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Battle of Pontvallain

The Battle of Pontvallain, part of the Hundred Years' War, took place in the Sarthe region of north-west France on 4 December 1370, when a French army under Bertrand du Guesclin heavily defeated an English force which had broken away from an army commanded by Sir Robert Knolles. The French numbered 5,200 men, and the English force was approximately the same size.

Battle of Pontvallain
Part of the Hundred Years' War

The Battle of Pontvallain, from an illuminated manuscript of Froissart's Chronicles
Date4 December 1370
Location
Pontvallain, Sarthe, north-west France
Result French victory
Belligerents
France England
Commanders and leaders
Bertrand Du Guesclin
Louis de Sancerre
Robert Knolles
Thomas Grandison
Walter Fitzwalter
John Minsterworth
Strength
5,200 4,000–6,000
Casualties and losses
Light Most of the English army

The English had plundered and burnt their way across northern France from Calais to Paris. With winter coming, the English commanders fell out and divided their army into four. The battle consisted of two separate engagements: one at Pontvallain where, after a forced march, which continued overnight, Guesclin, the newly appointed constable of France, surprised a major part of the English force, and wiped it out. In a coordinated attack, Guesclin's subordinate, Louis de Sancerre, caught a smaller English force the same day, at the nearby town of Vaas, also wiping it out. The two are sometimes named as separate battles.

The French harried the surviving Englishmen into the following year, recapturing much lost territory. Though the engagements were comparatively small, they were significant because the English were routed, ending a reputation for invincibility in open battle they had enjoyed since the war started in 1337.

Background edit

Following a series of disagreements between Philip VI of France (r. 1328–1350) and Edward III of England (r. 1327–1377), on 24 May 1337 Philip's Great Council in Paris agreed that the lands held by Edward in France should be taken back into Philip's hands on the grounds that Edward was in breach of his obligations as a vassal. This marked the start of the Hundred Years' War, which was to last 116 years. In 1340 Edward claimed the French Crown, proclaiming himself the rightful heir through his mother, Isabella of France.[1][2][3]

 
France after the Treaty of Brétigny – French territory in green, English territory in pink

The English campaigned frequently on the continent, gaining a long run of military successes against larger forces across France.[4][5] In 1356 a large French army was decisively defeated at the Battle of Poitiers, in which King John II of France (r. 1350–1364), the son and successor of King Philip, was captured.[6] This eventually led to peace being agreed, and the Treaty of Brétigny was signed in 1360. It ceded large parts of south-west France to England as its sovereign territory, while Edward renounced all claims to the French throne. The terms of Brétigny were meant to untangle the feudal responsibilities that had caused so much conflict, and, as far as the English were concerned, would concentrate their territory in an expanded version of Aquitaine. This had been part of the English royal estate in France since the reign of Henry II (r. 1154–1189),[7] and by the treaty it and Poitou became fiefdoms of Edward's oldest son, Edward the Black Prince. John was to pay three million écus as his ransom.[note 1] The French were deeply unhappy with this arrangement.[9]

In 1369, on the pretext that Edward had failed to observe the terms of the treaty, Charles V (r. 1364–1380), the son and heir of King John, declared war once again. In August a French offensive attempted to recapture castles in Normandy.[10] Men who had fought[11] in earlier English campaigns, and had already won fortune and fame, were summoned from their retirements,[12] and new, younger men were given commands.[13] Events went poorly for England almost from the start: James Audley and John Chandos, two important English commanders, were killed in the first six months;[14] while the French made territorial gains in the west, re-occupying the strategic provincial capital of Poitiers and capturing many castles.[12]

French strategy edit

This period of the Hundred Years' War, starting in 1369 and known as the Carolinian phase, was significantly different from the previous one. The French were well prepared militarily, and immediately went on the offensive.[15] Charles was well situated in terms of financial and human resources.[16] Edward III was growing senile, his heir was crippled by illness, and once the turmoil of the previous phase of the war had subsided Charles was able to benefit from France having three times the population and wealth of England.[17] The French also benefited from technological improvements, such as in barding, the armouring of horses.[18]

Fighting during this phase took place largely in Aquitaine, meaning the English had extremely long borders to defend. These were easy for small French parties to penetrate, which they did to great effect. They relied on Fabian tactics:[15] avoiding pitched battles and using attrition to wear down the English[16] and only attacking dispersed or isolated English forces.[19] This was now an offensive war for the French, and the English were ill-prepared for it.[15]

English strategy edit

 
 
 

The English planned to use two armies. One would operate out of Aquitaine in south-west France and be commanded by the experienced Black Prince. It would concentrate on reversing recent French gains in Poitou. This force was hampered by the Black Prince being so ill that he had to be transported in a litter. As a result, he was unable to lead the campaign personally and needed to delegate the command.[12] The other English force would operate out of the English enclave of Calais in northern France.[20]

The north-eastern army was to be commanded by Robert Knolles, a veteran with considerable experience of independent command in the previous phase of the war and in the Breton War of Succession. Knolles contracted on 20 June to lead the King's army, although a week earlier he had agreed to share the command with Sir Alan Buxhull, Sir Thomas Grandison and Sir John Bourchier. On 1 July they were jointly appointed King's lieutenants. Both the King and his council were aware of the problems that could be caused by giving the overall command to Knolles, whose social status was lower than that of his peers. To prevent the English army from dividing and going separate ways – and in what the historian Jonathan Sumption calls "a prescient precaution"[21] – the captains were required to sign a contract before they left agreeing not only to serve the King faithfully, but also not to allow any divisions to open up between them, and to make decisions collectively.[22]

Prelude edit

English movements edit

Knolles landed at Calais in August 1370 with an army of between 4,000[23] and 6,000 mounted men.[24] There he awaited further orders from the King. None were forthcoming, so he proceeded on[24] a "meandering"[25] plundering raid through northern France. According to the historian T. F. Tout, the French allowed Knolles and his army "to wander where he would".[24][note 2] Knolles crossed north-eastern France using what by now was a traditional English tactic, the chevauchée – a large-scale mounted raid. This was intended not only to inflict as much destruction as possible on the countryside they passed through, but, by doing so, draw out the French army into a pitched battle.[15] Journeying through the Somme region, Knolles made a show of force outside Reims, marched to Troyes, and then swung west to approach Paris from the direction of Nemours. As they marched, Knolles's army captured many towns, which they would then raze if the French refused to pay the ransoms the English demanded.[27][note 3] He reached Paris on 24 September, but the city was well garrisoned and well defended. Knolles could not enter, and the French defenders would not leave their positions. He tried to draw them out to fight them in the open, but the French would not take the bait.[27] The contemporary Chronique des Règnes de Jean II et de Charles V describes how, even though "the said English set fire to a great number of villages around Paris ... the King was advised, for the better, that they should not then be fought with."[29]

By October Knolles had moved south and was marching towards Vendôme.[30] He captured and garrisoned castles and monasteries between the Rivers Loir and Loire and positioned himself to be able to march into either Poitou or southern Normandy. The former would enable him to support the Black Prince; the latter might be necessary if Edward concluded an agreement with Charles of Navarre, who was offering his lands in northern Normandy as a base for the English. Many of the subordinate captains, who considered themselves better-born than Knolles, deplored his apparent lack of martial spirit. They found a leader in Sir John Minsterworth, an ambitious but unstable knight from the Welsh Marches, who mocked Knolles as "the old freebooter".[31] Much of Knolles's strategy was based on that employed in the campaigns of the 1340s and 1350s; particularly the capturing of enemy fortresses, to either garrison them with English troops or levy a ransom.[32][note 4] Meanwhile, the English campaign in the west, which was nominally commanded by the Black Prince and actually by John of Gaunt and the Earl of Pembroke,[34] captured Limoges after a five-day siege, taking many prisoners whom they held for ransom and seizing much booty.[35][note 5]

Divisions among the English edit

And before the feast of Christmas, the chief men of the army, out of envy and self-importance, split into four parts, to the great harm of England, and great comfort of the enemies: that is to say, the Lord of Grandson with his men in one part, the Lord FitzWalter in another, and Sir John Minsterworth in the third part, and Sir Robert Knolles in the fourth.[38]

The Anonimalle Chronicle, 64–65.

The English system of shared leadership led to jealousies between their captains regarding how the booty and the many ransoms they had collected should be distributed.[39][note 6] In November 1370 acrimony broke out among the English captains over the issue of where to spend the winter. Knolles was aware that the French were closing in, and of the risk this posed. Not wishing to stay encamped in an area where a surprise attack was possible, he proposed withdrawing westward into Brittany. His captains, led by Sir Alan Buxhull, strongly disagreed, preferring to find winter quarters where they were. This would enable them to be able to continue raiding the surrounding countryside. They were confident they could defeat any French attack.[41] Their concern to keep pillaging the countryside was in large part forced upon them: the government had only paid their and their army's wages for thirteen weeks, and they were expected not just to live off the land, but pay themselves from it.[27][note 7]

Knolles threatened to leave, and when the other English commanders refused to join him, did so, taking the largest retinue from the army with him[41] – "doubtless with considerable booty", remarks the medievalist Kenneth Fowler.[45] With Knolles gone, the remaining 4,000 men of the English force[46] divided into three forces. One was under the dual command of Thomas Grandison and Hugh Calveley, the other two were commanded by Walter Fitzwalter and John Minsterworth.[47] These three forces, in turn, went separate ways, which maximised their opportunities to forage for supplies and to loot.[41] Fowler suggests that Minsterworth was probably the first to leave.[46] On the evening of 3 December, Knolles was some way to the west, Grandison's force of between 600 and 1,200 was spread out along a river between Pontvallain and Mayet, and Fitzwalter was several miles to the south. The location of Minsterworth's force is no longer known.[41]

French movements edit

 
Bertrand du Guesclin is appointed constable of France by King Charles V in 1370; from a contemporary manuscript.

Bertrand du Guesclin was appointed constable of France on 2 October, in direct response to Knolles's campaign.[46] Charles considered that Guesclin had the necessary skills in leading small forces and in irregular warfare to implement the Fabian approach he had decided on.[48] On 24 October, Guesclin sealed a "pact of brotherhood-in-arms" with Olivier de Clisson, an experienced Breton commander, and by 6 November Guesclin was in Caen raising an army.[49] Guesclin concentrated his forces at Caen during November, and was joined there by reinforcements under the Marshals Mouton de Blainville and Arnoul d'Audrehem as well as a Breton contingent under de Clisson. Guesclin thus concentrated about 4,000 men.[50]

A second force of about 1,200 men assembled at Châtellerault, under Marshal Sancerre. This then moved towards the English from the east, while Guesclin began to move on him from the north.[50] On 1 December Guesclin left Caen with his army – "One of those marches of which he had the secret", said a contemporary chronicler,[51] – and marched south. One of the most important aspects of the Pontvallain campaign was the speed with which the French moved: Guesclin and his forces reached Le Mans, a journey of 100 miles (160 km), two days later.[49][52]

Battle edit

Battle of Pontvallain edit

At Le Mans, Guesclin received intelligence that Grandison's force was nearby at Mayet, but was on the move in an attempt to join with Knolles. Guesclin, however, outmanoeuvred him.[49] Despite his army being near-exhausted, Guesclin commenced a night march, which brought him to Pontvallain by the early morning of 4 December. The French were able to attack Grandison's army with no warning,[53] which was a great psychological advantage to them. The English were taken by surprise and Sumption speculates that Grandison may only have had time to form rough lines with his men before fierce close-quarters fighting began.[52] In the earlier phase of the war, English longbowmen had largely neutralised the French cavalry but in this encounter, the barding (armouring) of the French horses rendered the English archery largely ineffective.[18] The English attempted an escape through the woods,[49] but were unable to retreat northwards, where the slightly higher ground may have provided them with a defensible position. Soon, with heavy losses on both sides, Grandison's force was penned in and wiped out beneath the walls of the Château de la Faigne.[52]

Among the French casualties was the Marshal of France, Arnoul d'Audrehem, who was mortally wounded. The English army died almost to a man. Grandison and his captains, who included Philip Courtenay and Hugh Despenser,[49] were among the few survivors, and were taken prisoner by Guesclin. With Grandison's defeat, the largest remaining English force in the area was Fitzwalter's. Sancerre, who was still "a few hours march away",[54] on receiving news of the battle at Pontvallain turned south to confront Fitzwalter. Guesclin, meanwhile, organised his prisoners, sent a portion of his army to chase Knolles, and moved towards Fitzwalter with the balance. Fitzwalter managed to avoid being surprised in open ground as Grandison had been, and marched south, intending to take refuge within the fortified Vaas Abbey.[54]

Battle of Vaas edit

The abbey at Vaas was garrisoned by Knolles's men, and Fitzwalter's men assumed it to be a haven. However, the French forces led by Sancerre reached the abbey at nearly the same time as the English. The garrison were unable to organise a proper defence before they had to attempt to fend off an immediate assault from Sancerre. According to Sumption, it is likely that Fitzwalter's force managed to enter the outer gate, but after bitter fighting Sancerre's troops forced their way into the abbey. The English defence, such as it was, collapsed. The arrival of Guesclin effectively put an end to the battle, which became a rout. What Sumption considers reliable estimates attested the English losses to be over 300, exclusive of prisoners.[52] These included Fitzwalter himself, captured by the seneschal of Toulouse, and most of his lieutenants. Guesclin held Fitzwalter as his personal prisoner; possibly, Sumption adds, like the contemporary Pierre d'Orgemont when he related the tale, Guesclin believed Fitzwalter to be the marshal of England.[52]

Aftermath edit

 
Bressuire Castle in 2006; most of the English survivors of the Battle of Pontvallain died outside its walls.

The few English survivors of the battles still at large scattered in confusion.[55] John Minsterworth's force, which had not been engaged at either battle, immediately removed itself to Brittany. Others made their way to Saint-Sauveur, south of the Loire. Calveley returned to Poitou. Around 300 of the English remnants joined together and overran Courcillon Castle, near Château-du-Loir, and then marched to the Loire, closely pursued by Sancerre.[55] Many of Knolles's men abandoned their positions garrisoning castles, including Rillé and Beaufort la Vallée, and also headed to the Loire.[55] This group, which included many wounded men and pillagers, joined up with the other English force,[56] making it "several hundred" in strength.[54]

Guesclin maintained his close pursuit, and his constant ambushes and raids diminished the English numbers. They eventually reached the relative safe haven of the ford at Saint-Maur.[55] Calveley's force, which had taken no part in either of the battles,[57] had already crossed. A little beyond the ford was a strong English garrison at a fortified abbey, garrisoned by the English. Here, some of the English went east, while the majority continued towards Bordeaux. This group continued to be pursued by Guesclin, now joined again by Sancerre, deep into Poitou, where it was eventually run to ground outside Bressuire Castle. This was also occupied by an English garrison, but, fearing that if they opened the gates they would admit the French army alongside the English, they refused to do so.[55] As a result, what remained of this remnant of the Pontvallain army was wiped out under the walls.[56]

Sancerre proceeded to regain the castles previously captured by Knolles during his chevauchée. Guesclin made his way back to Saint-Maur where he negotiated with the English inside the abbey – led by Sir John Cresswell and Calveley – and arranged their release on payment of a ransom. The price of freedom for the English is unknown. Soon after, Guesclin returned to Le Mans.[58]

There is uncertainty as to exactly where in Brittany Knolles retired to[59] with the booty he had garnered.[45] Whether to Derval, to Concarneau, or to one and then to the other,[45] he was soon joined by Minsterworth. They decided to return to England with most of their force early the following year. They made their way to the port of Pointe Saint-Mathieu, repeatedly ambushed by the French en route. When they arrived there were only two small ships available, inadequate for the several hundred men with Knolles and Minsterworth.[60] Their numbers were swollen by English garrisons which had abandoned their posts and independently made their way to the port.[45] Minsterworth was one of the relative few who could buy a passage; most of those who remained, possibly amounting to around 500 men,[45] were massacred by the French, who soon caught up with them.[60]

 
Little remained in 2011 of Knolles's castle at Derval.

The return of Minsterworth to England "began a long period of recrimination", politically.[29] Although he was as culpable as Knolles or any of the other commanders, Minsterworth attempted to avoid almost all the blame for the military disaster that had befallen them by putting the responsibility on to Knolles.[61] In July 1372 the King's council effectively agreed with him, and condemned Knolles for the defeat.[61][62] The English nobility also blamed Knolles, because of his lower social status.[62] Despite this, Minsterworth was unable to exculpate himself completely, and the council later had him arrested and charged with traducing Knolles.[63]

Sumption argues that the Pontvallain campaign and its aftermath should be seen as a "spectacular demonstration of Guesclin's capacity to be everywhere at once" and an "extraordinary demonstration of [his] unconventional skills as a commander".[64] Many knights were captured by the French, including John Clanvowe, Edmund Daumarle and William Neville,[65] and were conveyed to Paris in open carts and strictly imprisoned.[58] Others spent great sums evading capture, often borrowing money from colleagues to do so.[66] Fitzwalter was held prisoner until he was able to raise a ransom by mortgaging his Cumberland estates to Edward III's mistress Alice Perrers on ruinous terms.[67]

Legacy edit

Knolles's campaign has been estimated to have cost Edward at least £66,667 (equivalent to £42,000,000 in 2023), based on his known requests for loans.[68][note 8] The historian May McKisack suggests that the chevauchée that preceded the battle yielded "plunder but little military benefit".[72] Maurice Keen notes that even though Knolles had reached the gates of Paris, "he had little to show for it when he reached Brittany",[73] which illustrated how much the Hundred Years' War had changed in character. According to Christopher Allmand, "the days of Crécy and Poitiers were over".[15] Pontvallain, argues Alexander Gillespie, "destroyed the reputation the English had for invincibility on the battlefield".[74]

England continued losing territory in Aquitaine until 1374, and as they lost land, they lost the allegiance of the local lords.[75] Pontvallain ended King Edward's short-lived strategy of promoting an alliance with Charles, King of Navarre.[76] It also marked the last use of great companies – large forces of mercenaries – by England in France; most of their original leaders had been killed. Mercenaries were still considered useful, but they were increasingly absorbed into the main armies of both sides.[77]

Five hundred years later, when the French lost Alsace-Lorraine to Germany, the Pontvallain campaign was used jingoistically by the French as an example of a spectacular recovery of territory, to keep alive hope of eventually similarly recovering Alsace-Lorraine.[78]

Notes, references and bibliography edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Approximately £450,000,000 in 2024 terms. UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2019). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 14 November 2019. To give a very rough idea of earning power, an English foot-soldier could expect to earn £1 in wages for, usually seasonal, military service in approximately three months.[8]
  2. ^ He was following, almost exactly, the route of King Edward's great chevauchée of 1359.[26]
  3. ^ On a previous campaign in 1357–1360, Knolles used the same tactic with profitable results. Michael Jones has described how on that occasion Knolles's army "left a trail of ravaged villages, whose charred gables were known as 'Knolles' mitres'"; and how, as a result, Knolles made around £15,000 in booty.[28]
  4. ^ This included the creation of reventions, or ransom districts, especially in the counties of Anjou and Maine. The French behaved similarly when they attacked English-controlled territories.[33]
  5. ^ This campaign would also suffer from divided leadership: The Earl of Pembroke, young and with "aristocratic arrogance"[13] refused to serve alongside Sir John Chandos, who, although of great military experience and fame,[13] was only a knight banneret in rank.[36] Pembroke's jealousy of Chandos was possibly exacerbated by the fact that as Jonathan Sumption put it, Pembroke "may have had the grander name but his inexperience showed."[37]
  6. ^ The French chronicler Pierre d'Orgemont wrote in Chroniques des regnes de Jean II et Charles V that as Knolles's army marched through northern France burning the wheat and "great houses", the English "did not, however, burn anything for which a ransom was paid."[40]
  7. ^ This was an innovative method of recruitment; no English government had attempted "contractual service without pay" before.[42] It has been described as the government attempting to reduce its own cost of making war by relying on "the lure of profits" to make soldiering more attractive.[43] If the system worked, it was because "the prospects of profits was deep-rooted in the military mentality and that the government was well aware of this and keen to take advantage of it."[44]
  8. ^ This surprisingly precise figure is due to the loan being accounted for in marks, which were valued at two-thirds of a pound; the total loan was 100,000 marks[69][70] – of which the single greatest amount came from the "famously rich" Richard, Earl of Arundel, who lent the King 40,000 marks, or £26,667.[69] (Approximately £17,000,000 in 2024 terms.) To put the cost of Knolles's campaign in perspective, it has been estimated that this whole period of war, from its outbreak in 1369 to the 1375 Treaty of Bruges, may have cost as much as £650,000. (£410,000,000 in 2024 terms.)[71]

References edit

  1. ^ Wagner 2006c, pp. 157–158.
  2. ^ Wagner 2006d, p. 163.
  3. ^ Wagner 2006e, p. 251.
  4. ^ Rogers 2005, p. 127.
  5. ^ Allmand 1989, p. 16.
  6. ^ Allmand 1989, p. 17.
  7. ^ Prestwich 1988, p. 298.
  8. ^ Gribit 2016, p. 37.
  9. ^ Wagner 2006a, pp. 58–59.
  10. ^ Fowler 2001, p. 286.
  11. ^ Prestwich 2007, pp. 337–338.
  12. ^ a b c Neillands 1990, p. 169.
  13. ^ a b c Jack 2004.
  14. ^ Ormrod 2012, p. 506.
  15. ^ a b c d e Allmand 1989, p. 22.
  16. ^ a b Neillands 1990, p. 168.
  17. ^ Sumption 2009, p. xi.
  18. ^ a b Nicholson 2003, p. 50.
  19. ^ Burne 1999, p. 23.
  20. ^ Sumption 2009, pp. 73–74.
  21. ^ Sumption 2009, p. 89.
  22. ^ Fowler 2001, p. 289.
  23. ^ Jones 2017, p. 368.
  24. ^ a b c Tout 1965, p. 413.
  25. ^ Jones 2017, p. 369.
  26. ^ Sumption 2009, p. 84.
  27. ^ a b c Fowler 2001, p. 290.
  28. ^ Jones 2017, p. 242.
  29. ^ a b Rogers 2000, p. 190.
  30. ^ Sumption 2009, pp. 84–85.
  31. ^ Sumption 2009, p. 87.
  32. ^ Fowler 2001, p. 292.
  33. ^ Fowler 2001, p. 292 n.40.
  34. ^ Sumption 2009, pp. 81–82.
  35. ^ Sumption 2009, pp. 82–83.
  36. ^ Barber 2004.
  37. ^ Sumption 2009, p. 47.
  38. ^ Galbraith 1970, pp. 64–65.
  39. ^ Bell et al. 2011, p. 69.
  40. ^ Rogers 2000, p. 189.
  41. ^ a b c d Sumption 2009, pp. 89–90.
  42. ^ Sherborne 1964, p. 7.
  43. ^ Ambühl 2013, p. 100 n.10.
  44. ^ Ambühl 2013, p. 100.
  45. ^ a b c d e Fowler 2001, p. 297.
  46. ^ a b c Fowler 2001, p. 293.
  47. ^ Bell et al. 2013, p. 69.
  48. ^ Wagner 2006b, p. 142.
  49. ^ a b c d e Fowler 2001, p. 294.
  50. ^ a b Sumption 2009, pp. 87–88.
  51. ^ Coulton 1908, p. 244.
  52. ^ a b c d e Sumption 2009, pp. 89–91.
  53. ^ Jaques 2006, p. 809.
  54. ^ a b c Sumption 2009, p. 90.
  55. ^ a b c d e Sumption 2009, pp. 90–91.
  56. ^ a b Fowler 2001, p. 295.
  57. ^ Fowler 2004.
  58. ^ a b Fowler 2001, p. 296.
  59. ^ Galbraith 1970, p. 176.
  60. ^ a b Sumption 2009, p. 91.
  61. ^ a b Sumption 2009, p. 92.
  62. ^ a b Perroy 1965, p. 164.
  63. ^ Sumption 2009, p. 93.
  64. ^ Sumption 2009, pp. 76, 92.
  65. ^ Bell et al. 2011, p. 192.
  66. ^ Bell et al. 2011, p. 203.
  67. ^ Sumption 2009, p. 274.
  68. ^ Ormrod 2012, p. 526.
  69. ^ a b Sumption 2009, pp. 70–71.
  70. ^ Carlin & Crouch 2013, pp. 87–88.
  71. ^ Prestwich 2003, p. 248.
  72. ^ McKisack 1991, p. 145.
  73. ^ Keen 1973, p. 255.
  74. ^ Gillespie 2016, p. 170.
  75. ^ Neillands 1990, p. 170.
  76. ^ Ormrod 2012, p. 508.
  77. ^ Nicholson 2003, p. 36.
  78. ^ Kagay & Villalon 2008, p. 335.

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47°46′08″N 00°12′25″E / 47.76889°N 0.20694°E / 47.76889; 0.20694

battle, pontvallain, part, hundred, years, took, place, sarthe, region, north, west, france, december, 1370, when, french, army, under, bertrand, guesclin, heavily, defeated, english, force, which, broken, away, from, army, commanded, robert, knolles, french, . The Battle of Pontvallain part of the Hundred Years War took place in the Sarthe region of north west France on 4 December 1370 when a French army under Bertrand du Guesclin heavily defeated an English force which had broken away from an army commanded by Sir Robert Knolles The French numbered 5 200 men and the English force was approximately the same size Battle of PontvallainPart of the Hundred Years WarThe Battle of Pontvallain from an illuminated manuscript of Froissart s ChroniclesDate4 December 1370LocationPontvallain Sarthe north west FranceResultFrench victoryBelligerentsFranceEnglandCommanders and leadersBertrand Du GuesclinLouis de SancerreRobert KnollesThomas GrandisonWalter FitzwalterJohn MinsterworthStrength5 2004 000 6 000Casualties and lossesLightMost of the English army The English had plundered and burnt their way across northern France from Calais to Paris With winter coming the English commanders fell out and divided their army into four The battle consisted of two separate engagements one at Pontvallain where after a forced march which continued overnight Guesclin the newly appointed constable of France surprised a major part of the English force and wiped it out In a coordinated attack Guesclin s subordinate Louis de Sancerre caught a smaller English force the same day at the nearby town of Vaas also wiping it out The two are sometimes named as separate battles The French harried the surviving Englishmen into the following year recapturing much lost territory Though the engagements were comparatively small they were significant because the English were routed ending a reputation for invincibility in open battle they had enjoyed since the war started in 1337 Contents 1 Background 1 1 French strategy 1 2 English strategy 2 Prelude 2 1 English movements 2 2 Divisions among the English 2 3 French movements 3 Battle 3 1 Battle of Pontvallain 3 2 Battle of Vaas 4 Aftermath 5 Legacy 6 Notes references and bibliography 6 1 Notes 6 2 References 6 3 BibliographyBackground editFollowing a series of disagreements between Philip VI of France r 1328 1350 and Edward III of England r 1327 1377 on 24 May 1337 Philip s Great Council in Paris agreed that the lands held by Edward in France should be taken back into Philip s hands on the grounds that Edward was in breach of his obligations as a vassal This marked the start of the Hundred Years War which was to last 116 years In 1340 Edward claimed the French Crown proclaiming himself the rightful heir through his mother Isabella of France 1 2 3 nbsp France after the Treaty of Bretigny French territory in green English territory in pink The English campaigned frequently on the continent gaining a long run of military successes against larger forces across France 4 5 In 1356 a large French army was decisively defeated at the Battle of Poitiers in which King John II of France r 1350 1364 the son and successor of King Philip was captured 6 This eventually led to peace being agreed and the Treaty of Bretigny was signed in 1360 It ceded large parts of south west France to England as its sovereign territory while Edward renounced all claims to the French throne The terms of Bretigny were meant to untangle the feudal responsibilities that had caused so much conflict and as far as the English were concerned would concentrate their territory in an expanded version of Aquitaine This had been part of the English royal estate in France since the reign of Henry II r 1154 1189 7 and by the treaty it and Poitou became fiefdoms of Edward s oldest son Edward the Black Prince John was to pay three million ecus as his ransom note 1 The French were deeply unhappy with this arrangement 9 In 1369 on the pretext that Edward had failed to observe the terms of the treaty Charles V r 1364 1380 the son and heir of King John declared war once again In August a French offensive attempted to recapture castles in Normandy 10 Men who had fought 11 in earlier English campaigns and had already won fortune and fame were summoned from their retirements 12 and new younger men were given commands 13 Events went poorly for England almost from the start James Audley and John Chandos two important English commanders were killed in the first six months 14 while the French made territorial gains in the west re occupying the strategic provincial capital of Poitiers and capturing many castles 12 French strategy edit This period of the Hundred Years War starting in 1369 and known as the Carolinian phase was significantly different from the previous one The French were well prepared militarily and immediately went on the offensive 15 Charles was well situated in terms of financial and human resources 16 Edward III was growing senile his heir was crippled by illness and once the turmoil of the previous phase of the war had subsided Charles was able to benefit from France having three times the population and wealth of England 17 The French also benefited from technological improvements such as in barding the armouring of horses 18 Fighting during this phase took place largely in Aquitaine meaning the English had extremely long borders to defend These were easy for small French parties to penetrate which they did to great effect They relied on Fabian tactics 15 avoiding pitched battles and using attrition to wear down the English 16 and only attacking dispersed or isolated English forces 19 This was now an offensive war for the French and the English were ill prepared for it 15 English strategy edit nbsp The 1370 campaign was part of a multi faceted offensive by the English in red with Knolles marching west from Calais although being turned away from Normandy and Burgundy and the Black Prince and the Earl of Pembroke occupying Aquitaine and attacking Poitou further west The French in blue led by Guesclin marched south to intercept Knolles nbsp Knolles s campaign route through northern France August September 1370 and his proximity to both Pontvallain and Derval nbsp Theatres of war in 1370 The English controlled Duchy of Aquitaine in red and the French counties of Anjou in dark blue and Maine in light blue The English planned to use two armies One would operate out of Aquitaine in south west France and be commanded by the experienced Black Prince It would concentrate on reversing recent French gains in Poitou This force was hampered by the Black Prince being so ill that he had to be transported in a litter As a result he was unable to lead the campaign personally and needed to delegate the command 12 The other English force would operate out of the English enclave of Calais in northern France 20 The north eastern army was to be commanded by Robert Knolles a veteran with considerable experience of independent command in the previous phase of the war and in the Breton War of Succession Knolles contracted on 20 June to lead the King s army although a week earlier he had agreed to share the command with Sir Alan Buxhull Sir Thomas Grandison and Sir John Bourchier On 1 July they were jointly appointed King s lieutenants Both the King and his council were aware of the problems that could be caused by giving the overall command to Knolles whose social status was lower than that of his peers To prevent the English army from dividing and going separate ways and in what the historian Jonathan Sumption calls a prescient precaution 21 the captains were required to sign a contract before they left agreeing not only to serve the King faithfully but also not to allow any divisions to open up between them and to make decisions collectively 22 Prelude editEnglish movements edit Knolles landed at Calais in August 1370 with an army of between 4 000 23 and 6 000 mounted men 24 There he awaited further orders from the King None were forthcoming so he proceeded on 24 a meandering 25 plundering raid through northern France According to the historian T F Tout the French allowed Knolles and his army to wander where he would 24 note 2 Knolles crossed north eastern France using what by now was a traditional English tactic the chevauchee a large scale mounted raid This was intended not only to inflict as much destruction as possible on the countryside they passed through but by doing so draw out the French army into a pitched battle 15 Journeying through the Somme region Knolles made a show of force outside Reims marched to Troyes and then swung west to approach Paris from the direction of Nemours As they marched Knolles s army captured many towns which they would then raze if the French refused to pay the ransoms the English demanded 27 note 3 He reached Paris on 24 September but the city was well garrisoned and well defended Knolles could not enter and the French defenders would not leave their positions He tried to draw them out to fight them in the open but the French would not take the bait 27 The contemporary Chronique des Regnes de Jean II et de Charles V describes how even though the said English set fire to a great number of villages around Paris the King was advised for the better that they should not then be fought with 29 By October Knolles had moved south and was marching towards Vendome 30 He captured and garrisoned castles and monasteries between the Rivers Loir and Loire and positioned himself to be able to march into either Poitou or southern Normandy The former would enable him to support the Black Prince the latter might be necessary if Edward concluded an agreement with Charles of Navarre who was offering his lands in northern Normandy as a base for the English Many of the subordinate captains who considered themselves better born than Knolles deplored his apparent lack of martial spirit They found a leader in Sir John Minsterworth an ambitious but unstable knight from the Welsh Marches who mocked Knolles as the old freebooter 31 Much of Knolles s strategy was based on that employed in the campaigns of the 1340s and 1350s particularly the capturing of enemy fortresses to either garrison them with English troops or levy a ransom 32 note 4 Meanwhile the English campaign in the west which was nominally commanded by the Black Prince and actually by John of Gaunt and the Earl of Pembroke 34 captured Limoges after a five day siege taking many prisoners whom they held for ransom and seizing much booty 35 note 5 Divisions among the English edit And before the feast of Christmas the chief men of the army out of envy and self importance split into four parts to the great harm of England and great comfort of the enemies that is to say the Lord of Grandson with his men in one part the Lord FitzWalter in another and Sir John Minsterworth in the third part and Sir Robert Knolles in the fourth 38 The Anonimalle Chronicle 64 65 The English system of shared leadership led to jealousies between their captains regarding how the booty and the many ransoms they had collected should be distributed 39 note 6 In November 1370 acrimony broke out among the English captains over the issue of where to spend the winter Knolles was aware that the French were closing in and of the risk this posed Not wishing to stay encamped in an area where a surprise attack was possible he proposed withdrawing westward into Brittany His captains led by Sir Alan Buxhull strongly disagreed preferring to find winter quarters where they were This would enable them to be able to continue raiding the surrounding countryside They were confident they could defeat any French attack 41 Their concern to keep pillaging the countryside was in large part forced upon them the government had only paid their and their army s wages for thirteen weeks and they were expected not just to live off the land but pay themselves from it 27 note 7 Knolles threatened to leave and when the other English commanders refused to join him did so taking the largest retinue from the army with him 41 doubtless with considerable booty remarks the medievalist Kenneth Fowler 45 With Knolles gone the remaining 4 000 men of the English force 46 divided into three forces One was under the dual command of Thomas Grandison and Hugh Calveley the other two were commanded by Walter Fitzwalter and John Minsterworth 47 These three forces in turn went separate ways which maximised their opportunities to forage for supplies and to loot 41 Fowler suggests that Minsterworth was probably the first to leave 46 On the evening of 3 December Knolles was some way to the west Grandison s force of between 600 and 1 200 was spread out along a river between Pontvallain and Mayet and Fitzwalter was several miles to the south The location of Minsterworth s force is no longer known 41 French movements edit nbsp Bertrand du Guesclin is appointed constable of France by King Charles V in 1370 from a contemporary manuscript Bertrand du Guesclin was appointed constable of France on 2 October in direct response to Knolles s campaign 46 Charles considered that Guesclin had the necessary skills in leading small forces and in irregular warfare to implement the Fabian approach he had decided on 48 On 24 October Guesclin sealed a pact of brotherhood in arms with Olivier de Clisson an experienced Breton commander and by 6 November Guesclin was in Caen raising an army 49 Guesclin concentrated his forces at Caen during November and was joined there by reinforcements under the Marshals Mouton de Blainville and Arnoul d Audrehem as well as a Breton contingent under de Clisson Guesclin thus concentrated about 4 000 men 50 A second force of about 1 200 men assembled at Chatellerault under Marshal Sancerre This then moved towards the English from the east while Guesclin began to move on him from the north 50 On 1 December Guesclin left Caen with his army One of those marches of which he had the secret said a contemporary chronicler 51 and marched south One of the most important aspects of the Pontvallain campaign was the speed with which the French moved Guesclin and his forces reached Le Mans a journey of 100 miles 160 km two days later 49 52 Battle editBattle of Pontvallain edit At Le Mans Guesclin received intelligence that Grandison s force was nearby at Mayet but was on the move in an attempt to join with Knolles Guesclin however outmanoeuvred him 49 Despite his army being near exhausted Guesclin commenced a night march which brought him to Pontvallain by the early morning of 4 December The French were able to attack Grandison s army with no warning 53 which was a great psychological advantage to them The English were taken by surprise and Sumption speculates that Grandison may only have had time to form rough lines with his men before fierce close quarters fighting began 52 In the earlier phase of the war English longbowmen had largely neutralised the French cavalry but in this encounter the barding armouring of the French horses rendered the English archery largely ineffective 18 The English attempted an escape through the woods 49 but were unable to retreat northwards where the slightly higher ground may have provided them with a defensible position Soon with heavy losses on both sides Grandison s force was penned in and wiped out beneath the walls of the Chateau de la Faigne 52 Among the French casualties was the Marshal of France Arnoul d Audrehem who was mortally wounded The English army died almost to a man Grandison and his captains who included Philip Courtenay and Hugh Despenser 49 were among the few survivors and were taken prisoner by Guesclin With Grandison s defeat the largest remaining English force in the area was Fitzwalter s Sancerre who was still a few hours march away 54 on receiving news of the battle at Pontvallain turned south to confront Fitzwalter Guesclin meanwhile organised his prisoners sent a portion of his army to chase Knolles and moved towards Fitzwalter with the balance Fitzwalter managed to avoid being surprised in open ground as Grandison had been and marched south intending to take refuge within the fortified Vaas Abbey 54 Battle of Vaas edit The abbey at Vaas was garrisoned by Knolles s men and Fitzwalter s men assumed it to be a haven However the French forces led by Sancerre reached the abbey at nearly the same time as the English The garrison were unable to organise a proper defence before they had to attempt to fend off an immediate assault from Sancerre According to Sumption it is likely that Fitzwalter s force managed to enter the outer gate but after bitter fighting Sancerre s troops forced their way into the abbey The English defence such as it was collapsed The arrival of Guesclin effectively put an end to the battle which became a rout What Sumption considers reliable estimates attested the English losses to be over 300 exclusive of prisoners 52 These included Fitzwalter himself captured by the seneschal of Toulouse and most of his lieutenants Guesclin held Fitzwalter as his personal prisoner possibly Sumption adds like the contemporary Pierre d Orgemont when he related the tale Guesclin believed Fitzwalter to be the marshal of England 52 Aftermath edit nbsp Bressuire Castle in 2006 most of the English survivors of the Battle of Pontvallain died outside its walls The few English survivors of the battles still at large scattered in confusion 55 John Minsterworth s force which had not been engaged at either battle immediately removed itself to Brittany Others made their way to Saint Sauveur south of the Loire Calveley returned to Poitou Around 300 of the English remnants joined together and overran Courcillon Castle near Chateau du Loir and then marched to the Loire closely pursued by Sancerre 55 Many of Knolles s men abandoned their positions garrisoning castles including Rille and Beaufort la Vallee and also headed to the Loire 55 This group which included many wounded men and pillagers joined up with the other English force 56 making it several hundred in strength 54 Guesclin maintained his close pursuit and his constant ambushes and raids diminished the English numbers They eventually reached the relative safe haven of the ford at Saint Maur 55 Calveley s force which had taken no part in either of the battles 57 had already crossed A little beyond the ford was a strong English garrison at a fortified abbey garrisoned by the English Here some of the English went east while the majority continued towards Bordeaux This group continued to be pursued by Guesclin now joined again by Sancerre deep into Poitou where it was eventually run to ground outside Bressuire Castle This was also occupied by an English garrison but fearing that if they opened the gates they would admit the French army alongside the English they refused to do so 55 As a result what remained of this remnant of the Pontvallain army was wiped out under the walls 56 Sancerre proceeded to regain the castles previously captured by Knolles during his chevauchee Guesclin made his way back to Saint Maur where he negotiated with the English inside the abbey led by Sir John Cresswell and Calveley and arranged their release on payment of a ransom The price of freedom for the English is unknown Soon after Guesclin returned to Le Mans 58 There is uncertainty as to exactly where in Brittany Knolles retired to 59 with the booty he had garnered 45 Whether to Derval to Concarneau or to one and then to the other 45 he was soon joined by Minsterworth They decided to return to England with most of their force early the following year They made their way to the port of Pointe Saint Mathieu repeatedly ambushed by the French en route When they arrived there were only two small ships available inadequate for the several hundred men with Knolles and Minsterworth 60 Their numbers were swollen by English garrisons which had abandoned their posts and independently made their way to the port 45 Minsterworth was one of the relative few who could buy a passage most of those who remained possibly amounting to around 500 men 45 were massacred by the French who soon caught up with them 60 nbsp Little remained in 2011 of Knolles s castle at Derval The return of Minsterworth to England began a long period of recrimination politically 29 Although he was as culpable as Knolles or any of the other commanders Minsterworth attempted to avoid almost all the blame for the military disaster that had befallen them by putting the responsibility on to Knolles 61 In July 1372 the King s council effectively agreed with him and condemned Knolles for the defeat 61 62 The English nobility also blamed Knolles because of his lower social status 62 Despite this Minsterworth was unable to exculpate himself completely and the council later had him arrested and charged with traducing Knolles 63 Sumption argues that the Pontvallain campaign and its aftermath should be seen as a spectacular demonstration of Guesclin s capacity to be everywhere at once and an extraordinary demonstration of his unconventional skills as a commander 64 Many knights were captured by the French including John Clanvowe Edmund Daumarle and William Neville 65 and were conveyed to Paris in open carts and strictly imprisoned 58 Others spent great sums evading capture often borrowing money from colleagues to do so 66 Fitzwalter was held prisoner until he was able to raise a ransom by mortgaging his Cumberland estates to Edward III s mistress Alice Perrers on ruinous terms 67 Legacy editKnolles s campaign has been estimated to have cost Edward at least 66 667 equivalent to 42 000 000 in 2023 based on his known requests for loans 68 note 8 The historian May McKisack suggests that the chevauchee that preceded the battle yielded plunder but little military benefit 72 Maurice Keen notes that even though Knolles had reached the gates of Paris he had little to show for it when he reached Brittany 73 which illustrated how much the Hundred Years War had changed in character According to Christopher Allmand the days of Crecy and Poitiers were over 15 Pontvallain argues Alexander Gillespie destroyed the reputation the English had for invincibility on the battlefield 74 England continued losing territory in Aquitaine until 1374 and as they lost land they lost the allegiance of the local lords 75 Pontvallain ended King Edward s short lived strategy of promoting an alliance with Charles King of Navarre 76 It also marked the last use of great companies large forces of mercenaries by England in France most of their original leaders had been killed Mercenaries were still considered useful but they were increasingly absorbed into the main armies of both sides 77 Five hundred years later when the French lost Alsace Lorraine to Germany the Pontvallain campaign was used jingoistically by the French as an example of a spectacular recovery of territory to keep alive hope of eventually similarly recovering Alsace Lorraine 78 Notes references and bibliography editNotes edit Approximately 450 000 000 in 2024 terms UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2019 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 14 November 2019 To give a very rough idea of earning power an English foot soldier could expect to earn 1 in wages for usually seasonal military service in approximately three months 8 He was following almost exactly the route of King Edward s great chevauchee of 1359 26 On a previous campaign in 1357 1360 Knolles used the same tactic with profitable results Michael Jones has described how on that occasion Knolles s army left a trail of ravaged villages whose charred gables were known as Knolles mitres and how as a result Knolles made around 15 000 in booty 28 This included the creation of reventions or ransom districts especially in the counties of Anjou and Maine The French behaved similarly when they attacked English controlled territories 33 This campaign would also suffer from divided leadership The Earl of Pembroke young and with aristocratic arrogance 13 refused to serve alongside Sir John Chandos who although of great military experience and fame 13 was only a knight banneret in rank 36 Pembroke s jealousy of Chandos was possibly exacerbated by the fact that as Jonathan Sumption put it Pembroke may have had the grander name but his inexperience showed 37 The French chronicler Pierre d Orgemont wrote in Chroniques des regnes de Jean II et Charles V that as Knolles s army marched through northern France burning the wheat and great houses the English did not however burn anything for which a ransom was paid 40 This was an innovative method of recruitment no English government had attempted contractual service without pay before 42 It has been described as the government attempting to reduce its own cost of making war by relying on the lure of profits to make soldiering more attractive 43 If the system worked it was because the prospects of profits was deep rooted in the military mentality and that the government was well aware of this and keen to take advantage of it 44 This surprisingly precise figure is due to the loan being accounted for in marks which were valued at two thirds of a pound the total loan was 100 000 marks 69 70 of which the single greatest amount came from the famously rich Richard Earl of Arundel who lent the King 40 000 marks or 26 667 69 Approximately 17 000 000 in 2024 terms To put the cost of Knolles s campaign in perspective it has been estimated that this whole period of war from its outbreak in 1369 to the 1375 Treaty of Bruges may have cost as much as 650 000 410 000 000 in 2024 terms 71 References edit Wagner 2006c pp 157 158 Wagner 2006d p 163 Wagner 2006e p 251 Rogers 2005 p 127 Allmand 1989 p 16 Allmand 1989 p 17 Prestwich 1988 p 298 Gribit 2016 p 37 Wagner 2006a pp 58 59 Fowler 2001 p 286 Prestwich 2007 pp 337 338 a b c Neillands 1990 p 169 a b c Jack 2004 Ormrod 2012 p 506 a b c d e Allmand 1989 p 22 a b Neillands 1990 p 168 Sumption 2009 p xi a b Nicholson 2003 p 50 Burne 1999 p 23 Sumption 2009 pp 73 74 Sumption 2009 p 89 Fowler 2001 p 289 Jones 2017 p 368 a b c Tout 1965 p 413 Jones 2017 p 369 Sumption 2009 p 84 a b c Fowler 2001 p 290 Jones 2017 p 242 a b Rogers 2000 p 190 Sumption 2009 pp 84 85 Sumption 2009 p 87 Fowler 2001 p 292 Fowler 2001 p 292 n 40 Sumption 2009 pp 81 82 Sumption 2009 pp 82 83 Barber 2004 Sumption 2009 p 47 Galbraith 1970 pp 64 65 Bell et al 2011 p 69 Rogers 2000 p 189 a b c d Sumption 2009 pp 89 90 Sherborne 1964 p 7 Ambuhl 2013 p 100 n 10 Ambuhl 2013 p 100 a b c d e Fowler 2001 p 297 a b c Fowler 2001 p 293 Bell et al 2013 p 69 Wagner 2006b p 142 a b c d e Fowler 2001 p 294 a b Sumption 2009 pp 87 88 Coulton 1908 p 244 a b c d e Sumption 2009 pp 89 91 Jaques 2006 p 809 a b c Sumption 2009 p 90 a b c d e Sumption 2009 pp 90 91 a b Fowler 2001 p 295 Fowler 2004 a b Fowler 2001 p 296 Galbraith 1970 p 176 a b Sumption 2009 p 91 a b Sumption 2009 p 92 a b Perroy 1965 p 164 Sumption 2009 p 93 Sumption 2009 pp 76 92 Bell et al 2011 p 192 Bell et al 2011 p 203 Sumption 2009 p 274 Ormrod 2012 p 526 a b Sumption 2009 pp 70 71 Carlin amp Crouch 2013 pp 87 88 Prestwich 2003 p 248 McKisack 1991 p 145 Keen 1973 p 255 Gillespie 2016 p 170 Neillands 1990 p 170 Ormrod 2012 p 508 Nicholson 2003 p 36 Kagay amp Villalon 2008 p 335 Bibliography edit Allmand C 1989 The Hundred Years War England and France at War c 1300 c 1450 Cambridge Medieval Textbooks Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31923 2 Ambuhl R 2013 Prisoners of War in the Hundred Years War Ransom Culture in the Late Middle Ages Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 01094 9 Barber R 2004 Chandos Sir John d 1370 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 5110 Archived from the original on 20 February 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2018 Subscription or UK public library membership required Bell A R Chapman A Curry A King A amp Simpkin D eds 2011 The Soldier Experience in the Fourteenth Century Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 674 2 Bell A R Curry A King A amp Simpkin D 2013 The Soldier in Later Medieval England Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 968082 5 Burne A H 1999 1955 The Agincourt War Ware Hertfordshire Eyre amp Spottiswoode ISBN 978 1 84022 211 1 Carlin M amp Crouch D 2013 Lost Letters of Medieval Life English Society 1200 1250 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 0756 9 Coulton G G 1908 Chaucer and his England London Methuen OCLC 220948086 Fowler K 2001 Medieval Mercenaries The Great Companies Vol I Oxford John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 631 15886 8 Fowler K 2004 Calveley Sir Hugh d 1394 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4407 Archived from the original on 20 February 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2018 Subscription or UK public library membership required Galbraith V H 1970 The Anonimalle Chronicle 1333 to 1381 From a MS Written at St Mary s Abbey York repr ed Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 0398 1 Gillespie A 2016 The Causes of War Volume 2 1000 CE to 1400 CE London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 84946 645 5 Gribit Nicholas 2016 Henry of Lancaster s Expedition to Aquitaine 1345 46 Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 78327 117 7 Jack R I 2004 Hastings John thirteenth earl of Pembroke 1347 1375 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12580 Archived from the original on 20 February 2018 Retrieved 20 February 2018 Subscription or UK public library membership required Jaques T 2006 Dictionary of Battles and Sieges A Guide to 8 500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty first Century P Z Vol III Westport CT Greenwood ISBN 978 0 313 33539 6 Jones M 2017 The Black Prince The King That Never Was London Head of Zeus ISBN 978 1 78497 293 6 Kagay D amp Villalon A eds 2008 The Hundred Years War Pt 2 Different Vistas History of Warfare Leiden Brill ISBN 978 9 00416 821 3 Keen M H 1973 England in the Later Middle Ages Bristol Head of Zeus ISBN 978 0 416 75990 7 McKisack M 1991 The Fourteenth Century 1307 1399 repr ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285250 2 Neillands R 1990 The Hundred Years War Padstow Cornwall Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 00148 9 Nicholson H A 2003 Medieval Warfare Theory and Practice of War in Europe 300 1500 London Palgrave ISBN 978 0 333 76331 5 Ormrod W M 2012 Edward III Yale English Monarchs New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11910 7 Perroy E 1965 The Hundred Years War Translated by Wells W B New York Capricorn published 1945 p 164 OCLC 773517536 Prestwich M 1988 Edward I Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06266 5 Prestwich M 2003 The Three Edwards War and State in England 1272 1377 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 30309 5 Prestwich M 2007 Plantagenet England 1225 1360 New Oxford History of England Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 922687 0 Rogers C J 2000 The Wars of Edward III Sources and Interpretations Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 646 0 Rogers C J 2005 Sir Thomas Dagworth in Brittany 1346 7 Restellou and La Roche Derrien In Rogers C J amp de Vries K eds The Journal of Medieval Military History Vol III Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press pp 127 54 ISBN 978 1 84383 171 6 Sherborne J W 1964 Indentured Retainers and English Expeditions to France 1369 80 The English Historical Review 79 718 746 doi 10 1093 ehr LXXIX CCCXIII 718 OCLC 51205098 Sumption J 2009 The Hundred Years War Divided Houses Vol III paperback ed London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 24012 8 Tout T F 1965 The History of England from the Accession of Henry III to the Reign of Edward III 1216 1377 Vol III repr ed New York Haskell House OCLC 499188639 Wagner John A 2006a Bretigny Treaty of Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War Woodbridge Suffolk Greenwood pp 250 252 ISBN 978 0 313 32736 0 Wagner John A 2006b Guesclin Bertrand du Constable of France Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War Woodbridge Suffolk Greenwood pp 141 142 ISBN 978 0 313 32736 0 Wagner John A 2006c Hundred Years War Causes of Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War Woodbridge Suffolk Greenwood pp 157 159 ISBN 978 0 313 32736 0 Wagner John A 2006d Hundred Years War Phases of Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War Woodbridge Suffolk Greenwood pp 160 164 ISBN 978 0 313 32736 0 Wagner John A 2006e Philip VI King of France 1293 1350 Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War Woodbridge Suffolk Greenwood pp 250 252 ISBN 978 0 313 32736 0 47 46 08 N 00 12 25 E 47 76889 N 0 20694 E 47 76889 0 20694 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Pontvallain amp oldid 1172014631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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