HomeTriviaHistorical FiguresWilliam Wallace
person👑 Historical Figures

William Wallace Trivia Questions

How much do you really know about William Wallace? Below are 8 true or false statements. Click each one to reveal the answer and explanation.

1.

Wallace's sword, still preserved in Stirling, weighs over 5 pounds and is nearly 5 feet long.

Click to reveal answer ›

Easy
✓ TRUE

The Wallace Sword, displayed at the National Wallace Monument, is about 4 feet 4 inches long and weighs around 6 pounds.

2.

Wallace and his army won a major victory at the Battle of Stirling Bridge using tactical brilliance.

Click to reveal answer ›

Easy
✓ TRUE

In 1297, Wallace's forces trapped the English on the narrow bridge, inflicting heavy casualties despite being outnumbered.

3.

William Wallace was born into a noble family and was knighted early in his life.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✗ FALSE

Wallace's birth status is debated; he was likely a minor noble, but there's no contemporary evidence he was knighted early.

4.

After his death, Wallace's body was quartered and his head displayed on London Bridge.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✓ TRUE

In 1305, Wallace was executed, disemboweled, beheaded, and quartered; his head was spiked on London Bridge as a warning.

5.

Wallace was betrayed by a Scottish knight loyal to Edward I, leading to his capture.

Click to reveal answer ›

Medium
✓ TRUE

Sir John Menteith, a Scottish noble, is widely believed to have betrayed Wallace to the English in 1305.

6.

Wallace personally killed the English sheriff of Lanark to avenge his wife's murder.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✗ FALSE

This story comes from later romanticized accounts; contemporary records don't confirm his wife's existence or the murder.

7.

Wallace was offered a pardon by King Edward I if he swore loyalty to England.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✗ FALSE

Edward I never offered Wallace a pardon; he was declared an outlaw and hunted relentlessly without negotiation.

8.

Wallace studied at Oxford University as a young man before returning to Scotland.

Click to reveal answer ›

Hard
✗ FALSE

No credible historical record places Wallace at Oxford; this myth likely originated from 19th-century fiction.

More in Historical Figures

Neil ArmstrongTrivia Questions →Leonardo da VinciTrivia Questions →Marie CurieTrivia Questions →William ShakespeareTrivia Questions →Albert EinsteinTrivia Questions →
View all Historical Figures topics →

Want to test yourself in real time?

Swipe right for True, left for False. New questions every day on PopBluff.

Play PopBluff Free →