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Battle of Agincourt

The Battle of Agincourt (/ˈæɪnkɔːr(t)/ AJ-in-kor(t);[a] French: Azincourt [azɛ̃kuʁ]) was an English victory in the Hundred Years' War. It took place on 25 October 1415 (Saint Crispin's Day) near Azincourt, in northern France.[b] The unexpected English victory against the numerically superior French army boosted English morale and prestige, crippled France, and started a new period of English dominance in the war that would last for 14 years until France defeated England in the Siege of Orléans in 1429.

Battle of Agincourt
Part of the Hundred Years' War

The Battle of Agincourt, 15th-century miniature, Enguerrand de Monstrelet
Date25 October 1415 (Saint Crispin's Day)
Location50°27′49″N 2°8′30″E / 50.46361°N 2.14167°E / 50.46361; 2.14167
Result English victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of England Kingdom of France
Commanders and leaders
Strength
6,000[1]–8,100 men[2]
(modern estimates; see Numbers at Agincourt)
• About 56 archers
16 dismounted men-at-arms in heavy armour
14,000–15,000 men[3] or up to 25,000 if counting armed servants[4]
• 10,000 men-at-arms[5]
• 4,000–5,000 archers and crossbowmen[6]
• Up to 10,000 mounted and armed servants (gros valets) present[7]
Casualties and losses
Up to 600 killed (112 identified)[8][9] • 6,000 killed (most of whom were of the French nobility)[10][11]
• 700–2,200 captured[12]

After several decades of relative peace, the English had resumed the war in 1415 amid the failure of negotiations with the French. In the ensuing campaign, many soldiers died from disease, and the English numbers dwindled; they tried to withdraw to English-held Calais but found their path blocked by a considerably larger French army. Despite the numerical disadvantage, the battle ended in an overwhelming victory for the English.

King Henry V of England led his troops into battle and participated in hand-to-hand fighting. King Charles VI of France did not command the French army as he suffered from psychotic illnesses and associated mental incapacity. The French were commanded by Constable Charles d'Albret and various prominent French noblemen of the Armagnac party. This battle is notable for the use of the English longbow in very large numbers, with the English and Welsh archers comprising nearly 80 per cent of Henry's army. Henry's standard-bearer was William Harrington, he being an official Standard Bearer of England.

The Battle of Agincourt is one of England's most celebrated victories and was one of the most important English triumphs in the Hundred Years' War, along with the Battle of Crécy (1346) and Battle of Poitiers (1356). Perhaps the most notable example of a last stand of a heavily outnumbered force resulting in an outright victory, it continues to fascinate scholars and the general public into the modern day. It forms the backdrop to notable works such as William Shakespeare's play Henry V, written in 1599.

Contemporary accounts Edit

 
Monumental brass of an English knight wearing armour at the time of Agincourt (Sir Maurice Russell (d. 1416), Dyrham Church, Gloucestershire)

The Battle of Agincourt is well documented by at least seven contemporary accounts, three from eyewitnesses. The general location of the battle is not disputed and the site remains relatively unaltered after 600 years. A paucity of archeological evidence though, has led to a debate as to the exact location of the battlefield.[citation needed]

Immediately after the battle, Henry summoned the heralds of the two armies who had watched the battle together with principal French herald Montjoie, and they settled on the name of the battle as Azincourt, after the nearest fortified place.[17] Two of the most frequently cited accounts come from Burgundian sources, one from Jean Le Fèvre de Saint-Remy who was present at the battle, and the other from Enguerrand de Monstrelet. The English eyewitness account comes from the anonymous author of the Gesta Henrici Quinti, believed to have been written by a chaplain in the King's household who would have been in the baggage train at the battle.[18] A recent re-appraisal of Henry's strategy of the Agincourt campaign incorporates these three accounts and argues that war was seen as a legal due process for solving the disagreement over claims to the French throne.[19]

Background Edit

Henry V invaded France following the failure of negotiations with the French. He claimed the title of King of France through his great-grandfather Edward III of England, although in practice the English kings were generally prepared to renounce this claim if the French would acknowledge the English claim on Aquitaine and other French lands (the terms of the Treaty of Brétigny).[20] He initially called a Great Council in the spring of 1414 to discuss going to war with France, but the lords insisted that he should negotiate further and moderate his claims. In the ensuing negotiations Henry said that he would give up his claim to the French throne if the French would pay the 1.6 million crowns outstanding from the ransom of John II (who had been captured at the Battle of Poitiers in 1356), and concede English ownership of the lands of Anjou, Brittany, Flanders, Normandy, and Touraine, as well as Aquitaine. Henry would marry Catherine, Charles VI's young daughter, and receive a dowry of 2 million crowns.[citation needed]

The French responded with what they considered the generous terms of marriage with Catherine, a dowry of 600,000 crowns, and an enlarged Aquitaine. In December 1414, the English parliament was persuaded to grant Henry a "double subsidy", a tax at twice the traditional rate, to recover his inheritance from the French. By 1415, negotiations had ground to a halt, with the English claiming that the French had mocked their claims and ridiculed Henry himself. [21] On 19 April 1415, Henry again asked the Great Council to sanction war with France, and this time they agreed.[22]

 
1833 reconstruction of the banners flown by the armies at Agincourt

Henry's army landed in northern France on 13 August 1415, carried by a vast fleet. It was often reported to comprise 1,500 ships, but was probably far smaller. Theodore Beck also suggests that among Henry's army was "the king's physician and a little band of surgeons".[23] Thomas Morstede, Henry V's royal surgeon,[24] had previously been contracted by the king to supply a team of surgeons and makers of surgical instruments to take part in the Agincourt campaign.[23] The army of about 12,000 men and up to 20,000 horses besieged the port of Harfleur.[25] The siege took longer than expected. The town surrendered on 22 September, and the English army did not leave until 8 October. The campaign season was coming to an end, and the English army had suffered many casualties through disease. Rather than retire directly to England for the winter, with his costly expedition resulting in the capture of only one town, Henry decided to march most of his army (roughly 9,000) through Normandy to the port of Calais, the English stronghold in northern France, to demonstrate by his presence in the territory at the head of an army that his right to rule in the duchy was more than a mere abstract legal and historical claim.[26] He also intended the manoeuvre as a deliberate provocation to battle aimed at the dauphin, who had failed to respond to Henry's personal challenge to combat at Harfleur.[27]

During the siege, the French had raised an army which assembled around Rouen. This was not strictly a feudal army, but an army paid through a system similar to that of the English. The French hoped to raise 9,000 troops, but the army was not ready in time to relieve Harfleur.[citation needed]

After Henry V marched to the north, the French moved to block them along the River Somme. They were successful for a time, forcing Henry to move south, away from Calais, to find a ford. The English finally crossed the Somme south of Péronne, at Béthencourt and Voyennes[28][29] and resumed marching north.

Without a river obstacle to defend, the French were hesitant to force a battle. They shadowed Henry's army while calling a semonce des nobles,[30] calling on local nobles to join the army. By 24 October, both armies faced each other for battle, but the French declined, hoping for the arrival of more troops. The two armies spent the night of 24 October on open ground. The next day the French initiated negotiations as a delaying tactic, but Henry ordered his army to advance and to start a battle that, given the state of his army, he would have preferred to avoid, or to fight defensively: that was how Crécy and the other famous longbow victories had been won. The English had very little food, had marched 260 miles (420 km) in two and a half weeks, were suffering from sickness such as dysentery, and were greatly outnumbered by well-equipped French men-at-arms. The French army blocked Henry's way to the safety of Calais, and delaying battle would only further weaken his tired army and allow more French troops to arrive.[31]

Setting Edit

Battlefield Edit

The precise location of the battle is not known. It may be in the narrow strip of open land formed between the woods of Tramecourt and Azincourt (close to the modern village of Azincourt). However, the lack of archaeological evidence at this traditional site has led to suggestions it was fought to the west of Azincourt.[32] In 2019, the historian Michael Livingston also made the case for a site west of Azincourt, based on a review of sources and early maps.[33]

English deployment Edit

 
The battle of Agincourt

Early on the 25th, Henry deployed his army (approximately 1,500 men-at-arms and 7,000 longbowmen) across a 750-yard (690 m) part of the defile. The army was divided into three groups, with the right wing led by Edward, Duke of York, the centre led by the king himself, and the left wing under the old and experienced Baron Thomas Camoys. The archers were commanded by Sir Thomas Erpingham, another elderly veteran.[34] It is likely that the English adopted their usual battle line of longbowmen on either flank, with men-at-arms and knights in the centre. They might also have deployed some archers in the centre of the line. The English men-at-arms in plate and mail were placed shoulder to shoulder four deep. The English and Welsh archers on the flanks drove pointed wooden stakes, or palings, into the ground at an angle to force cavalry to veer off. This use of stakes could have been inspired by the Battle of Nicopolis of 1396, where forces of the Ottoman Empire used the tactic against French cavalry.[c]

The English made their confessions before the battle, as was customary.[36] Henry, worried about the enemy launching surprise raids, and wanting his troops to remain focused, ordered all his men to spend the night before the battle in silence, on pain of having an ear cut off. He told his men that he would rather die in the coming battle than be captured and ransomed.[37]

Henry made a speech emphasising the justness of his cause, and reminding his army of previous great defeats the kings of England had inflicted on the French. The Burgundian sources have him concluding the speech by telling his men that the French had boasted that they would cut off two fingers from the right hand of every archer, so that he could never draw a longbow again. Whether this was true is open to question and continues to be debated to this day; however, it seems likely that death was the normal fate of any soldier who could not be ransomed.[38]

French deployment Edit

The French army had 10,000 men-at arms[39][40][41] plus some 4,000–5,000 miscellaneous footmen (gens de trait) including archers, crossbowmen[42] (arbalétriers) and shield-bearers (pavisiers), totaling 14,000–15,000 men. Probably each man-at-arms would be accompanied by a gros valet (or varlet), an armed servant, adding up to another 10,000 potential fighting men,[7] though some historians omit them from the number of combatants.[43]

The French were organized into two main groups (or battles), a vanguard up front and a main battle behind, both composed principally of men-at-arms fighting on foot and flanked by more of the same in each wing.[44] There was a special, elite cavalry force whose purpose was to break the formation of the English archers and thus clear the way for the infantry to advance.[45] A second, smaller mounted force was to attack the rear of the English army, along with its baggage and servants.[46] Many lords and gentlemen demanded – and got – places in the front lines, where they would have a higher chance to acquire glory and valuable ransoms; this resulted in the bulk of the men-at-arms being massed in the front lines and the other troops, for which there was no remaining space, to be placed behind.[47] Although it had been planned for the archers and crossbowmen to be placed with the infantry wings, they were now regarded as unnecessary and placed behind them instead.[48] On account of the lack of space, the French drew up a third battle, the rearguard, which was on horseback and mainly comprised the varlets mounted on the horses belonging to the men fighting on foot ahead.[49]

The French vanguard and main battle numbered respectively 4,800 and 3,000 men-at-arms.[50] Both lines were arrayed in tight, dense formations of about 16 ranks each, and were positioned a bowshot length from each other.[51] Albret, Boucicaut and almost all the leading noblemen were assigned stations in the vanguard.[52] The dukes of Alençon and Bar led the main battle.[53] A further 600 dismounted men-at-arms stood in each wing, with the left under the Count of Vendôme and the right under the Count of Richemont.[54] To disperse the enemy archers, a cavalry force of 800–1,200 picked men-at-arms,[55] led by Clignet de Bréban and Louis de Bosredon, was distributed evenly between both flanks of the vanguard (standing slightly forward, like horns).[56] Some 200 mounted men-at-arms would attack the English rear.[34][d] The French apparently had no clear plan for deploying the rest of the army.[34] The rearguard, leaderless, would serve as a "dumping ground" for the surplus troops.[59]

Terrain Edit

The field of battle was arguably the most significant factor in deciding the outcome. The recently ploughed land hemmed in by dense woodland favoured the English, both because of its narrowness, and because of the thick mud through which the French knights had to walk.[60][61]

Accounts of the battle describe the French engaging the English men-at-arms before being rushed from the sides by the longbowmen as the mêlée developed. The English account in the Gesta Henrici says: "For when some of them, killed when battle was first joined, fall at the front, so great was the undisciplined violence and pressure of the mass of men behind them that the living fell on top of the dead, and others falling on top of the living were killed as well."[62]

Although the French initially pushed the English back, they became so closely packed that they were described as having trouble using their weapons properly. The French monk of St. Denis says: "Their vanguard, composed of about 5,000 men, found itself at first so tightly packed that those who were in the third rank could scarcely use their swords,"[63] and the Burgundian sources have a similar passage.

Recent heavy rain made the battle field very muddy, proving very tiring to walk through in full plate armour. The French monk of St. Denis describes the French troops as "marching through the middle of the mud where they sank up to their knees. So they were already overcome with fatigue even before they advanced against the enemy". The deep, soft mud particularly favoured the English force because, once knocked to the ground, the heavily armoured French knights had a hard time getting back up to fight in the mêlée. Barker states that some knights, encumbered by their armour, actually drowned in their helmets.[64]

Fighting Edit

Opening moves Edit

 
John Gilbert – The Morning of the Battle of Agincourt (1884), Guildhall Art Gallery

On the morning of 25 October, the French were still waiting for additional troops to arrive. The Duke of Brabant (about 2,000 men),[65] the Duke of Anjou (about 600 men),[65] and the Duke of Brittany (6,000 men, according to Monstrelet),[66] were all marching to join the army.

For three hours after sunrise there was no fighting. Military textbooks of the time stated: "Everywhere and on all occasions that foot soldiers march against their enemy face to face, those who march lose and those who remain standing still and holding firm win."[67] On top of this, the French were expecting thousands of men to join them if they waited. They were blocking Henry's retreat, and were perfectly happy to wait for as long as it took. There had even been a suggestion that the English would run away rather than give battle when they saw that they would be fighting so many French princes.[68]

Henry's men were already very weary from hunger, illness and retreat. Apparently Henry believed his fleeing army would perform better on the defensive, but had to halt the retreat and somehow engage the French before a defensive battle was possible.[31] This entailed abandoning his chosen position and pulling out, advancing, and then re-installing the long sharpened wooden stakes pointed outwards toward the enemy, which helped protect the longbowmen from cavalry charges.[69] (The use of stakes was an innovation for the English: during the Battle of Crécy, for example, the archers had been instead protected by pits and other obstacles.[70])

The tightness of the terrain also seems to have restricted the planned deployment of the French forces. The French had originally drawn up a battle plan that had archers and crossbowmen in front of their men-at-arms, with a cavalry force at the rear specifically designed to "fall upon the archers, and use their force to break them,"[71] but in the event, the French archers and crossbowmen were deployed behind and to the sides of the men-at-arms (where they seem to have played almost no part, except possibly for an initial volley of arrows at the start of the battle). The cavalry force, which could have devastated the English line if it had attacked while they moved their stakes, charged only after the initial volley of arrows from the English. It is unclear whether the delay occurred because the French were hoping the English would launch a frontal assault (and were surprised when the English instead started shooting from their new defensive position), or whether the French mounted knights instead did not react quickly enough to the English advance. French chroniclers agree that when the mounted charge did come, it did not contain as many men as it should have; Gilles le Bouvier states that some had wandered off to warm themselves and others were walking or feeding their horses.[72]

French cavalry attack Edit

The French cavalry, despite being disorganised and not at full numbers, charged towards the longbowmen. It was a disastrous attempt. The French knights were unable to outflank the longbowmen (because of the encroaching woodland) and unable to charge through the array of sharpened stakes that protected the archers. John Keegan argues that the longbows' main influence on the battle at this point was injuries to horses: armoured only on the head, many horses would have become dangerously out of control when struck in the back or flank from the high-elevation, long-range shots used as the charge started.[73] The mounted charge and subsequent retreat churned up the already muddy terrain between the French and the English. Juliet Barker quotes a contemporary account by a monk from St. Denis who reports how the wounded and panicking horses galloped through the advancing infantry, scattering them and trampling them down in their headlong flight from the battlefield.[74]

Main French assault Edit

 
King Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt, 1415, by Sir John Gilbert in the 19th century.

The plate armour of the French men-at-arms allowed them to close the 1,000 yards or so to the English lines while being under what the French monk of Saint Denis described as "a terrifying hail of arrow shot". A complete coat of plate was considered such good protection that shields were generally not used,[75] although the Burgundian contemporary sources distinguish between Frenchmen who used shields and those who did not, and Rogers has suggested that the front elements of the French force used axes and shields.[76] Modern historians are divided on how effective the longbows would have been against plate armour of the time. Modern test and contemporary accounts conclude that arrows could not penetrate the better quality steel armour, which became available to knights and men-at-arms of fairly modest means by the middle of the 14th century, but could penetrate the poorer quality wrought iron armour.[77][78][79][80] Rogers suggested that the longbow could penetrate a wrought iron breastplate at short range and penetrate the thinner armour on the limbs even at 220 yards (200 m). He considered a knight in the best-quality steel armour invulnerable to an arrow on the breastplate or top of the helmet, but vulnerable to shots hitting the limbs, particularly at close range.[81] In any case, to protect themselves as much as possible from the arrows, the French had to lower their visors and bend their helmeted heads to avoid being shot in the face, as the eye- and air-holes in their helmets were among the weakest points in the armour. This head-lowered position restricted their breathing and their vision. Then they had to walk a few hundred yards (metres) through thick mud and a press of comrades while wearing armour weighing 50–60 pounds (23–27 kg), gathering sticky clay all the way. Increasingly, they had to walk around or over fallen comrades.[82]

 
Miniature from Vigiles du roi Charles VII. The battle of Azincourt 1415.

The surviving French men-at-arms reached the front of the English line and pushed it back, with the longbowmen on the flanks continuing to shoot at point-blank range. When the archers ran out of arrows, they dropped their bows and, using hatchets, swords, and the mallets they had used to drive their stakes in, attacked the now disordered, fatigued and wounded French men-at-arms massed in front of them. The French could not cope with the thousands of lightly armoured longbowmen assailants (who were much less hindered by the mud and weight of their armour) combined with the English men-at-arms. The impact of thousands of arrows, combined with the slog in heavy armour through the mud, the heat and difficulty breathing in plate armour with the visor down,[83] and the crush of their numbers, meant the French men-at-arms could "scarcely lift their weapons" when they finally engaged the English line.[84] The exhausted French men-at-arms were unable to get up after being knocked to the ground by the English. As the mêlée developed, the French second line also joined the attack, but they too were swallowed up, with the narrow terrain meaning the extra numbers could not be used effectively. Rogers suggested that the French at the back of their deep formation would have been attempting to literally add their weight to the advance, without realising that they were hindering the ability of those at the front to manoeuvre and fight by pushing them into the English formation of lancepoints. After the initial wave, the French would have had to fight over and on the bodies of those who had fallen before them. In such a "press" of thousands of men, Rogers suggested that many could have suffocated in their armour, as was described by several sources, and which was also known to have happened in other battles.[85]

The French men-at-arms were taken prisoner or killed in the thousands. The fighting lasted about three hours, but eventually the leaders of the second line were killed or captured, as those of the first line had been. The English Gesta Henrici described three great heaps of the slain around the three main English standards.[62] According to contemporary English accounts, Henry fought hand to hand. Upon hearing that his youngest brother Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester had been wounded in the groin, Henry took his household guard and stood over his brother, in the front rank of the fighting, until Humphrey could be dragged to safety. The king received an axe blow to the head, which knocked off a piece of the crown that formed part of his helmet.[86]

Attack on the English baggage train Edit

 
1915 depiction of Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt : The King wears on this surcoat the Royal Arms of England, quartered with the Fleur de Lys of France as a symbol of his claim to the throne of France.

The only French success was an attack on the lightly protected English baggage train, with Ysembart d'Azincourt (leading a small number of men-at-arms and varlets plus about 600 peasants) seizing some of Henry's personal treasures, including a crown.[87] Whether this was part of a deliberate French plan or an act of local brigandage is unclear from the sources. Certainly, d'Azincourt was a local knight but he might have been chosen to lead the attack because of his local knowledge and the lack of availability of a more senior soldier.[88] In some accounts the attack happened towards the end of the battle, and led the English to think they were being attacked from the rear. Barker, following the Gesta Henrici, believed to have been written by an English chaplain who was actually in the baggage train, concluded that the attack happened at the start of the battle.[88]

Henry executes the French prisoners Edit

Regardless of when the baggage assault happened, at some point after the initial English victory, Henry became alarmed that the French were regrouping for another attack. The Gesta Henrici places this after the English had overcome the onslaught of the French men-at-arms and the weary English troops were eyeing the French rearguard ("in incomparable number and still fresh").[62] Le Fèvre and Wavrin similarly say that it was signs of the French rearguard regrouping and "marching forward in battle order" which made the English think they were still in danger.[89] A slaughter of the French prisoners ensued. It seems it was purely a decision of Henry, since the English knights found it contrary to chivalry, and contrary to their interests, to kill valuable hostages for whom it was commonplace to ask ransom. Henry threatened to hang whomever did not obey his orders.[citation needed]

In any event, Henry ordered the slaughter of what were perhaps several thousand French prisoners, sparing only the highest ranked (presumably those most likely to fetch a large ransom under the chivalric system of warfare). According to most chroniclers, Henry's fear was that the prisoners (who, in an unusual turn of events, actually outnumbered their captors) would realise their advantage in numbers, rearm themselves with the weapons strewn about the field and overwhelm the exhausted English forces. Contemporary chroniclers did not criticise him for it.[90] In his study of the battle John Keegan argued that the main aim was not to actually kill the French knights but rather to terrorise them into submission and quell any possibility they might resume the fight, which would probably have caused the uncommitted French reserve forces to join the fray, as well.[91] Such an event would have posed a risk to the still-outnumbered English and could have easily turned a stunning victory into a mutually destructive defeat, as the English forces were now largely intermingled with the French and would have suffered grievously from the arrows of their own longbowmen had they needed to resume shooting. Keegan also speculated that due to the relatively low number of archers actually involved in killing the French knights (roughly 200 by his estimate), together with the refusal of the English knights to assist in a duty they saw as distastefully unchivalrous, and combined with the sheer difficulty of killing such a large number of prisoners in such a short space of time, the actual number of French prisoners put to death may not have been substantial before the French reserves fled the field and Henry rescinded the order.[92]

Aftermath Edit

The French had suffered a catastrophic defeat.[93] In all, around 6,000 of their fighting men lay dead on the ground.[94][10][11] The list of casualties, one historian has noted, "read like a roll call of the military and political leaders of the past generation".[93] Among them were 90–120 great lords and bannerets killed, including[95] three dukes (Alençon, Bar and Brabant), nine counts (Blâmont, Dreux, Fauquembergue, Grandpré, Marle, Nevers, Roucy, Vaucourt, Vaudémont) and one viscount (Puisaye), also an archbishop.[96] Of the great royal office holders, France lost its constable (Albret), an admiral (the lord of Dampierre), the Master of Crossbowmen (David de Rambures, dead along with three sons), Master of the Royal Household (Guichard Dauphin) and prévôt of the marshals.[97] According to the heralds, 3,069 knights and squires were killed,[e] while at least 2,600 more corpses were found without coats of arms to identify them.[93] Entire noble families were wiped out in the male line, and in some regions an entire generation of landed nobility was annihilated.[101] The bailiffs of nine major northern towns were killed, often along with their sons, relatives and supporters. In the words of Juliet Barker, the battle "cut a great swath through the natural leaders of French society in Artois, Ponthieu, Normandy, Picardy."[102]

Estimates of the number of prisoners vary between 700 and 2,200, amongst them the dukes of Orléans and Bourbon, the counts of Eu, Vendôme, Richemont (brother of the Duke of Brittany and stepbrother of Henry V) and Harcourt, and marshal Jean Le Maingre.[12]

While numerous English sources give the English casualties in double figures,[8] record evidence identifies at least 112 Englishmen killed in the fighting,[103] while Monstrelet reported 600 English dead.[8] These included the Duke of York, the young Earl of Suffolk and the Welsh esquire Dafydd ("Davy") Gam. Jean de Wavrin, a knight on the French side wrote that English fatalities were 1,600 "men of all ranks".

Although the victory had been militarily decisive, its impact was complex. It did not lead to further English conquests immediately as Henry's priority was to return to England, which he did on 16 November, to be received in triumph in London on the 23rd.[104] Henry returned a conquering hero, seen as blessed by God in the eyes of his subjects and European powers outside France. It established the legitimacy of the Lancastrian monarchy and the future campaigns of Henry to pursue his "rights and privileges" in France.[105] Other benefits to the English were longer term. Very quickly after the battle, the fragile truce between the Armagnac and Burgundian factions broke down. The brunt of the battle had fallen on the Armagnacs and it was they who suffered the majority of senior casualties and carried the blame for the defeat. The Burgundians seized on the opportunity and within 10 days of the battle had mustered their armies and marched on Paris.[106] This lack of unity in France allowed Henry eighteen months to prepare militarily and politically for a renewed campaign. When that campaign took place, it was made easier by the damage done to the political and military structures of Normandy by the battle.[107]

Numbers at Agincourt Edit

Most primary sources which describe the battle have English outnumbered by several times. By contrast, Anne Curry in her 2005 book Agincourt: A New History, argued, based on research into the surviving administrative records, that the French army was 12,000 strong, and the English army 9,000, proportions of four to three.[108] While not necessarily agreeing with the exact numbers Curry uses, Bertrand Schnerb, a professor of medieval history at the University of Lille, states the French probably had 12,000–15,000 troops.[109] Juliet Barker, Jonathan Sumption and Clifford J. Rogers criticized Curry's reliance on administrative records, arguing that they are incomplete and that several of the available primary sources already offer a credible assessment of the numbers involved.[110][111][112] Ian Mortimer endorsed Curry's methodology, though applied it more liberally, noting how she "minimises French numbers (by limiting her figures to those in the basic army and a few specific additional companies) and maximises English numbers (by assuming the numbers sent home from Harfleur were no greater than sick lists)", and concluded that "the most extreme imbalance which is credible" is 15,000 French against 8,000–9,000 English.[113] Barker opined that "if the differential really was as low as three to four then this makes a nonsense of the course of the battle as described by eyewitnesses and contemporaries".[110]

Barker, Sumption and Rogers all wrote that the English probably had 6,000 men, these being 5,000 archers and 900–1,000 men-at-arms. These numbers are based on the Gesta Henrici Quinti and the chronicle of Jean Le Fèvre, the only two eyewitness accounts on the English camp.[114][115] Curry and Mortimer questioned the reliability of the Gesta, as there have been doubts as to how much it was written as propaganda for Henry V. Both note that the Gesta vastly overestimates the number of French in the battle; its proportions of English archers to men-at-arms at the battle are also different from those of the English army before the siege of Harfleur. Mortimer also considers that the Gesta vastly inflates the English casualties – 5,000 – at Harfleur, and that "despite the trials of the march, Henry had lost very few men to illness or death; and we have independent testimony that no more than 160 had been captured on the way".[116] Rogers, on the other hand, finds the number 5,000 plausible, giving several analogous historical events to support his case,[112] and Barker considers that the fragmentary pay records which Curry relies on actually support the lower estimates.

Historians disagree less about the French numbers. Rogers, Mortimer[117] and Sumption[41] all give more or less 10,000 men-at-arms for the French, using as a source the herald of the Duke of Berry, an eyewitness. The number is supported by many other contemporary accounts.[39] Curry, Rogers[118] and Mortimer[42] all agree the French had 4 to 5 thousand missile troops. Sumption, thus, concludes that the French had 14,000 men, basing himself on the monk of St. Denis;[119] Mortimer gives 14 or 15 thousand fighting men.[116] One particular cause of confusion may have been the number of servants on both sides, or whether they should at all be counted as combatants. Since the French had many more men-at-arms than the English, they would accordingly be accompanied by a far greater number of servants. Rogers says each of the 10,000 men-at-arms would be accompanied by a gros valet (an armed, armoured and mounted military servant) and a noncombatant page, counts the former as fighting men, and concludes thus that the French in fact numbered 24,000.[7] Barker, who believes the English were outnumbered by at least four to one,[120] says that the armed servants formed the rearguard in the battle.[121] Mortimer notes the presence of noncombatant pages only, indicating that they would ride the spare horses during the battle and be mistakenly thought of as combatants by the English.[122]

Popular representations Edit

 
The 15th century Agincourt Carol

The battle remains an important symbol in popular culture. Some notable examples are listed below.

Music Edit

Soon after the victory at Agincourt, a number of popular folk songs were created about the battle, the most famous being the "Agincourt Carol", produced in the first half of the 15th century.[123] Other ballads followed, including "King Henry Fifth's Conquest of France", raising the popular prominence of particular events mentioned only in passing by the original chroniclers, such as the gift of tennis balls before the campaign.[124]

Literature Edit

The most famous cultural depiction of the battle today is in Act IV of William Shakespeare's Henry V, written in 1599. The play focuses on the pressures of kingship, the tensions between how a king should appear – chivalric, honest, and just – and how a king must sometimes actMachiavellian and ruthless.[125] Shakespeare illustrates these tensions by depicting Henry's decision to kill some of the French prisoners, whilst attempting to justify it and distance himself from the event. This moment of the battle is portrayed both as a break with the traditions of chivalry and as a key example of the paradox of kingship.[126]

Shakespeare's depiction of the battle also plays on the theme of modernity. He contrasts the modern, English king and his army with the medieval, chivalric, older model of the French.[127]

Shakespeare's play presented Henry as leading a truly English force into battle, playing on the importance of the link between the monarch and the common soldiers in the fight.[128] The original play does not, however, feature any scenes of the actual battle itself, leading critic Rose Zimbardo to characterise it as "full of warfare, yet empty of conflict."[129]

The play introduced the famous St Crispin's Day Speech, considered one of Shakespeare's most heroic speeches, which Henry delivers movingly to his soldiers just before the battle, urging his "band of brothers" to stand together in the forthcoming fight.[130] Critic David Margolies describes how it "oozes honour, military glory, love of country and self-sacrifice", and forms one of the first instances of English literature linking solidarity and comradeship to success in battle.[130][131] Partially as a result, the battle was used as a metaphor at the beginning of the First World War, when the British Expeditionary Force's attempts to stop the German advances were widely likened to it.[132]

Shakespeare's portrayal of the casualty loss is ahistorical in that the French are stated to have lost 10,000 and the English 'less than' thirty men, prompting Henry's remark, "O God, thy arm was here".

In 2008, English-American author Bernard Cornwell released a retelling of both the events leading up the battle and the battle itself, titled Azincourt. The story is told predominantly through the eyes of an English longbowman named Nicholas Hook.

Films Edit

Shakespeare's version of the battle of Agincourt has been turned into several minor and two major films. The latter, each titled Henry V, star Laurence Olivier in 1944 and Kenneth Branagh in 1989. Made just prior to the invasion of Normandy, Olivier's rendition gives the battle what Sarah Hatchuel has termed an "exhilarating and heroic" tone, with an artificial, cinematic look to the battle scenes.[133] Branagh's version gives a longer, more realist portrayal of the battle itself, drawing on both historical sources and images from the Vietnam and Falkland Wars.[134]

In his 2007 film adaptation, director Peter Babakitis uses digital effects to exaggerate realist features during the battle scenes, producing a more avant-garde interpretation of the fighting at Agincourt.[135] The battle also forms a central component of the 2019 Netflix film The King, which stars Timothée Chalamet as Henry V and Robert Pattinson as the Dauphin of Viennois. The film takes inspiration from Shakespeare's Henriad plays.[136][137]

Mock trial Edit

In March 2010, a mock trial of Henry V for the crimes associated with the slaughter of the prisoners was held in Washington, D.C., drawing from both the historical record and Shakespeare's play. Participating as judges were Justices Samuel Alito and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The trial ranged widely over whether there was just cause for war and not simply the prisoner issue. Although an audience vote was "too close to call", Henry was unanimously found guilty by the court on the basis of "evolving standards of civil society".[138][139][140]

 
Battlefield today

Agincourt today Edit

There is a modern museum in Azincourt village dedicated to the battle.[141] The museum lists the names of combatants of both sides who died in the battle.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The story of the battle has been retold many times in English, from the 15th-century Agincourt song onwards and an English pronunciation of /ˈæɪnkɔːrt/ AJ-in-kort has become established.[13] The modern tendency is to use a style closer to French, such as /ˈæɪnkɔːr/ AJ-in-kor or /ˈæʒɪnkʊər/ AZH-in-koor.[14][15][16]
  2. ^ Dates in the fifteenth century are difficult to reconcile with modern calendars: see Barker 2015, pp. 226–228 for the way the date of the battle was established.
  3. ^ The first known use of angled stakes to thwart a mounted charge was at the Battle of Nicopolis, an engagement between European states and Turkish forces in 1396, twenty years before Agincourt. French knights, charging uphill, were unseated from their horses, either because their mounts were injured on the stakes or because they dismounted to uproot the obstacles, and were overpowered. News of the contrivance circulated within Europe and was described in a book of tactics written in 1411 by Boucicault, Marshal of France.[35]
  4. ^ With 4,800 men-at-arms in the vanguard, 3,000 in the main battle, and 1,200 in the infantry wings,[57] along with 800 and 200 in each cavalry force,[55] the total number of men-at-arms was 10,000.[57] There may have been men-at-arms in the rearguard but, if so, no more than a couple of hundred.[58]
  5. ^ As reported by Thomas Walsingham.[98] Other sources agree closely, citing 4,000 dead in this group.[99] Reportedly 1,500 knights died.[100]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Barker 2015, pp. xvi–xvii, xxi, 220, 229, 276, 388–392; Rogers 2008, pp. 42, 114–121; Sumption 2015, pp. 441, 814 (n. 11)
  2. ^ Mortimer 2009, p. 566.
  3. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 57, 59 (n. 71); Mortimer 2009, pp. 565, 566; Sumption 2015, pp. 449, 815 (n. 20); Curry 2000, p. 102
  4. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 60–62.
  5. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 57–59; Sumption 2015, pp. 452–453; Mortimer 2009, pp. 429; Curry 2000, p. 181
  6. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 57, 62–63; Mortimer 2009, pp. 422, 565
  7. ^ a b c Rogers 2008, pp. 57, 60–62.
  8. ^ a b c Curry 2000, p. 12.
  9. ^ Barker 2015, p. 320.
  10. ^ a b Curry 2006, pp. 187, 192, 233, 248.
  11. ^ a b Sumption 2015, pp. 459, 461.
  12. ^ a b Barker 2015, pp. 337, 367, 368.
  13. ^ Merriam-Webster has a small audio file here: "Agincourt". Merriam-Webster Pronunciation. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  14. ^ Olausson, Lena; Sangster, Catherine (2006). Oxford BBC Guide to Pronunciation: The Essential Handbook of the Spoken Word. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-19-280710-6. aj-in-kor/ˈadʒɪnˌkɔː(r)/ the established anglicization
  15. ^ Jones, Daniel (2003). Roach, Peter; et al. (eds.). English Pronouncing Dictionary (16th ed.). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-521-01712-1.
  16. ^ As in this interview with Juliet Barker: . Meet the Author. Archived from the original on 21 February 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  17. ^ Keegan 1976, p. 86.
  18. ^ Curry 2000, pp. 22–26.
  19. ^ Honig, Jan Willem (2012). "Reappraising Late Medieval Strategy: The Example of the 1415 Agincourt Campaign". War in History. 19 (123): 123–151. doi:10.1177/0968344511432975. S2CID 146219312.[page needed]
  20. ^ Barker 2015, p. 14.
  21. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 67–69.
  22. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 107, 114.
  23. ^ a b Beck, Theodore (1974). Cutting Edge: Early History of the Surgeons of London. Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd. p. 58. ISBN 978-0853313663.
  24. ^ Prioreschi, Plinio (1996). A History of Medicine: Medieval medicine. Horatius Press. ISBN 9781888456059.
  25. ^ "Guardian newspaper:French correction: Henry V's Agincourt fleet was half as big, historian claims, 28 July 2015". TheGuardian.com. 27 July 2015.
  26. ^ Hibbert 1971, p. 67.
  27. ^ Barker 2015, p. 221.
  28. ^ Wylie & Waugh 1914, p. 118.
  29. ^ Seward 1999, p. 162.
  30. ^ . 25 May 2013. Archived from the original on 14 December 2013.[verification needed]
  31. ^ a b Mortimer 2009, pp. 436–437.
  32. ^ Sutherland (2015)
  33. ^ Livingston, Michael (2019). "Where was Agincourt Fought?". Medieval Warfare. IX (1): 20–33. ISSN 2211-5129.
  34. ^ a b c Sumption 2015, p. 454.
  35. ^ Bennett 1994, pp. 7, 15–16.
  36. ^ Curry 2006, p. 166.
  37. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 269–270.
  38. ^ Barker 2015, p. 286.
  39. ^ a b Rogers 2008, pp. 57–59.
  40. ^ Mortimer 2009, pp. 429, 565.
  41. ^ a b Sumption 2015, pp. 452–453.
  42. ^ a b Mortimer 2009, pp. 422, 565.
  43. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 59 n. 71.
  44. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 278–279, 280; Curry 2006, pp. 141, 142, 184; Mortimer 2009, pp. 428–429.
  45. ^ Curry 2006, pp. 183–184; Barker 2015, pp. 279, 280.
  46. ^ Phillpotts 1984, p. 63.
  47. ^ Mortimer 2009, pp. 428–429, 430; Barker 2015, pp. 278–279; Curry 2000, pp. 113, 115, 125.
  48. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 275, 278–279; Rogers 2008, pp. 64, 66–67, 69; Phillpotts 1984, pp. 62; Mortimer 2009, p. 429, 430.
  49. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 278–279; Rogers 2008, pp. 61 (n. 79), 62, 64, 66; Phillpotts 1984, p. 62.
  50. ^ Mortimer 2009, p. 429; Sumption 2015, p. 452; Rogers 2008, p. 58; Curry 2000, pp. 107, 132, 181.
  51. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 63.
  52. ^ Sumption 2015, p. 452; Barker 2015, p. 279.
  53. ^ Barker 2015, p. 279.
  54. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 279, 280, 322, 331; Curry 2000, pp. 156, 181, 183; Curry 2006, p. 182.
  55. ^ a b Curry 2000, pp. 60–61, 71, 106, 161, 173, 468.
  56. ^ Curry 2000, pp. 34, 35, 61, 161; Rogers 2008, p. 63; Barker 2015, p. 280; Mortimer 2009, pp. 429, 599 (n. 109).
  57. ^ a b Curry 2000, p. 181.
  58. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 59; Mortimer 2009, p. 429.
  59. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 281–282.
  60. ^ Wason 2004, p. 74.
  61. ^ Holmes 1996, p. 48.
  62. ^ a b c Curry 2000, p. 37.
  63. ^ Quoted in Curry 2000, p. 107.
  64. ^ Barker 2015, p. 303.
  65. ^ a b Mortimer 2009, p. 449.
  66. ^ Mortimer 2009, p. 416.
  67. ^ Barker 2015, p. 290.
  68. ^ Barker 2015, p. 291.
  69. ^ Keegan 1976, pp. 90–91.
  70. ^ Bennett 1994.
  71. ^ Barker 2015, p. 275.
  72. ^ Barker 2015, p. 294.
  73. ^ Keegan 1976, pp. 92–96.
  74. ^ Barker 2015, p. 297.
  75. ^ Nicholson 2004, p. 109.
  76. ^ Rogers 2008, p. 90.
  77. ^ Nicolle, D. (2004). Poitiers 1356: The capture of a king (Vol. 138). Osprey Publishing.
  78. ^ Loades, M. (2013). The longbow. Bloomsbury Publishing.
  79. ^ Jones, P. N. (1992). The metallography and relative effectiveness of arrowheads and armor during the Middle Ages. Materials characterization, 29(2), 111–117.
  80. ^ Military History Monthly February 2016
  81. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 110–113.
  82. ^ Barker 2015, p. 301.
  83. ^ Askew, Graham N.; Formenti, Federico; Minetti, Alberto E. (2012). "Limitations imposed by wearing armour on Medieval soldiers' locomotor performance". Proc. R. Soc. B. 279 (1729): 640–644. doi:10.1098/rspb.2011.0816. PMC 3248716. PMID 21775328.
  84. ^ Curry 2000, p. 159.
  85. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 95–98.
  86. ^ Mortimer 2009, p. 443.
  87. ^ Curry 2006, pp. 207–209.
  88. ^ a b Barker 2015, p. 311.
  89. ^ Curry 2000, p. 163.
  90. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 305–308.
  91. ^ Keegan 1976, pp. 107–112.
  92. ^ Keegan 1976, p. 112.
  93. ^ a b c Sumption 2015, p. 459.
  94. ^ Curry 2000, pp. 38, 121, 127.
  95. ^ Curry 2000, pp. 38, 53, 93, 168, 169.
  96. ^ Barker 2015, p. 325.
  97. ^ Barker 2015, pp. xxii, 325, 327.
  98. ^ Curry 2000, p. 53.
  99. ^ Curry 2000, pp. 131, 182.
  100. ^ Curry 2000, pp. 38, 93.
  101. ^ Sumption 2015, p. 460.
  102. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 326–327.
  103. ^ Barker 2015, p. 324.
  104. ^ Mortimer 2009, pp. 475, 479.
  105. ^ Mortimer 2009, pp. 547–549.
  106. ^ Barker 2015, p. 358.
  107. ^ Barker 2015, p. 385.
  108. ^ Curry 2006, p. 192.
  109. ^ Glanz 2009.
  110. ^ a b Barker 2015, p. xvi.
  111. ^ Sumption 2015, p. 814 n. 11.
  112. ^ a b Rogers 2008, pp. 114–121.
  113. ^ Mortimer 2009, pp. 565, 566.
  114. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 42, 114–121.
  115. ^ Sumption 2015, p. 441.
  116. ^ a b Mortimer 2009, p. 565.
  117. ^ Mortimer 2009, p. 429.
  118. ^ Rogers 2008, pp. 57, 62–63.
  119. ^ Sumption 2015, pp. 449, 815 (n. 20).
  120. ^ Barker 2015, pp. x, 274.
  121. ^ Barker 2015, pp. 278–279.
  122. ^ Mortimer 2009, pp. 421–422.
  123. ^ Curry 2000, pp. 280–283.
  124. ^ Woolf 2003, p. 323.
  125. ^ Cantor 2006, p. 15.
  126. ^ Cantor 2006, pp. 21–22.
  127. ^ Cantor 2006, p. 20.
  128. ^ Cantor 2006, p. 16.
  129. ^ Hatchuel 2008, p. 193.
  130. ^ a b Margolies 2008, p. 149.
  131. ^ Adams 2002, p. 31.
  132. ^ Adams 2002, p. 183.
  133. ^ Hatchuel 2008, pp. 194–195.
  134. ^ Hatchuel 2008, p. 195.
  135. ^ Hatchuel 2008, p. 200.
  136. ^ Jagernauth, Kevin (3 February 2016). "Joel Edgerton Talks 'Game Of Thrones' Meets Shakespeare Project With David Michôd, 'Jane Got A Gun,' And More". IndieWire. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  137. ^ "The True Story Behind Netflix's The King". Time. 25 October 2019. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  138. ^ . C-SPAN. 16 March 2010. Archived from the original on 17 October 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2010. link to video
  139. ^ Treanor, Tim (18 March 2010). "High Court Rules for French at Agincourt". DC Theater Scene.
  140. ^ Jones, Andy (8 March 2010). "High Court Justices, Legal Luminaries Debate Shakespeare's 'Henry V'". National Law Journal.
  141. ^ "Agincourt Museum".

General sources Edit

Further reading Edit

  • Beck, Steve (2005). The Battle of Agincourt, Military History Online
  • Bennett, Matthew (2000). "The Battle". In Curry, Anne (ed.). Agincourt 1415. Stroud: Tempus. pp. 25–30. ISBN 978-0-7524-1780-6.
  • Cooper, Stephen (2015). "Where was Agincourt fought?" [1], Agincourt 600 website
  • Dupuy, Trevor N. (1993). Harper Encyclopedia of Military History. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-270056-8.
  • Family Chronicle.com, , , March/April 1997.
  • The Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge Macclesfield Psalter CD
  • Glanz, James (25 October 2009). "Henry V's Greatest Victory is Besieged by Academia". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 October 2009.
  • Grummitt, David. (Oxford University), A review of Agincourt 1415: Henry V, Sir Thomas Erpingham and the triumph of the English archers ed. Anne Curry, Pub: Tempus UK, 2000 ISBN 0-7524-1780-0. Accessed 15 April 2008.
  • Hansen, Mogens Herman (Copenhagen Polis Centre) Histos volume 2 (March 1998), website of the Department of Classics and Ancient History, University of Durham
  • Jones, Michael J. (2005). Agincourt 1415. Barnsley: Pen & Sword. ISBN 978-1-84415-251-3.
  • Nicolas, Harris (1833). History of the Battle of Agincourt, and of the expedition of Henry the Fifth into France in 1415; to which is added the Roll of the men at arms in the English army. London: Johnson & Co.
  • Strickland, Matthew; Hardy, Robert (2005). The Great Warbow. Stroud: Sutton. ISBN 978-0-7509-3167-0.
  • Sutherland, Timothy L. (November 2005). "The Battle of Agincourt: An Alternative location?". Journal of Conflict Archaeology. 1 (1): 245–263. doi:10.1163/157407705774928935. S2CID 161334286. 
  • "Battle of Agincourt" in Military Heritage, October 2005, Volume 7, No. 2, pp. 36–43. ISSN 1524-8666.
  • Swain, Robert L. (20 January 2017). "Miracle in the Mud: The Hundred Years' War's Battle of Agincourt". Warfare History Network.

External links Edit

battle, agincourt, ɔːr, french, azincourt, azɛ, kuʁ, english, victory, hundred, years, took, place, october, 1415, saint, crispin, near, azincourt, northern, france, unexpected, english, victory, against, numerically, superior, french, army, boosted, english, . The Battle of Agincourt ˈ ae dʒ ɪ n k ɔːr t AJ in kor t a French Azincourt azɛ kuʁ was an English victory in the Hundred Years War It took place on 25 October 1415 Saint Crispin s Day near Azincourt in northern France b The unexpected English victory against the numerically superior French army boosted English morale and prestige crippled France and started a new period of English dominance in the war that would last for 14 years until France defeated England in the Siege of Orleans in 1429 Battle of AgincourtPart of the Hundred Years WarThe Battle of Agincourt 15th century miniature Enguerrand de MonstreletDate25 October 1415 Saint Crispin s Day LocationAzincourt County of Saint Pol now Pas de Calais 50 27 49 N 2 8 30 E 50 46361 N 2 14167 E 50 46361 2 14167ResultEnglish victoryBelligerentsKingdom of EnglandKingdom of FranceCommanders and leadersKing Henry V Edward Duke of York Thomas Camoys Thomas ErpinghamCharles d Albret Jean Le Maingre Duke of Orleans Duke of Alencon Duke of Bourbon Strength6 000 1 8 100 men 2 modern estimates see Numbers at Agincourt About 5 6 archers 1 6 dismounted men at arms in heavy armour14 000 15 000 men 3 or up to 25 000 if counting armed servants 4 10 000 men at arms 5 4 000 5 000 archers and crossbowmen 6 Up to 10 000 mounted and armed servants gros valets present 7 Casualties and lossesUp to 600 killed 112 identified 8 9 6 000 killed most of whom were of the French nobility 10 11 700 2 200 captured 12 After several decades of relative peace the English had resumed the war in 1415 amid the failure of negotiations with the French In the ensuing campaign many soldiers died from disease and the English numbers dwindled they tried to withdraw to English held Calais but found their path blocked by a considerably larger French army Despite the numerical disadvantage the battle ended in an overwhelming victory for the English King Henry V of England led his troops into battle and participated in hand to hand fighting King Charles VI of France did not command the French army as he suffered from psychotic illnesses and associated mental incapacity The French were commanded by Constable Charles d Albret and various prominent French noblemen of the Armagnac party This battle is notable for the use of the English longbow in very large numbers with the English and Welsh archers comprising nearly 80 per cent of Henry s army Henry s standard bearer was William Harrington he being an official Standard Bearer of England The Battle of Agincourt is one of England s most celebrated victories and was one of the most important English triumphs in the Hundred Years War along with the Battle of Crecy 1346 and Battle of Poitiers 1356 Perhaps the most notable example of a last stand of a heavily outnumbered force resulting in an outright victory it continues to fascinate scholars and the general public into the modern day It forms the backdrop to notable works such as William Shakespeare s play Henry V written in 1599 Contents 1 Contemporary accounts 2 Background 3 Setting 3 1 Battlefield 3 2 English deployment 3 3 French deployment 3 4 Terrain 4 Fighting 4 1 Opening moves 4 2 French cavalry attack 4 3 Main French assault 4 4 Attack on the English baggage train 4 5 Henry executes the French prisoners 5 Aftermath 6 Numbers at Agincourt 7 Popular representations 7 1 Music 7 2 Literature 7 3 Films 7 4 Mock trial 8 Agincourt today 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 General sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksContemporary accounts Edit nbsp Monumental brass of an English knight wearing armour at the time of Agincourt Sir Maurice Russell d 1416 Dyrham Church Gloucestershire The Battle of Agincourt is well documented by at least seven contemporary accounts three from eyewitnesses The general location of the battle is not disputed and the site remains relatively unaltered after 600 years A paucity of archeological evidence though has led to a debate as to the exact location of the battlefield citation needed Immediately after the battle Henry summoned the heralds of the two armies who had watched the battle together with principal French herald Montjoie and they settled on the name of the battle as Azincourt after the nearest fortified place 17 Two of the most frequently cited accounts come from Burgundian sources one from Jean Le Fevre de Saint Remy who was present at the battle and the other from Enguerrand de Monstrelet The English eyewitness account comes from the anonymous author of the Gesta Henrici Quinti believed to have been written by a chaplain in the King s household who would have been in the baggage train at the battle 18 A recent re appraisal of Henry s strategy of the Agincourt campaign incorporates these three accounts and argues that war was seen as a legal due process for solving the disagreement over claims to the French throne 19 Background EditMain article Hundred Years War Henry V invaded France following the failure of negotiations with the French He claimed the title of King of France through his great grandfather Edward III of England although in practice the English kings were generally prepared to renounce this claim if the French would acknowledge the English claim on Aquitaine and other French lands the terms of the Treaty of Bretigny 20 He initially called a Great Council in the spring of 1414 to discuss going to war with France but the lords insisted that he should negotiate further and moderate his claims In the ensuing negotiations Henry said that he would give up his claim to the French throne if the French would pay the 1 6 million crowns outstanding from the ransom of John II who had been captured at the Battle of Poitiers in 1356 and concede English ownership of the lands of Anjou Brittany Flanders Normandy and Touraine as well as Aquitaine Henry would marry Catherine Charles VI s young daughter and receive a dowry of 2 million crowns citation needed The French responded with what they considered the generous terms of marriage with Catherine a dowry of 600 000 crowns and an enlarged Aquitaine In December 1414 the English parliament was persuaded to grant Henry a double subsidy a tax at twice the traditional rate to recover his inheritance from the French By 1415 negotiations had ground to a halt with the English claiming that the French had mocked their claims and ridiculed Henry himself 21 On 19 April 1415 Henry again asked the Great Council to sanction war with France and this time they agreed 22 nbsp 1833 reconstruction of the banners flown by the armies at AgincourtHenry s army landed in northern France on 13 August 1415 carried by a vast fleet It was often reported to comprise 1 500 ships but was probably far smaller Theodore Beck also suggests that among Henry s army was the king s physician and a little band of surgeons 23 Thomas Morstede Henry V s royal surgeon 24 had previously been contracted by the king to supply a team of surgeons and makers of surgical instruments to take part in the Agincourt campaign 23 The army of about 12 000 men and up to 20 000 horses besieged the port of Harfleur 25 The siege took longer than expected The town surrendered on 22 September and the English army did not leave until 8 October The campaign season was coming to an end and the English army had suffered many casualties through disease Rather than retire directly to England for the winter with his costly expedition resulting in the capture of only one town Henry decided to march most of his army roughly 9 000 through Normandy to the port of Calais the English stronghold in northern France to demonstrate by his presence in the territory at the head of an army that his right to rule in the duchy was more than a mere abstract legal and historical claim 26 He also intended the manoeuvre as a deliberate provocation to battle aimed at the dauphin who had failed to respond to Henry s personal challenge to combat at Harfleur 27 During the siege the French had raised an army which assembled around Rouen This was not strictly a feudal army but an army paid through a system similar to that of the English The French hoped to raise 9 000 troops but the army was not ready in time to relieve Harfleur citation needed After Henry V marched to the north the French moved to block them along the River Somme They were successful for a time forcing Henry to move south away from Calais to find a ford The English finally crossed the Somme south of Peronne at Bethencourt and Voyennes 28 29 and resumed marching north Without a river obstacle to defend the French were hesitant to force a battle They shadowed Henry s army while calling a semonce des nobles 30 calling on local nobles to join the army By 24 October both armies faced each other for battle but the French declined hoping for the arrival of more troops The two armies spent the night of 24 October on open ground The next day the French initiated negotiations as a delaying tactic but Henry ordered his army to advance and to start a battle that given the state of his army he would have preferred to avoid or to fight defensively that was how Crecy and the other famous longbow victories had been won The English had very little food had marched 260 miles 420 km in two and a half weeks were suffering from sickness such as dysentery and were greatly outnumbered by well equipped French men at arms The French army blocked Henry s way to the safety of Calais and delaying battle would only further weaken his tired army and allow more French troops to arrive 31 Setting EditBattlefield Edit The precise location of the battle is not known It may be in the narrow strip of open land formed between the woods of Tramecourt and Azincourt close to the modern village of Azincourt However the lack of archaeological evidence at this traditional site has led to suggestions it was fought to the west of Azincourt 32 In 2019 the historian Michael Livingston also made the case for a site west of Azincourt based on a review of sources and early maps 33 English deployment Edit nbsp The battle of AgincourtEarly on the 25th Henry deployed his army approximately 1 500 men at arms and 7 000 longbowmen across a 750 yard 690 m part of the defile The army was divided into three groups with the right wing led by Edward Duke of York the centre led by the king himself and the left wing under the old and experienced Baron Thomas Camoys The archers were commanded by Sir Thomas Erpingham another elderly veteran 34 It is likely that the English adopted their usual battle line of longbowmen on either flank with men at arms and knights in the centre They might also have deployed some archers in the centre of the line The English men at arms in plate and mail were placed shoulder to shoulder four deep The English and Welsh archers on the flanks drove pointed wooden stakes or palings into the ground at an angle to force cavalry to veer off This use of stakes could have been inspired by the Battle of Nicopolis of 1396 where forces of the Ottoman Empire used the tactic against French cavalry c The English made their confessions before the battle as was customary 36 Henry worried about the enemy launching surprise raids and wanting his troops to remain focused ordered all his men to spend the night before the battle in silence on pain of having an ear cut off He told his men that he would rather die in the coming battle than be captured and ransomed 37 Henry made a speech emphasising the justness of his cause and reminding his army of previous great defeats the kings of England had inflicted on the French The Burgundian sources have him concluding the speech by telling his men that the French had boasted that they would cut off two fingers from the right hand of every archer so that he could never draw a longbow again Whether this was true is open to question and continues to be debated to this day however it seems likely that death was the normal fate of any soldier who could not be ransomed 38 French deployment Edit The French army had 10 000 men at arms 39 40 41 plus some 4 000 5 000 miscellaneous footmen gens de trait including archers crossbowmen 42 arbaletriers and shield bearers pavisiers totaling 14 000 15 000 men Probably each man at arms would be accompanied by a gros valet or varlet an armed servant adding up to another 10 000 potential fighting men 7 though some historians omit them from the number of combatants 43 The French were organized into two main groups or battles a vanguard up front and a main battle behind both composed principally of men at arms fighting on foot and flanked by more of the same in each wing 44 There was a special elite cavalry force whose purpose was to break the formation of the English archers and thus clear the way for the infantry to advance 45 A second smaller mounted force was to attack the rear of the English army along with its baggage and servants 46 Many lords and gentlemen demanded and got places in the front lines where they would have a higher chance to acquire glory and valuable ransoms this resulted in the bulk of the men at arms being massed in the front lines and the other troops for which there was no remaining space to be placed behind 47 Although it had been planned for the archers and crossbowmen to be placed with the infantry wings they were now regarded as unnecessary and placed behind them instead 48 On account of the lack of space the French drew up a third battle the rearguard which was on horseback and mainly comprised the varlets mounted on the horses belonging to the men fighting on foot ahead 49 The French vanguard and main battle numbered respectively 4 800 and 3 000 men at arms 50 Both lines were arrayed in tight dense formations of about 16 ranks each and were positioned a bowshot length from each other 51 Albret Boucicaut and almost all the leading noblemen were assigned stations in the vanguard 52 The dukes of Alencon and Bar led the main battle 53 A further 600 dismounted men at arms stood in each wing with the left under the Count of Vendome and the right under the Count of Richemont 54 To disperse the enemy archers a cavalry force of 800 1 200 picked men at arms 55 led by Clignet de Breban and Louis de Bosredon was distributed evenly between both flanks of the vanguard standing slightly forward like horns 56 Some 200 mounted men at arms would attack the English rear 34 d The French apparently had no clear plan for deploying the rest of the army 34 The rearguard leaderless would serve as a dumping ground for the surplus troops 59 Terrain Edit The field of battle was arguably the most significant factor in deciding the outcome The recently ploughed land hemmed in by dense woodland favoured the English both because of its narrowness and because of the thick mud through which the French knights had to walk 60 61 Accounts of the battle describe the French engaging the English men at arms before being rushed from the sides by the longbowmen as the melee developed The English account in the Gesta Henrici says For when some of them killed when battle was first joined fall at the front so great was the undisciplined violence and pressure of the mass of men behind them that the living fell on top of the dead and others falling on top of the living were killed as well 62 Although the French initially pushed the English back they became so closely packed that they were described as having trouble using their weapons properly The French monk of St Denis says Their vanguard composed of about 5 000 men found itself at first so tightly packed that those who were in the third rank could scarcely use their swords 63 and the Burgundian sources have a similar passage Recent heavy rain made the battle field very muddy proving very tiring to walk through in full plate armour The French monk of St Denis describes the French troops as marching through the middle of the mud where they sank up to their knees So they were already overcome with fatigue even before they advanced against the enemy The deep soft mud particularly favoured the English force because once knocked to the ground the heavily armoured French knights had a hard time getting back up to fight in the melee Barker states that some knights encumbered by their armour actually drowned in their helmets 64 Fighting EditOpening moves Edit nbsp John Gilbert The Morning of the Battle of Agincourt 1884 Guildhall Art GalleryOn the morning of 25 October the French were still waiting for additional troops to arrive The Duke of Brabant about 2 000 men 65 the Duke of Anjou about 600 men 65 and the Duke of Brittany 6 000 men according to Monstrelet 66 were all marching to join the army For three hours after sunrise there was no fighting Military textbooks of the time stated Everywhere and on all occasions that foot soldiers march against their enemy face to face those who march lose and those who remain standing still and holding firm win 67 On top of this the French were expecting thousands of men to join them if they waited They were blocking Henry s retreat and were perfectly happy to wait for as long as it took There had even been a suggestion that the English would run away rather than give battle when they saw that they would be fighting so many French princes 68 Henry s men were already very weary from hunger illness and retreat Apparently Henry believed his fleeing army would perform better on the defensive but had to halt the retreat and somehow engage the French before a defensive battle was possible 31 This entailed abandoning his chosen position and pulling out advancing and then re installing the long sharpened wooden stakes pointed outwards toward the enemy which helped protect the longbowmen from cavalry charges 69 The use of stakes was an innovation for the English during the Battle of Crecy for example the archers had been instead protected by pits and other obstacles 70 The tightness of the terrain also seems to have restricted the planned deployment of the French forces The French had originally drawn up a battle plan that had archers and crossbowmen in front of their men at arms with a cavalry force at the rear specifically designed to fall upon the archers and use their force to break them 71 but in the event the French archers and crossbowmen were deployed behind and to the sides of the men at arms where they seem to have played almost no part except possibly for an initial volley of arrows at the start of the battle The cavalry force which could have devastated the English line if it had attacked while they moved their stakes charged only after the initial volley of arrows from the English It is unclear whether the delay occurred because the French were hoping the English would launch a frontal assault and were surprised when the English instead started shooting from their new defensive position or whether the French mounted knights instead did not react quickly enough to the English advance French chroniclers agree that when the mounted charge did come it did not contain as many men as it should have Gilles le Bouvier states that some had wandered off to warm themselves and others were walking or feeding their horses 72 French cavalry attack Edit The French cavalry despite being disorganised and not at full numbers charged towards the longbowmen It was a disastrous attempt The French knights were unable to outflank the longbowmen because of the encroaching woodland and unable to charge through the array of sharpened stakes that protected the archers John Keegan argues that the longbows main influence on the battle at this point was injuries to horses armoured only on the head many horses would have become dangerously out of control when struck in the back or flank from the high elevation long range shots used as the charge started 73 The mounted charge and subsequent retreat churned up the already muddy terrain between the French and the English Juliet Barker quotes a contemporary account by a monk from St Denis who reports how the wounded and panicking horses galloped through the advancing infantry scattering them and trampling them down in their headlong flight from the battlefield 74 Main French assault Edit nbsp King Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt 1415 by Sir John Gilbert in the 19th century The plate armour of the French men at arms allowed them to close the 1 000 yards or so to the English lines while being under what the French monk of Saint Denis described as a terrifying hail of arrow shot A complete coat of plate was considered such good protection that shields were generally not used 75 although the Burgundian contemporary sources distinguish between Frenchmen who used shields and those who did not and Rogers has suggested that the front elements of the French force used axes and shields 76 Modern historians are divided on how effective the longbows would have been against plate armour of the time Modern test and contemporary accounts conclude that arrows could not penetrate the better quality steel armour which became available to knights and men at arms of fairly modest means by the middle of the 14th century but could penetrate the poorer quality wrought iron armour 77 78 79 80 Rogers suggested that the longbow could penetrate a wrought iron breastplate at short range and penetrate the thinner armour on the limbs even at 220 yards 200 m He considered a knight in the best quality steel armour invulnerable to an arrow on the breastplate or top of the helmet but vulnerable to shots hitting the limbs particularly at close range 81 In any case to protect themselves as much as possible from the arrows the French had to lower their visors and bend their helmeted heads to avoid being shot in the face as the eye and air holes in their helmets were among the weakest points in the armour This head lowered position restricted their breathing and their vision Then they had to walk a few hundred yards metres through thick mud and a press of comrades while wearing armour weighing 50 60 pounds 23 27 kg gathering sticky clay all the way Increasingly they had to walk around or over fallen comrades 82 nbsp Miniature from Vigiles du roi Charles VII The battle of Azincourt 1415 The surviving French men at arms reached the front of the English line and pushed it back with the longbowmen on the flanks continuing to shoot at point blank range When the archers ran out of arrows they dropped their bows and using hatchets swords and the mallets they had used to drive their stakes in attacked the now disordered fatigued and wounded French men at arms massed in front of them The French could not cope with the thousands of lightly armoured longbowmen assailants who were much less hindered by the mud and weight of their armour combined with the English men at arms The impact of thousands of arrows combined with the slog in heavy armour through the mud the heat and difficulty breathing in plate armour with the visor down 83 and the crush of their numbers meant the French men at arms could scarcely lift their weapons when they finally engaged the English line 84 The exhausted French men at arms were unable to get up after being knocked to the ground by the English As the melee developed the French second line also joined the attack but they too were swallowed up with the narrow terrain meaning the extra numbers could not be used effectively Rogers suggested that the French at the back of their deep formation would have been attempting to literally add their weight to the advance without realising that they were hindering the ability of those at the front to manoeuvre and fight by pushing them into the English formation of lancepoints After the initial wave the French would have had to fight over and on the bodies of those who had fallen before them In such a press of thousands of men Rogers suggested that many could have suffocated in their armour as was described by several sources and which was also known to have happened in other battles 85 The French men at arms were taken prisoner or killed in the thousands The fighting lasted about three hours but eventually the leaders of the second line were killed or captured as those of the first line had been The English Gesta Henrici described three great heaps of the slain around the three main English standards 62 According to contemporary English accounts Henry fought hand to hand Upon hearing that his youngest brother Humphrey Duke of Gloucester had been wounded in the groin Henry took his household guard and stood over his brother in the front rank of the fighting until Humphrey could be dragged to safety The king received an axe blow to the head which knocked off a piece of the crown that formed part of his helmet 86 Attack on the English baggage train Edit nbsp 1915 depiction of Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt The King wears on this surcoat the Royal Arms of England quartered with the Fleur de Lys of France as a symbol of his claim to the throne of France The only French success was an attack on the lightly protected English baggage train with Ysembart d Azincourt leading a small number of men at arms and varlets plus about 600 peasants seizing some of Henry s personal treasures including a crown 87 Whether this was part of a deliberate French plan or an act of local brigandage is unclear from the sources Certainly d Azincourt was a local knight but he might have been chosen to lead the attack because of his local knowledge and the lack of availability of a more senior soldier 88 In some accounts the attack happened towards the end of the battle and led the English to think they were being attacked from the rear Barker following the Gesta Henrici believed to have been written by an English chaplain who was actually in the baggage train concluded that the attack happened at the start of the battle 88 Henry executes the French prisoners Edit Regardless of when the baggage assault happened at some point after the initial English victory Henry became alarmed that the French were regrouping for another attack The Gesta Henrici places this after the English had overcome the onslaught of the French men at arms and the weary English troops were eyeing the French rearguard in incomparable number and still fresh 62 Le Fevre and Wavrin similarly say that it was signs of the French rearguard regrouping and marching forward in battle order which made the English think they were still in danger 89 A slaughter of the French prisoners ensued It seems it was purely a decision of Henry since the English knights found it contrary to chivalry and contrary to their interests to kill valuable hostages for whom it was commonplace to ask ransom Henry threatened to hang whomever did not obey his orders citation needed In any event Henry ordered the slaughter of what were perhaps several thousand French prisoners sparing only the highest ranked presumably those most likely to fetch a large ransom under the chivalric system of warfare According to most chroniclers Henry s fear was that the prisoners who in an unusual turn of events actually outnumbered their captors would realise their advantage in numbers rearm themselves with the weapons strewn about the field and overwhelm the exhausted English forces Contemporary chroniclers did not criticise him for it 90 In his study of the battle John Keegan argued that the main aim was not to actually kill the French knights but rather to terrorise them into submission and quell any possibility they might resume the fight which would probably have caused the uncommitted French reserve forces to join the fray as well 91 Such an event would have posed a risk to the still outnumbered English and could have easily turned a stunning victory into a mutually destructive defeat as the English forces were now largely intermingled with the French and would have suffered grievously from the arrows of their own longbowmen had they needed to resume shooting Keegan also speculated that due to the relatively low number of archers actually involved in killing the French knights roughly 200 by his estimate together with the refusal of the English knights to assist in a duty they saw as distastefully unchivalrous and combined with the sheer difficulty of killing such a large number of prisoners in such a short space of time the actual number of French prisoners put to death may not have been substantial before the French reserves fled the field and Henry rescinded the order 92 Aftermath EditThe French had suffered a catastrophic defeat 93 In all around 6 000 of their fighting men lay dead on the ground 94 10 11 The list of casualties one historian has noted read like a roll call of the military and political leaders of the past generation 93 Among them were 90 120 great lords and bannerets killed including 95 three dukes Alencon Bar and Brabant nine counts Blamont Dreux Fauquembergue Grandpre Marle Nevers Roucy Vaucourt Vaudemont and one viscount Puisaye also an archbishop 96 Of the great royal office holders France lost its constable Albret an admiral the lord of Dampierre the Master of Crossbowmen David de Rambures dead along with three sons Master of the Royal Household Guichard Dauphin and prevot of the marshals 97 According to the heralds 3 069 knights and squires were killed e while at least 2 600 more corpses were found without coats of arms to identify them 93 Entire noble families were wiped out in the male line and in some regions an entire generation of landed nobility was annihilated 101 The bailiffs of nine major northern towns were killed often along with their sons relatives and supporters In the words of Juliet Barker the battle cut a great swath through the natural leaders of French society in Artois Ponthieu Normandy Picardy 102 Estimates of the number of prisoners vary between 700 and 2 200 amongst them the dukes of Orleans and Bourbon the counts of Eu Vendome Richemont brother of the Duke of Brittany and stepbrother of Henry V and Harcourt and marshal Jean Le Maingre 12 While numerous English sources give the English casualties in double figures 8 record evidence identifies at least 112 Englishmen killed in the fighting 103 while Monstrelet reported 600 English dead 8 These included the Duke of York the young Earl of Suffolk and the Welsh esquire Dafydd Davy Gam Jean de Wavrin a knight on the French side wrote that English fatalities were 1 600 men of all ranks Although the victory had been militarily decisive its impact was complex It did not lead to further English conquests immediately as Henry s priority was to return to England which he did on 16 November to be received in triumph in London on the 23rd 104 Henry returned a conquering hero seen as blessed by God in the eyes of his subjects and European powers outside France It established the legitimacy of the Lancastrian monarchy and the future campaigns of Henry to pursue his rights and privileges in France 105 Other benefits to the English were longer term Very quickly after the battle the fragile truce between the Armagnac and Burgundian factions broke down The brunt of the battle had fallen on the Armagnacs and it was they who suffered the majority of senior casualties and carried the blame for the defeat The Burgundians seized on the opportunity and within 10 days of the battle had mustered their armies and marched on Paris 106 This lack of unity in France allowed Henry eighteen months to prepare militarily and politically for a renewed campaign When that campaign took place it was made easier by the damage done to the political and military structures of Normandy by the battle 107 Numbers at Agincourt EditMost primary sources which describe the battle have English outnumbered by several times By contrast Anne Curry in her 2005 book Agincourt A New History argued based on research into the surviving administrative records that the French army was 12 000 strong and the English army 9 000 proportions of four to three 108 While not necessarily agreeing with the exact numbers Curry uses Bertrand Schnerb a professor of medieval history at the University of Lille states the French probably had 12 000 15 000 troops 109 Juliet Barker Jonathan Sumption and Clifford J Rogers criticized Curry s reliance on administrative records arguing that they are incomplete and that several of the available primary sources already offer a credible assessment of the numbers involved 110 111 112 Ian Mortimer endorsed Curry s methodology though applied it more liberally noting how she minimises French numbers by limiting her figures to those in the basic army and a few specific additional companies and maximises English numbers by assuming the numbers sent home from Harfleur were no greater than sick lists and concluded that the most extreme imbalance which is credible is 15 000 French against 8 000 9 000 English 113 Barker opined that if the differential really was as low as three to four then this makes a nonsense of the course of the battle as described by eyewitnesses and contemporaries 110 Barker Sumption and Rogers all wrote that the English probably had 6 000 men these being 5 000 archers and 900 1 000 men at arms These numbers are based on the Gesta Henrici Quinti and the chronicle of Jean Le Fevre the only two eyewitness accounts on the English camp 114 115 Curry and Mortimer questioned the reliability of the Gesta as there have been doubts as to how much it was written as propaganda for Henry V Both note that the Gesta vastly overestimates the number of French in the battle its proportions of English archers to men at arms at the battle are also different from those of the English army before the siege of Harfleur Mortimer also considers that the Gesta vastly inflates the English casualties 5 000 at Harfleur and that despite the trials of the march Henry had lost very few men to illness or death and we have independent testimony that no more than 160 had been captured on the way 116 Rogers on the other hand finds the number 5 000 plausible giving several analogous historical events to support his case 112 and Barker considers that the fragmentary pay records which Curry relies on actually support the lower estimates Historians disagree less about the French numbers Rogers Mortimer 117 and Sumption 41 all give more or less 10 000 men at arms for the French using as a source the herald of the Duke of Berry an eyewitness The number is supported by many other contemporary accounts 39 Curry Rogers 118 and Mortimer 42 all agree the French had 4 to 5 thousand missile troops Sumption thus concludes that the French had 14 000 men basing himself on the monk of St Denis 119 Mortimer gives 14 or 15 thousand fighting men 116 One particular cause of confusion may have been the number of servants on both sides or whether they should at all be counted as combatants Since the French had many more men at arms than the English they would accordingly be accompanied by a far greater number of servants Rogers says each of the 10 000 men at arms would be accompanied by a gros valet an armed armoured and mounted military servant and a noncombatant page counts the former as fighting men and concludes thus that the French in fact numbered 24 000 7 Barker who believes the English were outnumbered by at least four to one 120 says that the armed servants formed the rearguard in the battle 121 Mortimer notes the presence of noncombatant pages only indicating that they would ride the spare horses during the battle and be mistakenly thought of as combatants by the English 122 Popular representations Edit nbsp The 15th century Agincourt CarolThe battle remains an important symbol in popular culture Some notable examples are listed below Music Edit Soon after the victory at Agincourt a number of popular folk songs were created about the battle the most famous being the Agincourt Carol produced in the first half of the 15th century 123 Other ballads followed including King Henry Fifth s Conquest of France raising the popular prominence of particular events mentioned only in passing by the original chroniclers such as the gift of tennis balls before the campaign 124 Literature Edit Main article Henry V play The most famous cultural depiction of the battle today is in Act IV of William Shakespeare s Henry V written in 1599 The play focuses on the pressures of kingship the tensions between how a king should appear chivalric honest and just and how a king must sometimes act Machiavellian and ruthless 125 Shakespeare illustrates these tensions by depicting Henry s decision to kill some of the French prisoners whilst attempting to justify it and distance himself from the event This moment of the battle is portrayed both as a break with the traditions of chivalry and as a key example of the paradox of kingship 126 Shakespeare s depiction of the battle also plays on the theme of modernity He contrasts the modern English king and his army with the medieval chivalric older model of the French 127 Shakespeare s play presented Henry as leading a truly English force into battle playing on the importance of the link between the monarch and the common soldiers in the fight 128 The original play does not however feature any scenes of the actual battle itself leading critic Rose Zimbardo to characterise it as full of warfare yet empty of conflict 129 The play introduced the famous St Crispin s Day Speech considered one of Shakespeare s most heroic speeches which Henry delivers movingly to his soldiers just before the battle urging his band of brothers to stand together in the forthcoming fight 130 Critic David Margolies describes how it oozes honour military glory love of country and self sacrifice and forms one of the first instances of English literature linking solidarity and comradeship to success in battle 130 131 Partially as a result the battle was used as a metaphor at the beginning of the First World War when the British Expeditionary Force s attempts to stop the German advances were widely likened to it 132 Shakespeare s portrayal of the casualty loss is ahistorical in that the French are stated to have lost 10 000 and the English less than thirty men prompting Henry s remark O God thy arm was here In 2008 English American author Bernard Cornwell released a retelling of both the events leading up the battle and the battle itself titled Azincourt The story is told predominantly through the eyes of an English longbowman named Nicholas Hook Films Edit Shakespeare s version of the battle of Agincourt has been turned into several minor and two major films The latter each titled Henry V star Laurence Olivier in 1944 and Kenneth Branagh in 1989 Made just prior to the invasion of Normandy Olivier s rendition gives the battle what Sarah Hatchuel has termed an exhilarating and heroic tone with an artificial cinematic look to the battle scenes 133 Branagh s version gives a longer more realist portrayal of the battle itself drawing on both historical sources and images from the Vietnam and Falkland Wars 134 In his 2007 film adaptation director Peter Babakitis uses digital effects to exaggerate realist features during the battle scenes producing a more avant garde interpretation of the fighting at Agincourt 135 The battle also forms a central component of the 2019 Netflix film The King which stars Timothee Chalamet as Henry V and Robert Pattinson as the Dauphin of Viennois The film takes inspiration from Shakespeare s Henriad plays 136 137 Mock trial Edit In March 2010 a mock trial of Henry V for the crimes associated with the slaughter of the prisoners was held in Washington D C drawing from both the historical record and Shakespeare s play Participating as judges were Justices Samuel Alito and Ruth Bader Ginsburg The trial ranged widely over whether there was just cause for war and not simply the prisoner issue Although an audience vote was too close to call Henry was unanimously found guilty by the court on the basis of evolving standards of civil society 138 139 140 nbsp Battlefield todayAgincourt today EditThere is a modern museum in Azincourt village dedicated to the battle 141 The museum lists the names of combatants of both sides who died in the battle nbsp Agincourt Memorial nbsp A list of English archers killed at Agincourt as recorded in the village s museumNotes Edit The story of the battle has been retold many times in English from the 15th century Agincourt song onwards and an English pronunciation of ˈ ae dʒ ɪ n k ɔːr t AJ in kort has become established 13 The modern tendency is to use a style closer to French such as ˈ ae dʒ ɪ n k ɔːr AJ in kor or ˈ ae ʒ ɪ n k ʊer AZH in koor 14 15 16 Dates in the fifteenth century are difficult to reconcile with modern calendars see Barker 2015 pp 226 228 for the way the date of the battle was established The first known use of angled stakes to thwart a mounted charge was at the Battle of Nicopolis an engagement between European states and Turkish forces in 1396 twenty years before Agincourt French knights charging uphill were unseated from their horses either because their mounts were injured on the stakes or because they dismounted to uproot the obstacles and were overpowered News of the contrivance circulated within Europe and was described in a book of tactics written in 1411 by Boucicault Marshal of France 35 With 4 800 men at arms in the vanguard 3 000 in the main battle and 1 200 in the infantry wings 57 along with 800 and 200 in each cavalry force 55 the total number of men at arms was 10 000 57 There may have been men at arms in the rearguard but if so no more than a couple of hundred 58 As reported by Thomas Walsingham 98 Other sources agree closely citing 4 000 dead in this group 99 Reportedly 1 500 knights died 100 References EditCitations Edit Barker 2015 pp xvi xvii xxi 220 229 276 388 392 Rogers 2008 pp 42 114 121 Sumption 2015 pp 441 814 n 11 Mortimer 2009 p 566 Rogers 2008 pp 57 59 n 71 Mortimer 2009 pp 565 566 Sumption 2015 pp 449 815 n 20 Curry 2000 p 102 Rogers 2008 pp 60 62 Rogers 2008 pp 57 59 Sumption 2015 pp 452 453 Mortimer 2009 pp 429 Curry 2000 p 181 Rogers 2008 pp 57 62 63 Mortimer 2009 pp 422 565 a b c Rogers 2008 pp 57 60 62 a b c Curry 2000 p 12 Barker 2015 p 320 a b Curry 2006 pp 187 192 233 248 a b Sumption 2015 pp 459 461 a b Barker 2015 pp 337 367 368 Merriam Webster has a small audio file here Agincourt Merriam Webster Pronunciation Retrieved 26 October 2014 Olausson Lena Sangster Catherine 2006 Oxford BBC Guide to Pronunciation The Essential Handbook of the Spoken Word Oxford England Oxford University Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 19 280710 6 aj in kor ˈadʒɪnˌkɔː r the established anglicization Jones Daniel 2003 Roach Peter et al eds English Pronouncing Dictionary 16th ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 521 01712 1 As in this interview with Juliet Barker Juliet Barker Meet the Author Archived from the original on 21 February 2014 Retrieved 26 October 2014 Keegan 1976 p 86 Curry 2000 pp 22 26 Honig Jan Willem 2012 Reappraising Late Medieval Strategy The Example of the 1415 Agincourt Campaign War in History 19 123 123 151 doi 10 1177 0968344511432975 S2CID 146219312 page needed Barker 2015 p 14 Barker 2015 pp 67 69 Barker 2015 pp 107 114 a b Beck Theodore 1974 Cutting Edge Early History of the Surgeons of London Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd p 58 ISBN 978 0853313663 Prioreschi Plinio 1996 A History of Medicine Medieval medicine Horatius Press ISBN 9781888456059 Guardian newspaper French correction Henry V s Agincourt fleet was half as big historian claims 28 July 2015 TheGuardian com 27 July 2015 Hibbert 1971 p 67 Barker 2015 p 221 Wylie amp Waugh 1914 p 118 Seward 1999 p 162 Living Dictionary of the French Language 25 May 2013 Archived from the original on 14 December 2013 verification needed a b Mortimer 2009 pp 436 437 Sutherland 2015 Livingston Michael 2019 Where was Agincourt Fought Medieval Warfare IX 1 20 33 ISSN 2211 5129 a b c Sumption 2015 p 454 Bennett 1994 pp 7 15 16 Curry 2006 p 166 Barker 2015 pp 269 270 Barker 2015 p 286 a b Rogers 2008 pp 57 59 Mortimer 2009 pp 429 565 a b Sumption 2015 pp 452 453 a b Mortimer 2009 pp 422 565 Rogers 2008 p 59 n 71 Barker 2015 pp 278 279 280 Curry 2006 pp 141 142 184 Mortimer 2009 pp 428 429 Curry 2006 pp 183 184 Barker 2015 pp 279 280 Phillpotts 1984 p 63 Mortimer 2009 pp 428 429 430 Barker 2015 pp 278 279 Curry 2000 pp 113 115 125 Barker 2015 pp 275 278 279 Rogers 2008 pp 64 66 67 69 Phillpotts 1984 pp 62 Mortimer 2009 p 429 430 Barker 2015 pp 278 279 Rogers 2008 pp 61 n 79 62 64 66 Phillpotts 1984 p 62 Mortimer 2009 p 429 Sumption 2015 p 452 Rogers 2008 p 58 Curry 2000 pp 107 132 181 Rogers 2008 p 63 Sumption 2015 p 452 Barker 2015 p 279 Barker 2015 p 279 Barker 2015 pp 279 280 322 331 Curry 2000 pp 156 181 183 Curry 2006 p 182 a b Curry 2000 pp 60 61 71 106 161 173 468 Curry 2000 pp 34 35 61 161 Rogers 2008 p 63 Barker 2015 p 280 Mortimer 2009 pp 429 599 n 109 a b Curry 2000 p 181 Rogers 2008 p 59 Mortimer 2009 p 429 Barker 2015 pp 281 282 Wason 2004 p 74 Holmes 1996 p 48 a b c Curry 2000 p 37 Quoted in Curry 2000 p 107 Barker 2015 p 303 a b Mortimer 2009 p 449 Mortimer 2009 p 416 Barker 2015 p 290 Barker 2015 p 291 Keegan 1976 pp 90 91 Bennett 1994 Barker 2015 p 275 Barker 2015 p 294 Keegan 1976 pp 92 96 Barker 2015 p 297 Nicholson 2004 p 109 Rogers 2008 p 90 Nicolle D 2004 Poitiers 1356 The capture of a king Vol 138 Osprey Publishing Loades M 2013 The longbow Bloomsbury Publishing Jones P N 1992 The metallography and relative effectiveness of arrowheads and armor during the Middle Ages Materials characterization 29 2 111 117 Military History Monthly February 2016 Rogers 2008 pp 110 113 Barker 2015 p 301 Askew Graham N Formenti Federico Minetti Alberto E 2012 Limitations imposed by wearing armour on Medieval soldiers locomotor performance Proc R Soc B 279 1729 640 644 doi 10 1098 rspb 2011 0816 PMC 3248716 PMID 21775328 Curry 2000 p 159 Rogers 2008 pp 95 98 Mortimer 2009 p 443 Curry 2006 pp 207 209 a b Barker 2015 p 311 Curry 2000 p 163 Barker 2015 pp 305 308 Keegan 1976 pp 107 112 Keegan 1976 p 112 a b c Sumption 2015 p 459 Curry 2000 pp 38 121 127 Curry 2000 pp 38 53 93 168 169 Barker 2015 p 325 Barker 2015 pp xxii 325 327 Curry 2000 p 53 Curry 2000 pp 131 182 Curry 2000 pp 38 93 Sumption 2015 p 460 Barker 2015 pp 326 327 Barker 2015 p 324 Mortimer 2009 pp 475 479 Mortimer 2009 pp 547 549 Barker 2015 p 358 Barker 2015 p 385 Curry 2006 p 192 Glanz 2009 a b Barker 2015 p xvi Sumption 2015 p 814 n 11 a b Rogers 2008 pp 114 121 Mortimer 2009 pp 565 566 Rogers 2008 pp 42 114 121 Sumption 2015 p 441 a b Mortimer 2009 p 565 Mortimer 2009 p 429 Rogers 2008 pp 57 62 63 Sumption 2015 pp 449 815 n 20 Barker 2015 pp x 274 Barker 2015 pp 278 279 Mortimer 2009 pp 421 422 Curry 2000 pp 280 283 Woolf 2003 p 323 Cantor 2006 p 15 Cantor 2006 pp 21 22 Cantor 2006 p 20 Cantor 2006 p 16 Hatchuel 2008 p 193 a b Margolies 2008 p 149 Adams 2002 p 31 Adams 2002 p 183 Hatchuel 2008 pp 194 195 Hatchuel 2008 p 195 Hatchuel 2008 p 200 Jagernauth Kevin 3 February 2016 Joel Edgerton Talks Game Of Thrones Meets Shakespeare Project With David Michod Jane Got A Gun And More IndieWire Retrieved 8 October 2023 The True Story Behind Netflix s The King Time 25 October 2019 Retrieved 8 October 2023 Judgment at Agincourt C SPAN 16 March 2010 Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 14 June 2010 link to video Treanor Tim 18 March 2010 High Court Rules for French at Agincourt DC Theater Scene Jones Andy 8 March 2010 High Court Justices Legal Luminaries Debate Shakespeare s Henry V National Law Journal Agincourt Museum General sources Edit Adams Michael C 2002 Echoes of War A Thousand Years of Military History in Popular Culture University of Kentucky Press ISBN 978 0 8131 2240 3 Barker Juliet 2015 2005 Agincourt The King the Campaign the Battle US title Agincourt Henry V and the Battle that Made England revised and updated ed London Abacus ISBN 978 0 349 11918 2 Bennett M 1994 The Development of Battle Tactics in the Hundred Years War PDF In Anne Curry Michael L Hughes eds Arms Armies and Fortifications in the Hundred Years War Woodbridge Boydell Press pp 7 20 ISBN 978 0 85115 365 0 Archived PDF from the original on 26 August 2018 Cantor Paul A 2006 Shakespeare s Henry V From the Medieval to the Modern World In John A Murley amp Sean D Sutton eds Perspectives on Politics in Shakespeare Lanham MD US Lexington Books pp 11 32 ISBN 978 0 7391 0900 7 Curry Anne 2000 The Battle of Agincourt Sources and Interpretations Woodbridge Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 802 0 Curry Anne 2006 2005 Agincourt A New History UK Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 2828 4 Curry Anne amp Mercer Malcolm eds 2015 The Battle of Agincourt London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 21430 7 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Agincourt Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press Glanz James 24 October 2009 Historians Reassess Battle of Agincourt The New York Times Hatchuel Sarah amp Nathalie Vienne Guerrin eds 2008 Shakespeare on Screen The Henriad Rouen Publications des Universites de Rouen et du Havre ISBN 978 2 87775 454 5 Hatchuel Sarah 2008 The Battle of Agincourt in Shakespeare s Laurence Olivier s Kenneth Branagh s and Peter Babakitis s Henry V in Hatchuel amp Vienne Guerrin 2008 pp 193 208 Hibbert Christopher 1971 Great Battles Agincourt London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 1 84212 718 6 Holmes Richard 1996 War Walks London BBC Worldwide Publishing p 48 ISBN 978 0 563 38360 4 Honig Jan Willem 24 April 2012 Reappraising Late Medieval Strategy The Example of the 1415 Agincourt Campaign War in History 19 2 123 151 doi 10 1177 0968344511432975 S2CID 146219312 Keegan John 1976 The Face of Battle A Study of Agincourt Waterloo and the Somme Penguin Classics Reprint Viking Adult ISBN 978 0 14 004897 1 Margolies David 2008 Henry V and Ideology in Hatchuel amp Vienne Guerrin 2008 pp 147 156 Mortimer Ian 2009 1415 Henry V s Year of Glory London The Bodley Head ISBN 978 0 224 07992 1 Nicholson Helen 2004 Medieval Warfare Palgrave Macmillan Phillpotts Christopher 1984 The French plan of battle during the Agincourt campaign English Historical Review 99 390 59 66 doi 10 1093 ehr XCIX CCCXC 59 JSTOR 567909 Rogers C J 2008 The Battle of Agincourt In L J Andrew Villalon amp Donald J Kagay eds The Hundred Years War Part II Different Vistas PDF Leiden Brill published 29 August 2008 pp 37 132 ISBN 978 90 04 16821 3 Archived from the original PDF on 23 August 2019 Seward Desmond 1999 The Hundred Years War The English in France 1337 1453 Penguin p 162 ISBN 978 0 14 028361 7 Sumption Jonathan 2015 The Hundred Years War IV Cursed Kings London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 27454 3 Sutherland Tim 17 November 2015 The Battlefield In Anne Curry Malcolm Mercer eds The Battle of Agincourt New Haven amp London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 21430 7 Wason David 2004 Battlefield Detectives London Carlton Books p 74 ISBN 978 0 233 05083 6 Woolf Daniel 12 June 2003 The Social Circulation of the Past English Historical Culture 1500 1730 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 925778 2 Wylie James Hamilton amp Waugh William Templeton 1914 The Reign of Henry the Fifth Cambridge The University Press p 118 OCLC 313049420 Further reading EditBeck Steve 2005 The Battle of Agincourt Military History Online Bennett Matthew 2000 The Battle In Curry Anne ed Agincourt 1415 Stroud Tempus pp 25 30 ISBN 978 0 7524 1780 6 Cooper Stephen 2015 Where was Agincourt fought 1 Agincourt 600 website Dupuy Trevor N 1993 Harper Encyclopedia of Military History New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 270056 8 Family Chronicle com The Agincourt Honor Roll Family Chronicle March April 1997 The Fitzwilliam Museum University of Cambridge Macclesfield Psalter CD Glanz James 25 October 2009 Henry V s Greatest Victory is Besieged by Academia The New York Times Retrieved 24 October 2009 Grummitt David Oxford University A review of Agincourt 1415 Henry V Sir Thomas Erpingham and the triumph of the English archers ed Anne Curry Pub Tempus UK 2000 ISBN 0 7524 1780 0 Accessed 15 April 2008 Hansen Mogens Herman Copenhagen Polis Centre The Little Grey Horse Henry V s Speech at Agincourt and the Battle Exhortation in Ancient Historiography Histos volume 2 March 1998 website of the Department of Classics and Ancient History University of Durham Jones Michael J 2005 Agincourt 1415 Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 251 3 Nicolas Harris 1833 History of the Battle of Agincourt and of the expedition of Henry the Fifth into France in 1415 to which is added the Roll of the men at arms in the English army London Johnson amp Co Strickland Matthew Hardy Robert 2005 The Great Warbow Stroud Sutton ISBN 978 0 7509 3167 0 Sutherland Timothy L November 2005 The Battle of Agincourt An Alternative location Journal of Conflict Archaeology 1 1 245 263 doi 10 1163 157407705774928935 S2CID 161334286 nbsp Battle of Agincourt in Military Heritage October 2005 Volume 7 No 2 pp 36 43 ISSN 1524 8666 Swain Robert L 20 January 2017 Miracle in the Mud The Hundred Years War s Battle of Agincourt Warfare History Network External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Agincourt Battle of Agincourt memorial 50 27 15 N 2 09 05 E 50 454269 N 2 151384 E 50 454269 2 151384 The Agincourt Battlefield Archaeology Project Tim Sutherland Project Director Azincourt Museum Battle of Agincourt on In Our Time at the BBC Bragg Melvyn presenter with Anne Curry Michael Jones and John Watts 16 September 2004 Detailed list of French casualties Contemporary account of battle by Enguerrand de Monstrelet d 1453 governor of Cambrai and supporter of the French crown Battle of Agincourt on Medieval Archives Podcast Battle of Agincourt animated map by David Crowther Agincourt campaign animated map by David Crowther https www youtube com watch v GBJww 70sCU Lt Col John Woodford and Excavations at Azincourt 17 September 2015 Agincourt600 conference by Tim Sutherland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Agincourt amp oldid 1180034315, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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