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The Battle of Agincourt,
1415 |
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The English victory at the Battle of Agincourt
gave birth to a legend that was immortalized in William Shakespeare's King
Henry V. The battle took place in a muddy farmer's field in northern
France on October 25, 1415 and was one in a series of encounters between
France and England that has become known as the Hundred Years' War (1337-1453).
The story begins two months before the battle. Henry and his army had landed in France on August 14 near the mouth of the Seine River. The objective was to regain English territory lost to France over a period of centuries. The first task was to besiege and conquer a nearby town. Henry was successful, but the time-consuming effort took over a month. It was now early October. Henry realized that his reduced force and the limited time left in the campaigning season, meant that he would not be able to press his attack on the French. Instead, he lead his army north in a "show of force" that would end at the English port of Calais and embarkation back to England. As the English army marched north, it was dogged by a French force intent on bringing Henry to battle. The French were able to slip ahead of Henry and block his path to the sea at Agincourt. On the morning of October 25, the two armies faced one another on a recently plowed field muddied by an overnight rain and constricted by woodlands on either side. The majority of Henry's army was made up of archers; the remainder consisted of armored knights who fought on foot. His opponent's force consisted primarily of knights who fought on foot and on horseback, supported by archers. Although estimates of the relative strength of the two armies vary, there is no argument that the English were vastly outnumbered. The two enemies faced one another, exchanging taunts designed to provoke an attack. Henry marched his force close enough to allow his archers to unleash a hail of arrows upon the French. The French knights charged forward only to be caught in a slippery quagmire of mud. To make matters worse, the French attackers were unable to effectively swing their broadswords because of the tight quarters of the battlefield and the continuing forward rush of their comrades behind them. Henry's archers fired lethal storms of arrows into this dense mass of humanity until the French began to retreat. The archers then dropped their bows, picked up what weapons they could find and joined the English knights in slaying their foe. The setting sun left a battlefield heaped with the bodies of thousands of French knights and the cream of France's ruling class. The English had dealt their enemy a disastrous blow. "...their horses stumbled among the stakes, and they were speedily slain by the archers." Jehan de Wavrin was the son of a Flemish knight. His father and older brother fought with the French at the battle. Both were killed. The young de Wavrin observed the battle from the French lines and we join his account as the two armies prepare for combat:
"When the battalions of the French were thus
formed, it was grand to see them; and as far as one could judge by the
eye, they were in number fully six times as many as the English. And when
this was done the French sat down by companies around their banners, waiting
the approach of the English, and making their peace with one another; and
then were laid aside many old aversions conceived long ago; some kissed
and embraced each other, which it was affecting to witness; so that all
quarrels and discords which they had had in time past were changed to great
and perfect love. And there were some who breakfasted on what they had.
And these Frenchmen remained thus till nine or ten o'clock in the morning,
feeling quite assured that, considering their great force, the English
could not escape them; however, there were at least some of the wisest
who greatly feared a fight with them in open battle.
...The French had arranged their battalions between two small thickets,
one lying close to Agincourt, and the other to Tramecourt. The place
was narrow, and very advantageous for the English, and, on the contrary,
very ruinous for the French, for the said French had been all night on
horseback, and it rained, and the pages, grooms, and others, in leading
about the horses, had broken up the ground, which was so soft that the
horses could with difficulty step out of the soil. And also the said
French were so loaded with armour that they could not support themselves
or move forward. In the first place they were armed with long coats of
steel, reaching to the knees or lower, and very heavy, over the leg harness,
and besides plate armour also most of them had hooded helmets; wherefore
this weight of armour, with the softness of the wet ground, as has been
said, kept them as if immovable, so that they could raise their dubs
only with great difficulty, and with all these mischiefs there was this,
that most of them were troubled with hunger and want of sleep.
...Now let us return to the English. After the parley between the two
armies was finished and the delegates had returned, each to their own
people, the King of England, who had appointed a knight called Sir Thomas
Erpingham to place his archers in front in two wings, trusted entirely
to him, and Sir Thomas, to do his part, exhorted every one to do well
in the name of the King, begging them to fight vigorously against the
French in order to secure and save their own lives. And thus the knight,
who rode with two others only in front of the battalion, seeing that
the hour was come, for all things were well arranged, threw up a baton
which he held in his hand, saying 'Nestrocq' ['Now strike'] which was
the signal for attack; then dismounted and joined the King, who was also
on foot in the midst of his men, with his banner before him.
Then the English, seeing this signal, began suddenly to march, uttering
a very loud cry, which greatly surprised the French. And when the English
saw that the French did not approach them, they marched dashingly towards
them in very fine order, and again raised a loud cry as they stopped
to take breath.
Then the English archers, who, as I have said, were in the wings, saw
that they were near enough, and began to send their arrows on the French
with great vigour.
Then the French seeing the English come towards them in this manner,
placed themselves together in order, everyone under his banner, their
helmets on their heads. The Constable, the Marshal, the admirals, and
the other princes earnestly exhorted their men to fight the English well
and bravely; and when it came to the approach the trumpets and clarions
resounded everywhere; but the French began to hold down their heads,
especially those who had no bucklers, for the impetuosity of the English
arrows, which fell so heavily that no one durst uncover or look up.
Thus they went forward a little, then made a little retreat, but before
they could come to close quarters, many of the French were disabled and
wounded by the arrows; and when they came quite up to the English, they
were, as has been said, so closely pressed one against another that none
of them could lift their arms to strike their enemies, except some that
were in front...
[The French knights] struck into these English
archers, who had their stakes fixed in front of them... their. horses
stumbled among the stakes, and they were speedily slain by the archers,
which was a great pity. And most of the rest, through fear, gave way
and fell back into their vanguard, to whom they were a great hindrance;
and they opened their ranks in several places, and made them fall back
and lose their footing in some land newly sown; for their horses had
been so wounded by the arrows that the men could no longer manage them.
[The French] men-at-arms without number
began to fall; and their horses feeling the arrows coming upon them took
to flight before the enemy, and following their example many of the French
turned and fled. Soon afterwards the English archers, seeing the vanguard
thus shaken, issued from behind their stockade, threw away their bows
and quivers, then took their swords, hatchets, mallets, axes, falcon-beaks
and other weapons, and, pushing into the places where they saw these
breaches, struck down and killed these Frenchmen without mercy, and never
ceased to kill till the said vanguard which had fought little or not
at all was completely overwhelmed, and these went on striking right and
left till they came upon the second battalion, which was behind the advance
guard, and there the King personally threw himself into the fight with
his men-at-arms. As the English continued to gain the upper hand, King Henry received news that the French were attacking at the rear of his army and that French reinforcements were approaching. King Henry ordered that all French prisoners be put to the sword - an order his knights were reluctant to follow as, if kept alive, these prisoners could bring a healthy ransom: "When the King of England perceived them coming thus he caused it to be published that every one that had a prisoner should immediately kill him, which those who had any were unwilling to do, for they expected to get great ransoms for them. But when the King was informed of this he appointed a gentleman with two hundred archers whom he commanded to go through the host and kill all the prisoners, whoever they might be. This esquire, without delay or objection, fulfilled the command of his sovereign lord, which was a most pitiable thing, for in cold blood all the nobility of France was beheaded and inhumanly cut to pieces, and all through this accursed company, a sorry set compared with the noble captive chivalry, who when they saw that the English were ready to receive them, all immediately turned and fled, each to save his own life. Many of the cavalry escaped; but of those on foot there were many among the dead." References: How To Cite This Article: |
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