhttps://robroyston.org/>here/a>./p>/body>/html>
Port 443
HTTP/1.1 200 OKDate: Wed, 18 Sep 2024 10:38:10 GMTServer: ApacheUpgrade: h2Connection: UpgradeLast-Modified: Tue, 24 Nov 2020 13:30:12 GMTETag: 26b7-5b4da4f763742Accept-Ranges: bytesContent-Length: 9911Vary: Accept-Encoding,User-AgentContent-Type: text/html !DOCTYPE html PUBLIC -//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN https://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd>html xmlnshttps://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml xml:langen>head>bgsound srcmusic/bgmusic.mp3 loop-1>meta http-equivContent-Type contenttext/html; charsetISO-8859-1 />meta namedescription contentHome page for Robroyston.org, the website to raise awareness of the William Wallace monument at Robroyston in Glasgow />meta namekeywords contentrobroyston,william wallace,monument,glasgow />meta nameauthor contentRobroyston.org />link relstylesheet typetext/css hrefrobroyston.css mediascreen,projection />link relstylesheet typetext/css hrefrobroyston_print.css mediaprint />title>Robroyston.org :: The History of the Glasgow William Wallace Monument/title>/head>body>script languageJavaScript srcwallace_adplib.js>/script>script languageJavaScript srcwallace.js>/script>div idwrap>div idheader>h1>a hrefindex.html>Robroyston.org/a>/h1>p>Read a hrefhttps://www.robroyston.org/robroyston-gb.php>our guestbook/a> before leaving.../p>/div>img idfrontphoto srcimg/front.jpg width760 height200 alt /> div idleftside>h2 classhide>Menu:/h2>ul classavmenu>li>a classcurrent hrefindex.html>Home page/a>/li>li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_history.html>The Local Hero/a>/li>li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_wallace.html>Wallace Timeline/a>/li>li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_timeline.html>Monument to 1999/a>/li>li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_timeline_2.html>Monument to 2009/a>/li>li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_developments.html>Developments/a>/li>li>a hrefrobroyston-gb.php>Guestbook/a>/li>li>a href#>Galleries/a> ul> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_1900.html>Monument 1900/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_1956.html>Monument 1956/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_1999.html>Monument 1999/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_2003.html>Monument 2003/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_2007.html>Monument 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_2008.html>Monument 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_2009.html>Monument 2009/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_2010.html>Monument 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_gallery_2011.html>Monument 2011/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_wallaces_well_gallery_1982-2003.html>Well 1982-2003/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_wallaces_well_gallery_2007.html>Well 2007/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_wallaces_well_gallery_2008.html>Well 2008/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_wallaces_well_gallery_2009.html>Well 2009/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_wallaces_well_gallery_2010.html>Well 2010/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_wallaces_well_gallery_2011may.html>Well 2011 (May)/a>/li> li>a hrefwallace_wallaces_well_gallery_2011june.html>Well 2011 (June)/a>/li> /ul>/li>li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_how_to_get_there.html>How to get there/a>/li>li>a hrefwallace_robroyston_links.html>Related Links/a>/li>/ul>p> /p>p> /p>div classannounce>h2>Updates:/h2>p> strong>April 2009:/strong>br />Site launched!/p>/div>/div>div idcontentwide>h3>William Wallace & Springburn Museum/h3>p>Some ten years ago, as part of the Glasgow 1999 celebrations to honour the citys new-found pride in its built environment, the curator of the a target_blank hrefhttps://www.glasgowguide.co.uk/images_springburn_museum.html>now-closed Springburn Museum/a>, Dr Gilbert T. Bell, crafted an informative and inspiring series of information sheets about the history of Springburn and the surrounding area. /p>p>One of those information sheets was entitled i>Wi Wallace Bled, William Wallace: Local Hero and Guardian of Scotland/i>. In the leaflet Dr Gilbert detailed both the reasons why the site of the Glasgow Wallace Monument is so important to this country, as well as the dangers and opportunities of future developments which might take place in the green belt area around the Robroyston monument./p>h3>Why Wallace Matters/h3>p>In an outstanding introduction to the Wallace sheet, Dr Gilbert explained exactly why William Wallace still matters:/p>p classpostinfo>img srcimg/test2.jpg height160 width120 classright altExample image - aligned to the right />"The distinguished statesman and one-time Prime Minister, A. J. Balfour stated b>Nothing matters very much; few things matter at all/b>. It may be a rather cynical view but nonetheless it may be an accurate assessment. Things that truly matter are indeed very rare. In all history very few things matter very much. One of the very few people to have mattered as far as Scottish history is concerned was William Wallace.br>br>"Visiting bookshops these days one cannot fail to be impressed by the number of books on Wallace ... he has become hugely popular. In one sense it is odd that so much has been written about Wallace for what we really know about him you could write on the back of an envelope. Countless myths and legends have taken the place of solid historical facts. Why so much has been written is not that we know so much but because he fires our imagination. We have heard the many stories and we imagine the kind of exploits he was likely to have been involved in. We can picture the man. We think we know him for we have heard so much about him and what we have learned we admire.br>br>"He has become a symbol of what patriotism is all about. He really did fight and die for our Wee bit hill and glen. He was Guardian of Scotland - a charismatic leader who truly led by example. He was the Scottish patriot par excellence. He, like few others, put national interests above self-interest. His was a truly noble life and he died a martyrs death. He puts present politicians in the shade, for he was a man of conviction, dedication and honour. He was a hero. He still remains a man to admire. All nations need their heroes and Wallace is one of ours because he stood for values that mattered and put his nation above personal glory. i>Wallace still matters/i> ..."/p>h3>Why Robroyston Matters/h3>p>Dr Gilbert added:/p>p classpostinfo>"Wallace is, however, not simply a national hero but a local one. Robroyston was the scene of his capture and betrayal. i>Because Wallace matters, Robroyston also matters. Places of real historical significance are thin on the ground.br>br>"/i>... at Robroyston one can stand on soil which one can rightly and proudly assume to be the very place once graced by the footsteps of one of Scotlands greatest sons and certainly her greatest champion of freedom. It is a place steeped in history."/p>h3>Objectives of this siteimg border0 srcimages/sunset_robroyston.JPG width172 height130 alignright>/h3>ol>li>Precisely because Robroyston matters – for the reasons set out above by Dr Gilbert – it is time to try to raise the profile of the Robroyston Wallace Monument. The objective of this modest website is to stimulate interest in, and, at the same time, generate investment towards providing positive, sustainable work to protect and enhance this cherished national asset. Also, the site of Wallaces Well itself needs to be restored and protected. br> /li>li>Dr Gilbert also detailed a list of threats and opportunities facing the monument. Unfortunately, over the ten-year period since the local historian wrote his prophetic words of warning, both the scale and speed of housing development at Robroyston has exceeded even his fears ... and it is unlikely to stop any time soon. This website will highlight the scale of the developments which have taken place – and are ongoing – to ensure that the public understands exactly what is happening on the north-eastern edge of this fine city. br> /li>li>We also wish to highlight the issue of the return to Scotland of Wallaces i>Safe Conduct/i> letter see below that he was carrying on the night he was captured. This ‘Safe Conduct’ letter was supposed to guarantee Wallace safe passage to Europe to visit the Pope; it is currently held at the National Archives in Surrey. The letter was written by King Philip IV of France and has been held in England since Wallace was executed - hung, drawn and quartered – in London on 23 August 1305./li>/ol>p aligncenter>img border0 srcimages/wallace_safe_conduct.jpg width550 height128 styleborder-width: 0px>/p>/div>div idfooter>p>span>© 2016 a hrefhttps://www.robroyston.org>Robroyston.org/a> :: info@robroyston.org/span>/p>p> /p>p> script typetext/javascript>var sc_project4646763;var sc_invisible1;var sc_partition56;var sc_click_stat1;var sc_security2a1ac3ba;var sc_text2;/script>script typetext/javascript srchttps://www.statcounter.com/counter/counter.js>/script>noscript>div classstatcounter> a titlefree hit counter hrefhttps://www.statcounter.com/free_hit_counter.html target_blank> img classstatcounter srchttps://c.statcounter.com/4646763/0/2a1ac3ba/0/ altfree hit counter> /a>/div> /noscript>/p>/div>/div>script typetext/javascript>var gaJsHost ((https: document.location.protocol) ? https://ssl. : https://www.);document.write(unescape(%3Cscript src + gaJsHost + google-analytics.com/ga.js typetext/javascript%3E%3C/script%3E));/script>script typetext/javascript>try {var pageTracker _gat._getTracker(UA-359516-17);pageTracker._trackPageview();} catch(err) {}/script>/body>/html>
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