In man-to-man encounters, both men were brutally psychopathic killers; Wallace had terrorized southern Scotland for years as a professional thief and murderer before rehabilitating himself through alignment with the Scottish enemies of Edward I, and Shaka Zulu assassinated scores of rivals in his consolidation of power, in some cases feeding the friends and family members of his enemies to wild hyenas. Neither of the two made their reputations as common foot soldiers, so it might as well be a coin toss if you dropped them each into an arena armed with nothing but bone daggers. Shaka Zulu was certainly by far the more notable strategic military innovator, and had been a distinguished member of a Zulu regiment, while Wallace was a brutish, unprincipled thug. Both were sadists, but which would win in an unarmed hand-to-hand fight would mostly depend on which one was healthier at the time.
A fairer comparison would be to compare Shaka Zulu with other empire builders like Napoleon (a roughly contemporary figure) or Ghengis Khan. William Wallace should be compared to medieval generals like the Sire of Coucy, or to guerrilla warfare tacticians like Jubal Early.
That's bullshitting mother f@*k&$
How could anyone on Earth answer this utterly stupid, dumb question ?
William Wallace was never King of Scotland. At the time of Wallace's death in 1305 Scotland had no King. Robert the Bruce became King of Scotland in 1306.
william wallaces whole campaign against the english was driven by revenge and not patriotism
William Wallace's father was called Alan Wallace and he died because he went out to fight the English and the the English killed him and William was back at the camp when all of this was happening and when William found out he was so depressed and the he worked for the English and the he betrayed him for what they done to his family and then that is why William Wallace is so famous for fighting the English hand for his revolting death.
William Wallace died a horrible death for his (very strong) belief in a Scotland free from English rule. He was hung, drawn and quartered on 23 August 1305 in London.
1066 the battle of Hastings
William Wallace was never King of Scotland. At the time of Wallace's death in 1305 Scotland had no King. Robert the Bruce became King of Scotland in 1306.
Conviction of cause.
William Wallace Lincoln was born on December 21, 1850 and died on February 20, 1862. William Wallace Lincoln would have been 11 years old at the time of death or 164 years old today.
william wallaces whole campaign against the english was driven by revenge and not patriotism
William Wallace's father was called Alan Wallace and he died because he went out to fight the English and the the English killed him and William was back at the camp when all of this was happening and when William found out he was so depressed and the he worked for the English and the he betrayed him for what they done to his family and then that is why William Wallace is so famous for fighting the English hand for his revolting death.
William Wallace died a horrible death for his (very strong) belief in a Scotland free from English rule. He was hung, drawn and quartered on 23 August 1305 in London.
A spartans idea of a "Beautiful death" is actually a historic truth. When the ancient greek spartans were to go into battle anyone who died in battle were explained to have a "Beautiful death" in that they died in the heat of battle instead of old age or of disease, so when the spartan in the film 300 was talking about a "Beautiful death" he was referring to dieing in battle.
William Wallace Lincoln died on February 20, 1862 at the age of 11.
1066 the battle of Hastings
William the Conqueror, upon Harold death at the Battle of Hastings.
i don't think there was a castle at the battle, but after the battle then the new king William had an abbey made in honour or that he felt bad about killing king Harold and where king Harold fell to his death it is said that the high alter marks the spot of his death, the castle of hastings on the sea front was one of the 1st castles to be erected by William i don't think there was a castle at the battle, but after the battle then the new king William had an abbey made in honour or that he felt bad about killing king Harold and where king Harold fell to his death it is said that the high alter marks the spot of his death, the castle of hastings on the sea front was one of the 1st castles to be erected by William
The change caused by Harold's death and the Anglo-Saxon's defeat by the Normans, at the Battle of Hastings in 1066, was that William I of Normandy became the new King of England. He was crowned as King William I, though was usually known as William the Conqueror, or even William the Bastard.