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The Fog Of War

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  • Scorpio
    replied
    I don't believe that the French knights were exhausted, but the advance through a muddy field must have been slow and chaotic and reduced the effectiveness of the assault.

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  • Cogidubnus
    replied
    Broderie Anglaise

    Hi Scorpio

    Not so far from the truth. The Dauphin did send tennis balls to Henry V, and found his adversary had more balls than he did.
    Well so Shakespeare said, (hence my quip), but he never embroidered did he?

    All the best

    Dave

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  • Cogidubnus
    replied
    Well they do say that the really devastating power of the English/Welsh Longbowmen wasn't their accuracy, (though at close enough range they could be), but their ability to put so many arrows in the air at once...a skilled man could fire off six arrows in a minute...

    Plus of course, didn't I read somewhere the French horsemen were forced to dismount because of the mud and in their heavy armour plod through the same,under heavy fire, and being fairly well exhausted before they reached Henry's men?

    All the best

    Dave

    Leave a comment:


  • Scorpio
    replied
    French aristocrats were only interested in fighting their opposites in the English army who occupied only a fraction of the entire English front; this only added to congestion in the French army and left them vulnerable to the counter attack .
    Last edited by Scorpio; 08-04-2013, 05:06 PM.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Scorpio View Post
    The French seemed to be aware of the Longbow's power, but their countermeasures were inadequate: they hoped to run of the archers with 200 hundred or so mounted men at arms. Knight's and men at arms belonged to a higher social strata than humble peasants with bows and they would not accept equality with them on the battlefield.
    That is how I understood it too, that the French aristocratic, lofty, somewhat condescending attitude towards the English bowman led them into the trap. They threw themselves to the wolves, in a manner of speaking.

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  • Scorpio
    replied
    Originally posted by Phil H View Post
    I believe that one of the recent historians on the battle looked again at the sources and determined that the traditional numbers of men present were hugely exaggerated. I'll check.

    John Keegan, the eminent military historian, in his fantastic book "The Face of Battle" also looks in depth at the battle of Agincourt.

    In addition, I believe there has been some recent work on "arrow storms" - and the calculation of the sheer volume of iron tipped missiles descending on the advancing French is staggering.

    Finally, the mystery and tragedy is added to by the fact that the French had gone through something very very similar at Crecy and Poitiers only a generation or so before.

    Phil
    The French seemed to be aware of the Longbow's power, but their countermeasures were inadequate: they hoped to run of the archers with 200 hundred or so mounted men at arms. Knight's and men at arms belonged to a higher social strata than humble peasants with bows and they would not accept equality with them on the battlefield.

    Leave a comment:


  • Phil H
    replied
    I believe that one of the recent historians on the battle looked again at the sources and determined that the traditional numbers of men present were hugely exaggerated. I'll check.

    John Keegan, the eminent military historian, in his fantastic book "The Face of Battle" also looks in depth at the battle of Agincourt.

    In addition, I believe there has been some recent work on "arrow storms" - and the calculation of the sheer volume of iron tipped missiles descending on the advancing French is staggering.

    Finally, the mystery and tragedy is added to by the fact that the French had gone through something very very similar at Crecy and Poitiers only a generation or so before.

    Phil

    Leave a comment:


  • Wickerman
    replied
    "We few, we happy few..."

    Yes, this great poetical speech is all I know from this period, though I should know more, I admit

    As with a number of historical stories, there is the popular version, and the factual version.
    I wouldn't be at all surprised to learn there is more to this confrontation than popular tradition admits.

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  • Scorpio
    replied
    Originally posted by Cogidubnus View Post
    Maybe the French were suffering an inexplicable shortage of Tennis Balls?

    Sorry...I'll just get me coat shall I...

    (great idea for a thread though)

    Dave
    Not so far from the truth. The Dauphin did send tennis balls to Henry V, and found his adversary had more balls than he did.

    Leave a comment:


  • Cogidubnus
    replied
    Non nobis domine

    Maybe the French were suffering an inexplicable shortage of Tennis Balls?

    Sorry...I'll just get me coat shall I...

    (great idea for a thread though)

    Dave

    Leave a comment:


  • Scorpio
    started a topic The Fog Of War

    The Fog Of War

    They say that war is organized chaos; so here's a thread for anyone interested in the mysteries of the battlefield. The battle of Agincourt in October 1415
    must rank as one of the most notorious battles of the medieval period: A significant difference in the size of the hosts but a result more one sided than an England versus Germany penalty shootout. But beyond the Shakespearean myth, what really accounted for the slaughter?.
    Students of the battle usually suggest such factors as the withering effect of around of perhaps 3000 archers armed with the famed longbow, the sheer unwieldy size of the French host, and the peculiar geography of the battlefield it self: a long, narrow field of freshly ploughed earthed. I believe a combination of these factors at key stages of the battle can explain the result, but perhaps people with more knowledge of the event can shed some light.
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