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Hundred Years' War

The Hundred Years' War (French: La guerre de Cent Ans; 1337–1453) was a series of armed conflicts between the kingdoms of England and France during the Late Middle Ages. It originated from disputed claims to the French throne between the English House of Plantagenet and the French royal House of Valois. Over time, the war grew into a broader power struggle involving factions from across Western Europe, fuelled by emerging nationalism on both sides.

Hundred Years' War
Part of the Anglo-French Wars

Clockwise, from top left: the Battle of La Rochelle, the Battle of Agincourt, the Battle of Patay, and Joan of Arc at the Siege of Orléans
Date24 May 1337 – 19 October 1453[d]
(116 years, 4 months, 3 weeks and 4 days)
Location
Result French victory
Full results
Territorial
changes
England loses all continental possessions except for the Pale of Calais.
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders

The Hundred Years' War was one of the most significant conflicts of the Middle Ages. For 116 years, interrupted by several truces, five generations of kings from two rival dynasties fought for the throne of the dominant kingdom in Western Europe. The war's effect on European history was lasting. Both sides produced innovations in military technology and tactics, including professional standing armies and artillery, that permanently changed warfare in Europe; chivalry, which had reached its height during the conflict, subsequently declined. Stronger national identities took root in both countries, which became more centralised and gradually rose as global powers.[1]

The term "Hundred Years' War" was adopted by later historians as a historiographical periodisation to encompass related conflicts, constructing the longest military conflict in European history. The war is commonly divided into three phases separated by truces: the Edwardian War (1337–1360), the Caroline War (1369–1389), and the Lancastrian War (1415–1453). Each side drew many allies into the conflict, with English forces initially prevailing. The House of Valois ultimately retained control over France, with the previously intertwined French and English monarchies thereafter remaining separate.

Overview

Origins

The root causes of the conflict can be traced to the crisis of 14th-century Europe. The outbreak of war was motivated by a gradual rise in tension between the kings of France and England over territory; the official pretext was the question that arose because of the interruption of the direct male line of the Capetian dynasty.

Tensions between the French and English crowns had gone back centuries to the origins of the English royal family, which was French (Norman, and later, Angevin) in origin because of William the Conqueror, the Norman duke who became King of England in 1066. English monarchs had therefore historically held titles and lands within France, which made them vassals to the kings of France. The status of the English king's French fiefs was a major source of conflict between the two monarchies throughout the Middle Ages. French monarchs systematically sought to check the growth of English power, stripping away lands as the opportunity arose, particularly whenever England was at war with Scotland, an ally of France. English holdings in France had varied in size, at some points dwarfing even the French royal domain; by 1337, however, only Gascony was English.

In 1328, Charles IV of France died without sons or brothers, and a new principle, Salic law, disallowed female succession. Charles's closest male relative was his nephew Edward III of England, whose mother, Isabella, was Charles's sister. Isabella claimed the throne of France for her son by the rule of proximity of blood, but the French nobility rejected this, maintaining that Isabella could not transmit a right she did not possess. An assembly of French barons decided that a native Frenchman should receive the crown, rather than Edward.[2]

So the throne passed instead to Charles's patrilineal cousin, Philip, Count of Valois. Edward protested but ultimately submitted and did homage for Gascony. Further French disagreements with Edward induced Philip, during May 1337, to meet with his Great Council in Paris. It was agreed that Gascony should be taken back into Philip's hands, which prompted Edward to renew his claim for the French throne, this time by force of arms.[3]

Edwardian Phase

In the early years of the war, the English, led by their king and his son Edward, the Black Prince, saw resounding successes (notably at Crécy in 1346 and at Poitiers in 1356 where King John II of France was taken prisoner).

Caroline Phase and Black Death

By 1378, under King Charles V the Wise and the leadership of Bertrand du Guesclin, the French had reconquered most of the lands ceded to King Edward in the Treaty of Brétigny (signed in 1360), leaving the English with only a few cities on the continent.

In the following decades, the weakening of royal authority, combined with the devastation caused by the Black Death of 1347–1351 (with the loss of nearly half of the French population[4] and between 20% and 33% of the English one[5]) and the major economic crisis that followed, led to a period of civil unrest in both countries. These crises were resolved in England earlier than in France.

Lancastrian Phase and after

The newly crowned Henry V of England seized the opportunity presented by the mental illness of Charles VI of France and the French civil war between Armagnacs and Burgundians to revive the conflict. Overwhelming victories at Agincourt in 1415 and Verneuil in 1424 as well as an alliance with the Burgundians raised the prospects of an ultimate English triumph and persuaded the English to continue the war over many decades. However, a variety of factors such as the deaths of both Henry and Charles in 1422, the emergence of Joan of Arc which boosted French morale, and the loss of Burgundy as an ally—marking the end of the civil war in France—prevented it.

The Siege of Orléans in 1429 announced the beginning of the end for English hopes of conquest. Even with the eventual capture of Joan by the Burgundians and her execution in 1431, a series of crushing French victories such as those at Patay in 1429, Formigny in 1450 and Castillon in 1453 concluded the war in favour of the Valois dynasty. England permanently lost most of its continental possessions, with only the Pale of Calais remaining under its control on the continent, until it too was lost in the Siege of Calais in 1558.

Related conflicts and aftereffects

Local conflicts in neighbouring areas, which were contemporarily related to the war, including the War of the Breton Succession (1341–1364), the Castilian Civil War (1366–1369), the War of the Two Peters (1356–1369) in Aragon, and the 1383–85 crisis in Portugal, were used by the parties to advance their agendas.

By the War's end, feudal armies had been largely replaced by professional troops, and aristocratic dominance had yielded to a democratisation of the manpower and weapons of armies. Although primarily a dynastic conflict, the war inspired French and English nationalism. The wider introduction of weapons and tactics supplanted the feudal armies where heavy cavalry had dominated, and artillery became important. The war precipitated the creation of the first standing armies in Western Europe since the Western Roman Empire, and helped change their role in warfare.

In France, civil wars, deadly epidemics, famines, and bandit free-companies of mercenaries reduced the population drastically. In England, political forces over time came to oppose the costly venture. The dissatisfaction of English nobles, resulting from the loss of their continental landholdings, as well as the general shock at losing a war in which investment had been so great, helped lead to the Wars of the Roses (1455–1487).

Causes and prelude

Dynastic turmoil in France: 1316–1328

The question of female succession to the French throne was raised after the death of Louis X in 1316. Louis left behind a young daughter, Joan II of Navarre, and a son, John I of France, although he only lived for five days. However, Joan’s paternity was in question, as her mother, Margaret of Burgundy, was accused of being an adulterer in the Tour de Nesle affair. Given the situation, Philip, Count of Poitiers and brother of Louis X, positioned himself to take the crown, advancing the stance that women should be ineligible to succeed to the French throne. Through his political sagacity he won over his adversaries and succeeded to the French throne as Philip V. When he died in 1322, leaving only daughters behind, the crown then passed to his younger brother, Charles IV. [6]

Charles IV died in 1328, leaving behind his young daughter and pregnant wife, Joan of Évreux. He decreed that, if the unborn child was male, he would become king. If not, Charles left the choice of his successor to the nobles. Joan gave birth to a girl, Blanche of France (later Duchess of Orleans). With the death of Charles IV and birth of Blanche, the main male line of the House of Capet was rendered extinct.

By proximity of blood, the nearest male relative of Charles IV was his nephew, Edward III of England. Edward was the son of Isabella, the sister of the dead Charles IV, but the question arose whether she should be able to transmit a right to inherit that she did not herself possess. Moreover, the French nobility baulked at the prospect of being ruled by an Englishman; especially one whose mother, Isabella, and her lover, Roger Mortimer, were widely suspected of having murdered the previous English king, Edward II. The assemblies of the French barons, prelates, and the University of Paris decided that males who derive their right to inheritance through their mother should be excluded from consideration. Therefore, excluding Edward, the nearest heir through the male line was Charles IV's first cousin, Philip, Count of Valois, and it was decided that he should take the throne. He was crowned Philip VI in 1328. In 1340 the Avignon papacy confirmed that, under Salic law, males would not be able to inherit through their mothers.[6][2]

Eventually, Edward III reluctantly recognized Philip VI and paid him homage for the duchy of Aquitaine and Gascony in 1329. He made concessions in Guyenne, but reserved the right to reclaim territories arbitrarily confiscated. After that, he expected to be left undisturbed while he made war on Scotland.

The dispute over Guyenne: a problem of sovereignty

 
Homage of Edward I of England (kneeling) to Philip IV of France (seated), 1286. As Duke of Aquitaine, Edward was also a vassal to the French King (illumination by Jean Fouquet from the Grandes Chroniques de France in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris).

Tensions between the French and English monarchies can be traced back to the 1066 Norman Conquest of England, in which the English throne was seized by the Duke of Normandy, a vassal of the King of France. As a result, the crown of England was held by a succession of nobles who already owned lands in France, which put them among the most powerful subjects of the French King, as they could now draw upon the economic power of England to enforce their interests in the mainland. To the kings of France, this dangerously threatened their royal authority, and so they would constantly try to undermine English rule in France, while the English monarchs would struggle to protect and expand their lands. This clash of interests was the root cause of much of the conflict between the French and English monarchies throughout the medieval era.

The Anglo-Norman dynasty that had ruled England since the Norman conquest of 1066 was brought to an end when Henry, the son of Geoffrey of Anjou and Empress Matilda, and great-grandson of William the Conqueror, became the first of the Angevin kings of England in 1154 as Henry II.[7] The Angevin kings ruled over what was later known as the Angevin Empire, which included more French territory than that under the kings of France. The Angevins still owed homage for these territories to the French king. From the 11th century, the Angevins had autonomy within their French domains, neutralising the issue.[8]

King John of England inherited the Angevin domains from his brother Richard I. However, Philip II of France acted decisively to exploit the weaknesses of John, both legally and militarily, and by 1204 had succeeded in taking control of much of the Angevin continental possessions. Following John's reign, the Battle of Bouvines (1214), the Saintonge War (1242), and finally the War of Saint-Sardos (1324), the English king's holdings on the continent, as Duke of Aquitaine, were limited roughly to provinces in Gascony.[9]

The dispute over Guyenne is even more important than the dynastic question in explaining the outbreak of the war. Guyenne posed a significant problem to the kings of France and England: Edward III was a vassal of Philip VI of France because of his French possessions and was required to recognise the suzerainty of the King of France over them. In practical terms, a judgment in Guyenne might be subject to an appeal to the French royal court. The King of France had the power to revoke all legal decisions made by the King of England in Aquitaine, which was unacceptable to the English. Therefore, sovereignty over Guyenne was a latent conflict between the two monarchies for several generations.

During the War of Saint-Sardos, Charles of Valois, father of Philip VI, invaded Aquitaine on behalf of Charles IV and conquered the duchy after a local insurrection, which the French believed had been incited by Edward II of England. Charles IV grudgingly agreed to return this territory in 1325. To recover his duchy, Edward II had to compromise: he sent his son, the future Edward III, to pay homage.

The King of France agreed to restore Guyenne, minus Agen but the French delayed the return of the lands, which helped Philip VI. On 6 June 1329, Edward III finally paid homage to the King of France. However, at the ceremony, Philip VI had it recorded that the homage was not due to the fiefs detached from the duchy of Guyenne by Charles IV (especially Agen). For Edward, the homage did not imply the renunciation of his claim to the extorted lands.

Gascony under the King of England

 
France in 1330.
  France before 1214
  French acquisitions until 1330
  England and Guyenne/Gascony as of 1330

In the 11th century, Gascony in southwest France had been incorporated into Aquitaine (also known as Guyenne or Guienne) and formed with it the province of Guyenne and Gascony (French: Guyenne-et-Gascogne). The Angevin kings of England became Dukes of Aquitaine after Henry II married the former Queen of France, Eleanor of Aquitaine, in 1152, from which point the lands were held in vassalage to the French Crown. By the 13th century the terms Aquitaine, Guyenne and Gascony were virtually synonymous.[10]

At the beginning of Edward III's reign on 1 February 1327, the only part of Aquitaine that remained in his hands was the Duchy of Gascony. The term Gascony came to be used for the territory held by the Angevin (Plantagenet) Kings of England in southwest France, although they still used the title Duke of Aquitaine.[11]

For the first 10 years of Edward III's reign, Gascony had been a major point of friction. The English argued that, as Charles IV had not acted in a proper way towards his tenant, Edward should be able to hold the duchy free of any French suzerainty. This argument was rejected by the French, so in 1329, the 17-year-old Edward III paid homage to Philip VI. Tradition demanded that vassals approach their liege unarmed, with heads bare. Edward protested by attending the ceremony wearing his crown and sword.[12] Even after this pledge of homage, the French continued to pressure the English administration.[13]

Gascony was not the only sore point. One of Edward's influential advisers was Robert III of Artois. Robert was an exile from the French court, having fallen out with Philip VI over an inheritance claim. He urged Edward to start a war to reclaim France, and was able to provide extensive intelligence on the French court.[14]

Franco-Scot alliance

France was an ally of the Kingdom of Scotland as English kings had for some time tried to subjugate the country. In 1295, a treaty was signed between France and Scotland during the reign of Philip the Fair known as the Auld Alliance. Charles IV formally renewed the treaty in 1326, promising Scotland that France would support the Scots if England invaded their country. Similarly, France would have Scotland's support if its own kingdom were attacked. Edward could not succeed in his plans for Scotland if the Scots could count on French support.[15]

Philip VI had assembled a large naval fleet off Marseilles as part of an ambitious plan for a crusade to the Holy Land. However, the plan was abandoned and the fleet, including elements of the Scottish navy, moved to the English Channel off Normandy in 1336, threatening England.[14] To deal with this crisis, Edward proposed that the English raise two armies, one to deal with the Scots "at a suitable time", the other to proceed at once to Gascony. At the same time, ambassadors were to be sent to France with a proposed treaty for the French king.[16]

Beginning of the war: 1337–1360

 
Animated map showing progress of the war (territorial changes and the most important battles between 1337 and 1453).

End of homage

At the end of April 1337, Philip of France was invited to meet the delegation from England but refused. The arrière-ban, literally a call to arms, was proclaimed throughout France starting on 30 April 1337. Then, in May 1337, Philip met with his Great Council in Paris. It was agreed that the Duchy of Aquitaine, effectively Gascony, should be taken back into the king's hands on the grounds that Edward III was in breach of his obligations as vassal and had sheltered the king's 'mortal enemy' Robert d'Artois.[17] Edward responded to the confiscation of Aquitaine by challenging Philip's right to the French throne.

When Charles IV died, Edward had made a claim for the succession of the French throne, through the right of his mother Isabella (Charles IV's sister), daughter of Philip IV. Any claim was considered invalidated by Edward's homage to Philip VI in 1329. Edward revived his claim and in 1340 formally assumed the title 'King of France and the French Royal Arms'.[18]

On 26 January 1340, Edward III formally received homage from Guy, half-brother of the Count of Flanders. The civic authorities of Ghent, Ypres and Bruges proclaimed Edward King of France. Edward's purpose was to strengthen his alliances with the Low Countries. His supporters would be able to claim that they were loyal to the "true" King of France and were not rebels against Philip. In February 1340, Edward returned to England to try to raise more funds and also deal with political difficulties.[19]

Relations with Flanders were also tied to the English wool trade, since Flanders' principal cities relied heavily on textile production and England supplied much of the raw material they needed. Edward III had commanded that his chancellor sit on the woolsack in council as a symbol of the pre-eminence of the wool trade.[20] At the time there were about 110,000 sheep in Sussex alone.[21] The great medieval English monasteries produced large surpluses of wool that were sold to mainland Europe. Successive governments were able to make large amounts of money by taxing it.[20] France's sea power led to economic disruptions for England, shrinking the wool trade to Flanders and the wine trade from Gascony.[22]

Outbreak, the English Channel and Brittany

 

On 22 June 1340, Edward and his fleet sailed from England and the next day arrived off the Zwin estuary. The French fleet assumed a defensive formation off the port of Sluis. The English fleet deceived the French into believing they were withdrawing. When the wind turned in the late afternoon, the English attacked with the wind and sun behind them. The French fleet was almost completely destroyed in what became known as the Battle of Sluys.

England dominated the English Channel for the rest of the war, preventing French invasions.[19] At this point, Edward's funds ran out and the war probably would have ended were it not for the death of the Duke of Brittany in 1341 precipitating a succession dispute between the duke's half-brother John of Montfort and Charles of Blois, nephew of Philip VI.[23]

In 1341, conflict over the succession to the Duchy of Brittany began the War of the Breton Succession, in which Edward backed John of Montfort and Philip backed Charles of Blois. Action for the next few years focused around a back-and-forth struggle in Brittany. The city of Vannes in Brittany changed hands several times, while further campaigns in Gascony met with mixed success for both sides.[23] The English-backed Montfort finally succeeded in taking the duchy but not until 1364.[24]

Battle of Crécy and the taking of Calais

In July 1346, Edward mounted a major invasion across the channel, landing in Normandy's Cotentin, at St. Vaast. The English army captured the city of Caen in just one day, surprising the French. Philip mustered a large army to oppose Edward, who chose to march northward toward the Low Countries, pillaging as he went. He reached the river Seine to find most of the crossings destroyed. He moved further and further south, worryingly close to Paris, until he found the crossing at Poissy. This had only been partially destroyed, so the carpenters within his army were able to fix it. He then continued on his way to Flanders until he reached the river Somme. The army crossed at a tidal ford at Blanchetaque, leaving Philip's army stranded. Edward, assisted by this head start, continued on his way to Flanders once more, until, finding himself unable to outmanoeuvre Philip, Edward positioned his forces for battle and Philip's army attacked.

 
Edward III counting the dead on the battlefield of Crécy

The Battle of Crécy of 1346 was a complete disaster for the French, largely credited to the longbowmen and the French king, who allowed his army to attack before it was ready.[25] Philip appealed to his Scottish allies to help with a diversionary attack on England. King David II of Scotland responded by invading northern England, but his army was defeated and he was captured at the Battle of Neville's Cross, on 17 October 1346. This greatly reduced the threat from Scotland.[23][26]

In France, Edward proceeded north unopposed and besieged the city of Calais on the English Channel, capturing it in 1347. This became an important strategic asset for the English, allowing them to keep troops safely in northern France.[25] Calais would remain under English control, even after the end of the Hundred Years' War, until the successful French siege in 1558.[27]

Battle of Poitiers

The Black Death, which had just arrived in Paris in 1348, began to ravage Europe.[28] In 1355, after the plague had passed and England was able to recover financially,[29] King Edward's son and namesake, the Prince of Wales, later known as the Black Prince, led a Chevauchée from Gascony into France, during which he pillaged Avignonet and Castelnaudary, sacked Carcassonne, and plundered Narbonne. The next year during another Chevauchée he ravaged Auvergne, Limousin, and Berry but failed to take Bourges. He offered terms of peace to King John II of France (known as John the Good), who had outflanked him near Poitiers, but refused to surrender himself as the price of their acceptance.

This led to the Battle of Poitiers (19 September 1356) where the Black Prince's army routed the French.[30] During the battle, the Gascon noble Jean de Grailly, captal de Buch led a mounted unit that was concealed in a forest. The French advance was contained, at which point de Grailly led a flanking movement with his horsemen cutting off the French retreat and succeeding in capturing King John and many of his nobles.[31] With John held hostage, his son the Dauphin (later to become Charles V) assumed the powers of the king as regent.[32]

After the Battle of Poitiers, many French nobles and mercenaries rampaged, and chaos ruled. A contemporary report recounted:

... all went ill with the kingdom and the State was undone. Thieves and robbers rose up everywhere in the land. The Nobles despised and hated all others and took no thought for usefulness and profit of lord and men. They subjected and despoiled the peasants and the men of the villages. In no wise did they defend their country from its enemies; rather did they trample it underfoot, robbing and pillaging the peasants' goods ...

— From the Chronicles of Jean de Venette[33]

Reims Campaign and Black Monday

 
Black Monday (1360), hailstorms and lightning ravage the English army at Chartres

Edward invaded France, for the third and last time, hoping to capitalise on the discontent and seize the throne. The Dauphin's strategy was that of non-engagement with the English army in the field. However, Edward wanted the crown and chose the cathedral city of Reims for his coronation (Reims was the traditional coronation city).[34] However, the citizens of Reims built and reinforced the city's defences before Edward and his army arrived.[35] Edward besieged the city for five weeks, but the defences held and there was no coronation.[34] Edward moved on to Paris, but retreated after a few skirmishes in the suburbs. Next was the town of Chartres.

Disaster struck in a freak hailstorm on the encamped army, causing over 1,000 English deaths – the so-called Black Monday at Easter 1360. This devastated Edward's army and forced him to negotiate when approached by the French.[36] A conference was held at Brétigny that resulted in the Treaty of Brétigny (8 May 1360).[37] The treaty was ratified at Calais in October. In return for increased lands in Aquitaine, Edward renounced Normandy, Touraine, Anjou and Maine and consented to reduce King John's ransom by a million crowns. Edward also abandoned his claim to the crown of France.[38]

First peace: 1360–1369

 
France at the Treaty of Brétigny, English holdings in light red

The French king, John II, had been held captive in England. The Treaty of Brétigny set his ransom at 3 million crowns and allowed for hostages to be held in lieu of John. The hostages included two of his sons, several princes and nobles, four inhabitants of Paris, and two citizens from each of the nineteen principal towns of France. While these hostages were held, John returned to France to try and raise funds to pay the ransom. In 1362 John's son Louis of Anjou, a hostage in English-held Calais, escaped captivity. So, with his stand-in hostage gone, John felt honour-bound to return to captivity in England.[32][39]

The French crown had been at odds with Navarre (near southern Gascony) since 1354, and in 1363 the Navarrese used the captivity of John II in London and the political weakness of the Dauphin to try to seize power.[40] Although there was no formal treaty, Edward III supported the Navarrese moves, particularly as there was a prospect that he might gain control over the northern and western provinces as a consequence. With this in mind, Edward deliberately slowed the peace negotiations.[41] In 1364, John II died in London, while still in honourable captivity.[42] Charles V succeeded him as king of France.[32][43] On 16 May, one month after the dauphin's accession and three days before his coronation as Charles V, the Navarrese suffered a crushing defeat at the Battle of Cocherel.[44]

French ascendancy under Charles V: 1369–1389

Aquitaine and Castile

In 1366 there was a civil war of succession in Castile (part of modern Spain). The forces of the ruler Peter of Castile were pitched against those of his half-brother Henry of Trastámara. The English crown supported Peter; the French supported Henry. French forces were led by Bertrand du Guesclin, a Breton, who rose from relatively humble beginnings to prominence as one of France's war leaders. Charles V provided a force of 12,000, with du Guesclin at their head, to support Trastámara in his invasion of Castile.[45]

 

Peter appealed to England and Aquitaine's Black Prince for help, but none was forthcoming, forcing Peter into exile in Aquitaine. The Black Prince had previously agreed to support Peter's claims but concerns over the terms of the treaty of Brétigny led him to assist Peter as a representative of Aquitaine, rather than England. He then led an Anglo-Gascon army into Castile. Peter was restored to power after Trastámara's army was defeated at the Battle of Nájera.[46]

Although the Castilians had agreed to fund the Black Prince, they failed to do so. The Prince was suffering from ill health and returned with his army to Aquitaine. To pay off debts incurred during the Castile campaign, the prince instituted a hearth tax. Arnaud-Amanieu VIII, Lord of Albret had fought on the Black Prince's side during the war. Albret, who already had become discontented by the influx of English administrators into the enlarged Aquitaine, refused to allow the tax to be collected in his fief. He then joined a group of Gascon lords who appealed to Charles V for support in their refusal to pay the tax. Charles V summoned one Gascon lord and the Black Prince to hear the case in his High Court in Paris. The Black Prince answered that he would go to Paris with sixty thousand men behind him. War broke out again and Edward III resumed the title of King of France.[47] Charles V declared that all the English possessions in France were forfeited, and before the end of 1369 all of Aquitaine was in full revolt.[48]

With the Black Prince gone from Castile, Henry of Trastámara led a second invasion that ended with Peter's death at the Battle of Montiel in March 1369. The new Castilian regime provided naval support to French campaigns against Aquitaine and England.[46] In 1372 the Castilian fleet defeated the English fleet in the Battle of La Rochelle.

1373 campaign of John of Gaunt

In August 1373, John of Gaunt, accompanied by John de Montfort, Duke of Brittany led a force of 9,000 men from Calais on a chevauchée. While initially successful as French forces were insufficiently concentrated to oppose them, the English met more resistance as they moved south. French forces began to concentrate around the English force but under orders from Charles V, the French avoided a set battle. Instead, they fell on forces detached from the main body to raid or forage. The French shadowed the English and in October, the English found themselves trapped against the River Allier by four French forces. With some difficulty, the English crossed at the bridge at Moulins but lost all their baggage and loot. The English carried on south across the Limousin plateau but the weather was turning severe. Men and horses died in great numbers and many soldiers, forced to march on foot, discarded their armour. At the beginning of December, the English army entered friendly territory in Gascony. By the end of December they were in Bordeaux, starving, ill-equipped and having lost over half of the 30,000 horses with which they had left Calais. Although the march across France had been a remarkable feat, it was a military failure.[49]

English turmoil

 
The Franco-Castilian Navy, led by Admirals de Vienne and Tovar, managed to raid the English coasts for the first time since the beginning of the Hundred Years' War.

With his health deteriorating, the Black Prince returned to England in January 1371, where his father Edward III was elderly and also in poor health. The prince's illness was debilitating, and he died on 8 June 1376.[50] Edward III died the following year on 21 June 1377[51] and was succeeded by the Black Prince's second son Richard II who was still a child of 10 (Edward of Angoulême, the Black Prince's first son, had died sometime earlier).[52] The treaty of Brétigny had left Edward III and England with enlarged holdings in France, but a small professional French army under the leadership of du Guesclin pushed the English back; by the time Charles V died in 1380, the English held only Calais and a few other ports.[53]

It was usual to appoint a regent in the case of a child monarch but no regent was appointed for Richard II, who nominally exercised the power of kingship from the date of his accession in 1377.[52] Between 1377 and 1380, actual power was in the hands of a series of councils. The political community preferred this to a regency led by the king's uncle, John of Gaunt, although Gaunt remained highly influential.[52] Richard faced many challenges during his reign, including the Peasants' Revolt led by Wat Tyler in 1381 and an Anglo-Scottish war in 1384–1385. His attempts to raise taxes to pay for his Scottish adventure and for the protection of Calais against the French made him increasingly unpopular.[52]

1380 campaign of the Earl of Buckingham

In July 1380, the Earl of Buckingham commanded an expedition to France to aid England's ally, the Duke of Brittany. The French refused battle before the walls of Troyes on 25 August; Buckingham's forces continued their chevauchée and in November laid siege to Nantes.[54] The support expected from the Duke of Brittany did not appear and in the face of severe losses in men and horses, Buckingham was forced to abandon the siege in January 1381.[55] In February, reconciled to the regime of the new French king Charles VI by the Treaty of Guérande, Brittany paid 50,000 francs to Buckingham for him to abandon the siege and the campaign.[56]

French turmoil

After the deaths of Charles V and du Guesclin in 1380, France lost its main leadership and overall momentum in the war. Charles VI succeeded his father as king of France at the age of 11, and he was thus put under a regency led by his uncles, who managed to maintain an effective grip on government affairs until about 1388, well after Charles had achieved royal majority.

With France facing widespread destruction, plague, and economic recession, high taxation put a heavy burden on the French peasantry and urban communities. The war effort against England largely depended on royal taxation, but the population was increasingly unwilling to pay for it, as would be demonstrated at the Harelle and Maillotin revolts in 1382. Charles V had abolished many of these taxes on his deathbed, but subsequent attempts to reinstate them stirred up hostility between the French government and populace.

Philip II of Burgundy, the uncle of the French king, brought together a Burgundian-French army and a fleet of 1,200 ships near the Zeeland town of Sluis in the summer and autumn of 1386 to attempt an invasion of England, but this venture failed. However, Philip's brother John of Berry appeared deliberately late, so that the autumn weather prevented the fleet from leaving and the invading army then dispersed again.

Difficulties in raising taxes and revenue hampered the ability of the French to fight the English. At this point, the war's pace had largely slowed down, and both nations found themselves fighting mainly through proxy wars, such as during the 1383–1385 Portuguese interregnum. The independence party in the Kingdom of Portugal, which was supported by the English, won against the supporters of the King of Castile's claim to the Portuguese throne, who in turn was backed by the French.

Second peace: 1389–1415

 
France in 1388, just before signing a truce. English territories are shown in red, French royal territories are dark blue, papal territories are orange, and French vassals have the other colours.

The war became increasingly unpopular with the English public due to the high taxes needed for the war effort. These taxes were seen as one of the reasons for the Peasants' Revolt.[57] Richard II's indifference to the war together with his preferential treatment of a select few close friends and advisors angered an alliance of lords that included one of his uncles. This group, known as Lords Appellant, managed to press charges of treason against five of Richard's advisors and friends in the Merciless Parliament. The Lords Appellant were able to gain control of the council in 1388 but failed to reignite the war in France. Although the will was there, the funds to pay the troops was lacking, so in the autumn of 1388 the Council agreed to resume negotiations with the French crown, beginning on 18 June 1389 with the signing of the three-year Truce of Leulinghem.[58]

In 1389, Richard's uncle and supporter, John of Gaunt, returned from Spain and Richard was able to rebuild his power gradually until 1397, when he reasserted his authority and destroyed the principal three among the Lords Appellant. In 1399, after John of Gaunt died, Richard II disinherited Gaunt's son, the exiled Henry of Bolingbroke. Bolingbroke returned to England with his supporters, deposed Richard and had himself crowned Henry IV.[52][59] In Scotland, the problems brought in by the English regime change prompted border raids that were countered by an invasion in 1402 and the defeat of a Scottish army at the Battle of Homildon Hill.[60] A dispute over the spoils between Henry and Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, resulted in a long and bloody struggle between the two for control of northern England, resolved only with the almost complete destruction of the House of Percy by 1408.[61]

In Wales, Owain Glyndŵr was declared Prince of Wales on 16 September 1400. He was the leader of the most serious and widespread rebellion against England authority in Wales since the conquest of 1282–1283. In 1405, the French allied with Glyndŵr and the Castilians in Spain; a Franco-Welsh army advanced as far as Worcester, while the Spaniards used galleys to raid and burn all the way from Cornwall to Southampton, before taking refuge in Harfleur for the winter.[62] The Glyndŵr Rising was finally put down in 1415 and resulted in Welsh semi-independence for a number of years.[63][clarification needed]

In 1392, Charles VI suddenly descended into madness, forcing France into a regency dominated by his uncles and his brother. A conflict for control over the Regency began between his uncle Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy and his brother, Louis of Valois, Duke of Orléans. After Philip's death, his son and heir John the Fearless continued the struggle against Louis but with the disadvantage of having no close relation to the king. Finding himself outmanoeuvred politically, John ordered the assassination of Louis in retaliation. His involvement in the murder was quickly revealed and the Armagnac family took political power in opposition to John. By 1410, both sides were bidding for the help of English forces in a civil war.[64] In 1418 Paris was taken by the Burgundians, who were unable to stop the massacre of Count of Armagnac and his followers by a Parisian crowd, with an estimated death toll between 1,000 and 5,000.[65]

Throughout this period, England confronted repeated raids by pirates that damaged trade and the navy. There is some evidence that Henry IV used state-legalised piracy as a form of warfare in the English Channel. He used such privateering campaigns to pressure enemies without risking open war.[66] The French responded in kind and French pirates, under Scottish protection, raided many English coastal towns.[67] The domestic and dynastic difficulties faced by England and France in this period quieted the war for a decade.[67] Henry IV died in 1413 and was replaced by his eldest son Henry V. The mental illness of Charles VI of France allowed his power to be exercised by royal princes whose rivalries caused deep divisions in France. In 1414 while Henry held court at Leicester, he received ambassadors from Burgundy.[68] Henry accredited envoys to the French king to make clear his territorial claims in France; he also demanded the hand of Charles VI's youngest daughter Catherine of Valois. The French rejected his demands, leading Henry to prepare for war.[68]

Resumption of the war under Henry V: 1415–1429

Burgundian alliance and the seizure of Paris

Battle of Agincourt (1415)

 
Fifteenth-century miniature depicting the Battle of Agincourt of 1415

In August 1415, Henry V sailed from England with a force of about 10,500 and laid siege to Harfleur. The city resisted for longer than expected, but finally surrendered on 22 September. Because of the unexpected delay, most of the campaign season was gone. Rather than march on Paris directly, Henry elected to make a raiding expedition across France toward English-occupied Calais. In a campaign reminiscent of Crécy, he found himself outmanoeuvred and low on supplies and had to fight a much larger French army at the Battle of Agincourt, north of the Somme. Despite the problems and having a smaller force, his victory was near-total; the French defeat was catastrophic, costing the lives of many of the Armagnac leaders. About 40% of the French nobility was killed.[4] Henry was apparently concerned that the large number of prisoners taken were a security risk (there were more French prisoners than there were soldiers in the entire English army) and he ordered their deaths.[68]

Treaty of Troyes (1420)

Henry retook much of Normandy, including Caen in 1417, and Rouen on 19 January 1419, turning Normandy English for the first time in two centuries. A formal alliance was made with Burgundy, which had taken Paris in 1418 before the assassination of Duke John the Fearless in 1419. In 1420, Henry met with King Charles VI. They signed the Treaty of Troyes, by which Henry finally married Charles' daughter Catherine of Valois and Henry's heirs would inherit the throne of France. The Dauphin, Charles VII, was declared illegitimate. Henry formally entered Paris later that year and the agreement was ratified by the Estates-General (French: Les États-Généraux).[68]

Death of the Duke of Clarence (1421)

 
Clan Carmichael crest with a broken lance commemorating the unseating of the Duke of Clarence, leading to his death at the Battle of Baugé

On 22 March 1421 Henry V's progress in his French campaign experienced an unexpected reversal. Henry had left his brother and presumptive heir Thomas, Duke of Clarence in charge while he returned to England. Clarence engaged a Franco-Scottish force of 5000 men, led by Gilbert Motier de La Fayette and John Stewart, Earl of Buchan at the Battle of Baugé. Clarence, against the advice of his lieutenants, before his army had been fully assembled, attacked with a force of no more than 1500 men-at-arms. Then, during the course of the battle, he led a charge of a few hundred men into the main body of the Franco-Scottish army, who quickly enveloped the English. In the ensuing mêlée, the Scot, John Carmichael of Douglasdale, broke his lance unhorsing the Duke of Clarence. Once on the ground, the duke was slain by Alexander Buchanan.[69] The body of the Duke of Clarence was recovered from the field by Thomas Montacute, 4th Earl of Salisbury, who conducted the English retreat.[70]

English success

Henry V returned to France and went to Paris, then visiting Chartres and Gâtinais before returning to Paris. From there, he decided to attack the Dauphin-held town of Meaux. It turned out to be more difficult to overcome than first thought. The siege began about 6 October 1421, and the town held for seven months before finally falling on 11 May 1422.[68]

At the end of May, Henry was joined by his queen and together with the French court, they went to rest at Senlis. While there, it became apparent that he was ill (possibly dysentery), and when he set out to the Upper Loire, he diverted to the royal castle at Vincennes, near Paris, where he died on 31 August.[68] The elderly and insane Charles VI of France died two months later on 21 October. Henry left an only child, his nine-month-old son, Henry, later to become Henry VI.[71]

On his deathbed, as Henry VI was only an infant, Henry V had given the Duke of Bedford responsibility for English France. The war in France continued under Bedford's generalship and several battles were won. The English won an emphatic victory at the Battle of Verneuil (17 August 1424). At the Battle of Baugé, the Duke of Clarence had rushed into battle without the support of his archers. At Verneuil, the archers fought to devastating effect against the Franco-Scottish army. The effect of the battle was to virtually destroy the Dauphin's field army and to eliminate the Scots as a significant military force for the rest of the war.[72]

French victory: 1429–1453

Joan of Arc and French revival

 
The first Western image of a battle with cannon: the Siege of Orléans in 1429. From Les Vigiles de Charles VII, Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris.
 
Joan of Arc (picture 1429)

The appearance of Joan of Arc at the siege of Orléans sparked a revival of French spirit, and the tide began to turn against the English.[71] The English laid siege to Orléans in 1428, but their force was insufficient to fully invest the city. In 1429 Joan persuaded the Dauphin to send her to the siege, saying she had received visions from God telling her to drive out the English. She raised the morale of the troops, and they attacked the English redoubts, forcing the English to lift the siege. Inspired by Joan, the French took several English strongholds on the Loire.[73]

The English retreated from the Loire Valley, pursued by a French army. Near the village of Patay, French cavalry broke through a unit of English longbowmen that had been sent to block the road, then swept through the retreating English army. The English lost 2,200 men, and the commander, John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, was taken prisoner. This victory opened the way for the Dauphin to march to Reims for his coronation as Charles VII, on 16 July 1429.[73][74]

After the coronation, Charles VII's army fared less well. An attempted French siege of Paris was defeated on 8 September 1429, and Charles VII withdrew to the Loire Valley.[75]

Henry's coronations and the desertion of Burgundy

Henry VI was crowned king of England at Westminster Abbey on 5 November 1429 and king of France at Notre-Dame, in Paris, on 16 December 1431.[71]

Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundians at the siege of Compiègne on 23 May 1430. The Burgundians then transferred her to the English, who organised a trial headed by Pierre Cauchon, Bishop of Beauvais and a collaborator with the English government who served as a member of the English Council at Rouen.[76] Joan was convicted and burned at the stake on 30 May 1431[73] (she was rehabilitated 25 years later by Pope Callixtus III).

After the death of Joan of Arc, the fortunes of war turned dramatically against the English.[77] Most of Henry's royal advisers were against making peace. Among the factions, the Duke of Bedford wanted to defend Normandy, the Duke of Gloucester was committed to just Calais, whereas Cardinal Beaufort was inclined to peace. Negotiations stalled. It seems that at the congress of Arras, in the summer of 1435, where the duke of Beaufort was mediator, the English were unrealistic in their demands. A few days after the congress ended in September, Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy, deserted to Charles VII, signing the Treaty of Arras that returned Paris to the King of France. This was a major blow to English sovereignty in France.[71] The Duke of Bedford died on 14 September 1435 and was later replaced by Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York.[77]

French resurgence

 

The allegiance of Burgundy remained fickle, but the Burgundian focus on expanding their domains in the Low Countries left them little energy to intervene in the rest of France.[78] The long truces that marked the war gave Charles time to centralise the French state and reorganise his army and government, replacing his feudal levies with a more modern professional army that could put its superior numbers to good use. A castle that once could only be captured after a prolonged siege would now fall after a few days from cannon bombardment. The French artillery developed a reputation as the best in the world.[77]

By 1449, the French had retaken Rouen. In 1450 the Count of Clermont and Arthur de Richemont, Earl of Richmond, of the Montfort family (the future Arthur III, Duke of Brittany), caught an English army attempting to relieve Caen and defeated it at the Battle of Formigny in 1450. Richemont's force attacked the English army from the flank and rear just as they were on the verge of beating Clermont's army.[79]

French conquest of Gascony

After Charles VII's successful Normandy campaign in 1450, he concentrated his efforts on Gascony, the last province held by the English. Bordeaux, Gascony's capital, was besieged and surrendered to the French on 30 June 1451. Largely due to the English sympathies of the Gascon people, this was reversed when John Talbot and his army retook the city on 23 October 1452. However, the English were decisively defeated at the Battle of Castillon on 17 July 1453. Talbot had been persuaded to engage the French army at Castillon near Bordeaux. During the battle the French appeared to retreat towards their camp. The French camp at Castillon had been laid out by Charles VII's ordinance officer Jean Bureau and this was instrumental in the French success as when the French cannon opened fire, from their positions in the camp, the English took severe casualties losing both Talbot and his son.[80]

End of the war

Although the Battle of Castillon is considered the last battle of the Hundred Years' War,[80] England and France remained formally at war for another 20 years, but the English were in no position to carry on the war as they faced unrest at home. Bordeaux fell to the French on 19 October and there were no more hostilities afterwards. Following defeat in the Hundred Years' War, English landowners complained vociferously about the financial losses resulting from the loss of their continental holdings; this is often considered a major cause of the Wars of the Roses that started in 1455.[77][81]

The Hundred Years' War almost resumed in 1474, when the duke Charles of Burgundy, counting on English support, took up arms against Louis XI. Louis managed to isolate the Burgundians by buying Edward IV of England off with a large cash sum and an annual pension, in the Treaty of Picquigny (1475). The treaty formally ended the Hundred Years' War with Edward renouncing his claim to the throne of France. However, future Kings of England (and later of Great Britain) continued to claim the title until 1803, when they were dropped in deference to the exiled Count of Provence, titular King Louis XVIII, who was living in England after the French Revolution.[82]

Some historians use the term "The Second Hundred Years' War" as a periodisation to describe the series of military conflicts between Great Britain and France that occurred from about 1689 (or some say 1714) to 1815.[83] Likewise, some historians refer to the Capetian–Plantagenet rivalry, series of conflicts and disputes that covered a period of 100 years (1159–1259) as "The First Hundred Years War".

Significance

 
Burgundian territories (orange/yellow) and limits of France (red) after the Burgundian War

Historical significance

The French victory marked the end of a long period of instability that had been seeded with the Norman Conquest (1066), when William the Conqueror added "King of England" to his titles, becoming both the vassal to (as Duke of Normandy) and the equal of (as king of England) the king of France.[84]

When the war ended, England was bereft of its Continental possessions, leaving it with only Calais on the continent (until 1558). The war destroyed the English dream of a joint monarchy and led to the rejection in England of all things French, although the French language in England, which had served as the language of the ruling classes and commerce there from the time of the Norman conquest, left many vestiges in English vocabulary. English became the official language in 1362 and French was no longer used for teaching from 1385.[85]

National feeling that emerged from the war unified both France and England further. Despite the devastation on its soil, the Hundred Years' War accelerated the process of transforming France from a feudal monarchy to a centralised state.[86] In England the political and financial troubles which emerged from the defeat were a major cause of the War of the Roses (1455–1487).[81]

 
The spread of the Black Death (with modern borders)

Historian Ben Lowe argued in 1997 that opposition to the war helped to shape England's early modern political culture. Although anti-war and pro-peace spokesmen generally failed to influence outcomes at the time, they had a long-term impact. England showed decreasing enthusiasm for conflict deemed not in the national interest, yielding only losses in return for high economic burdens. In comparing this English cost-benefit analysis with French attitudes, given that both countries suffered from weak leaders and undisciplined soldiers, Lowe noted that the French understood that warfare was necessary to expel the foreigners occupying their homeland. Furthermore, French kings found alternative ways to finance the war – sales taxes, debasing the coinage – and were less dependent than the English on tax levies passed by national legislatures. English anti-war critics thus had more to work with than the French.[87]

A 2021 theory about the early formation of state capacity is that interstate war was responsible for initiating a strong move toward states implementing tax systems with higher state capabilities. For example, see France in the Hundred Years' War, when the English occupation threatened the independent French Kingdom. The king and his ruling elite demanded consistent and permanent taxation, which would allow a permanent standing army to be financed. The French nobility, which had always opposed such an extension of state capacity, agreed in this exceptional situation. Hence, the inter-state war with England increased French state capability.[88]

Bubonic plague and warfare reduced population numbers throughout Europe during this period. France lost half its population during the Hundred Years' War,[4] with Normandy reduced by three-quarters and Paris by two-thirds.[89] During the same period, England's population fell by 20 to 33 percent.[5]

Military significance

The first regular standing army in Western Europe since Roman times was organised in France in 1445, partly as a solution to marauding free companies. The mercenary companies were given a choice of either joining the Royal army as compagnies d'ordonnance on a permanent basis, or being hunted down and destroyed if they refused. France gained a total standing army of around 6,000 men, which was sent out to gradually eliminate the remaining mercenaries who insisted on operating on their own. The new standing army had a more disciplined and professional approach to warfare than its predecessors.[90]

The Hundred Years' War was a time of rapid military evolution. Weapons, tactics, army structure and the social meaning of war all changed, partly in response to the war's costs, partly through advancement in technology and partly through lessons that warfare taught. The feudal system slowly disintegrated as well as the concept of chivalry.

By the war's end, although the heavy cavalry was still considered the most powerful unit in an army, the heavily armoured horse had to deal with several tactics developed to deny or mitigate its effective use on a battlefield.[91] The English began using lightly armoured mounted troops, known as hobelars. Hobelars' tactics had been developed against the Scots, in the Anglo-Scottish wars of the 14th century. Hobelars rode smaller unarmoured horses, enabling them to move through difficult or boggy terrain where heavier cavalry would struggle. Rather than fight while seated on the horse, they would dismount to engage the enemy.[90][92] The closing battle of the war, the Battle of Castillon, was the first major battle won through the extensive use of field artillery.[93]

Timeline

 

Battles

Prominent figures

France

Arms Historical Figure Life Role(s)
  King Philip VI 1293–1350
Reigned 1328–1350
Charles of Valois' son
  King John II 1319–1364
Reigned 1350–1364
Philip VI's son
  King Charles V 1338–1380
Reigned 1364–1380
John II's son
  Bertrand du Guesclin 1320–1380 Commander
  Louis I
Duke of Anjou
1339–1384
Regent 1380–1382
John II's son
  King Charles VI 1368–1422
Reigned 1380–1422
Charles V's son
  King Charles VII 1403–1461
Reigned 1422–1461
Charles VI's son
  Joan of Arc 1412–1431 Religious visionary
  La Hire 1390–1443 Commander
  Jean Poton de Xaintrailles 1390–1461 Commander
  John II
Duke of Alençon
1409–1476 Commander
  Jean de Dunois 1402–1468 Commander
  Jean Bureau 1390–1463 Master Gunner
  Gilles de Rais 1405–1440 Commander

England

Arms Historical Figure Life Role(s)
  Isabella of France 1295–1358
Regent of England 1327–1330
Queen consort of England, wife of Edward II, mother of Edward III, regent of England, sister of Charles IV and daughter of Philip IV of France
  King Edward III 1312–1377
Reigned 1327–1377
Philip IV's grandson
  Henry of Grosmont
Duke of Lancaster
1310–1361 Commander
  Edward the Black Prince 1330–1376 Edward III's son and Prince of Wales
  John of Gaunt
Duke of Lancaster
1340–1399 Edward III's son
  King Richard II 1367–1400
Reigned 1377–1399
Son of the Black Prince, Edward III's grandson
  King Henry IV 1367–1413
Reigned 1399–1413
John of Gaunt's son, Edward III's grandson
  King Henry V 1387–1422
Reigned 1413–1422
Henry IV's son
  Catherine of Valois 1401–1437 Queen consort of England, daughter of Charles VI of France, mother of Henry VI of England and by her second marriage grandmother of Henry VII
  John of Lancaster
Duke of Bedford
1389–1435
Regent 1422–1435
Henry IV's son
  Sir John Fastolf[74] 1380–1459 Commander
  John Talbot
Earl of Shrewsbury
1387–1453 Commander
  King Henry VI 1421–1471
Reigned 1422–1461 (also 1422–1453 as king Henry II of France)
Henry V's son, grandson of Charles VI of France
  Richard Plantagenet
Duke of York
1411–1460 Commander

Burgundy

Arms Historical Figure Life Role(s)
  Philip the Bold
Duke of Burgundy
1342–1404
Duke 1363–1404
Son of John II of France
  John the Fearless
Duke of Burgundy
1371–1419
Duke 1404–1419
Son of Philip the Bold
  Philip the Good
Duke of Burgundy
1396–1467
Duke 1419–1467
Son of John the Fearless

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Fought against England during Despenser's Crusade.
  2. ^ Fought with England during the Caroline War.
  3. ^ Fought with England during Despenser's Crusade.
  4. ^ 24 May 1337 is the day when Philip VI of France confiscated Aquitaine from Edward III of England, who responded by claiming the French throne. Bordeaux fell to the French on 19 October 1453; there were no more hostilities afterwards.

References

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  3. ^ Previté-Orton 1978, pp. 873–876.
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Sources

Further reading

  • Barker, J. (2012). (PDF). Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-06560-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  • Corrigan, Gordon (2014), A Great and Glorious Adventure: A Military History of the Hundred Years War, Atlantic Books, ISBN 978-1-84887-927-0
  • Cuttino, G. P., "The Causes of the Hundred Years War", Speculum 31#3 (1956), pp. 463–477 online
  • Favier, Jean (1980). La Guerre de Cent Ans. Paris: Fayard. ISBN 978-2-213-00898-1.
  • Froissart, Jean (1895). Macaulay, George Campbell (ed.). The Chronicles of Froissart. Translated by Bourchier, John; Lord Berners. London: Macmillan and Son. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
  • Green, David (2014), The Hundred Years War: A People's History. New Haven and London: Yale. ISBN 978-0-300-13451-3
  • Lambert, Craig L. (2011). "Edward III's siege of Calais: A reappraisal". Journal of Medieval History. 37 (3): 245–256. doi:10.1016/j.jmedhist.2011.05.002. S2CID 159935247.
  • Postan, M. M. "Some Social Consequences of the Hundred Years' War", Economic History Review 12#1/2, 1942, pp. 1–12. online
  • Seward, D. (2003). The Hundred Years War: The English in France, 1337–1453. Brief Histories (revised ed.). London: Robinson. ISBN 978-1-84119-678-7.

External links

  • The Hundred Years War and the History of Navarre
  • . Archived from the original on 26 March 2017.
  • The Hundred Years' War (1336–1565) by Dr. Lynn H. Nelson, University of Kansas Emeritus
  • The Hundred Years' War information and game
  • Jean Froissart, "On The Hundred Years War (1337–1453)" from the Internet Medieval Sourcebook
  • University of Southampton and University of Reading.
  • "Causes of the Wars of the Roses: An Overview". Luminarium Encyclopedia (Online Resource ed.). 26 April 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2017.

hundred, years, earlier, anglo, french, conflict, capetian, plantagenet, rivalry, later, anglo, french, conflict, second, french, guerre, cent, 1337, 1453, series, armed, conflicts, between, kingdoms, england, france, during, late, middle, ages, originated, fr. For the earlier Anglo French conflict see Capetian Plantagenet rivalry For the later Anglo French conflict see Second Hundred Years War The Hundred Years War French La guerre de Cent Ans 1337 1453 was a series of armed conflicts between the kingdoms of England and France during the Late Middle Ages It originated from disputed claims to the French throne between the English House of Plantagenet and the French royal House of Valois Over time the war grew into a broader power struggle involving factions from across Western Europe fuelled by emerging nationalism on both sides Hundred Years WarPart of the Anglo French WarsClockwise from top left the Battle of La Rochelle the Battle of Agincourt the Battle of Patay and Joan of Arc at the Siege of OrleansDate24 May 1337 19 October 1453 d 116 years 4 months 3 weeks and 4 days LocationFrance the Low Countries Great Britain Iberian PeninsulaResultFrench victory Full results House of Valois retains the French throne Strengthening of the French monarchy Agnatic primogeniture confirmed as the law of French royal succession Decline of the House of Plantagenet leading to the Wars of the Roses English claims to the French throne persist Rise of nationalistic identities in England and FranceTerritorialchangesEngland loses all continental possessions except for the Pale of Calais BelligerentsFrance loyal to the House of Valois Burgundian State 1337 1419 1435 1453 Duchy of Brittany Kingdom of Scotland Crown of Castile Welsh rebels Republic of Genoa Kingdom of Bohemia Crown of Aragon Avignon Papacy a France loyal to the House of Plantagenet Kingdom of England Burgundian State 1419 1435 Duchy of Brittany Kingdom of Portugal Kingdom of Navarre Ghent Rebels b Papal States c Commanders and leadersPhilip VI John II Charles V Charles VI Charles VII Louis Dauphin Joan of Arc Bertrand du Guesclin Jean de Vienne Hugues Quieret Charles d Orleans Rudolph of Lorraine Philip the Bold John the Fearless Philip the Good Charles of Blois David II John Stewart Archibald Douglas John of Darnley Henry of Trastamara John I Ambrosio Boccanegra Fernando Sanchez de Tovar Pedro Alvares Pereira Antonio Doria John the Blind Peter IV of Aragon Antipope Clement VIIEdward III Richard II Henry IV Henry V Henry VI The Black Prince John of Gaunt Edmund of Langley Richard of York John of Lancaster Henry of Lancaster Jean III de Grailly Thomas Dagworth Thomas Montacute Henry le Despenser John Talbot John Fastolf Robert d Artois Edward Balliol Jean of Luxembourg Philip the Good John of Montfort Joanna of Flanders John IV of Brittany John I Nuno Alvares Pereira Peter of Castile Pope Urban VI Jacob van Artevelde Philip van Artevelde Frans Ackerman The Hundred Years War was one of the most significant conflicts of the Middle Ages For 116 years interrupted by several truces five generations of kings from two rival dynasties fought for the throne of the dominant kingdom in Western Europe The war s effect on European history was lasting Both sides produced innovations in military technology and tactics including professional standing armies and artillery that permanently changed warfare in Europe chivalry which had reached its height during the conflict subsequently declined Stronger national identities took root in both countries which became more centralised and gradually rose as global powers 1 The term Hundred Years War was adopted by later historians as a historiographical periodisation to encompass related conflicts constructing the longest military conflict in European history The war is commonly divided into three phases separated by truces the Edwardian War 1337 1360 the Caroline War 1369 1389 and the Lancastrian War 1415 1453 Each side drew many allies into the conflict with English forces initially prevailing The House of Valois ultimately retained control over France with the previously intertwined French and English monarchies thereafter remaining separate Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Origins 1 2 Edwardian Phase 1 3 Caroline Phase and Black Death 1 4 Lancastrian Phase and after 1 5 Related conflicts and aftereffects 2 Causes and prelude 2 1 Dynastic turmoil in France 1316 1328 2 2 The dispute over Guyenne a problem of sovereignty 2 3 Gascony under the King of England 2 4 Franco Scot alliance 3 Beginning of the war 1337 1360 3 1 End of homage 3 2 Outbreak the English Channel and Brittany 3 3 Battle of Crecy and the taking of Calais 3 4 Battle of Poitiers 3 5 Reims Campaign and Black Monday 4 First peace 1360 1369 5 French ascendancy under Charles V 1369 1389 5 1 Aquitaine and Castile 5 2 1373 campaign of John of Gaunt 5 3 English turmoil 5 3 1 1380 campaign of the Earl of Buckingham 5 4 French turmoil 6 Second peace 1389 1415 7 Resumption of the war under Henry V 1415 1429 7 1 Burgundian alliance and the seizure of Paris 7 1 1 Battle of Agincourt 1415 7 1 2 Treaty of Troyes 1420 7 1 3 Death of the Duke of Clarence 1421 7 2 English success 8 French victory 1429 1453 8 1 Joan of Arc and French revival 8 2 Henry s coronations and the desertion of Burgundy 8 3 French resurgence 8 4 French conquest of Gascony 8 5 End of the war 9 Significance 9 1 Historical significance 9 2 Military significance 10 Timeline 10 1 Battles 11 Prominent figures 11 1 France 11 2 England 11 3 Burgundy 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksOverview EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Origins Edit The root causes of the conflict can be traced to the crisis of 14th century Europe The outbreak of war was motivated by a gradual rise in tension between the kings of France and England over territory the official pretext was the question that arose because of the interruption of the direct male line of the Capetian dynasty Tensions between the French and English crowns had gone back centuries to the origins of the English royal family which was French Norman and later Angevin in origin because of William the Conqueror the Norman duke who became King of England in 1066 English monarchs had therefore historically held titles and lands within France which made them vassals to the kings of France The status of the English king s French fiefs was a major source of conflict between the two monarchies throughout the Middle Ages French monarchs systematically sought to check the growth of English power stripping away lands as the opportunity arose particularly whenever England was at war with Scotland an ally of France English holdings in France had varied in size at some points dwarfing even the French royal domain by 1337 however only Gascony was English In 1328 Charles IV of France died without sons or brothers and a new principle Salic law disallowed female succession Charles s closest male relative was his nephew Edward III of England whose mother Isabella was Charles s sister Isabella claimed the throne of France for her son by the rule of proximity of blood but the French nobility rejected this maintaining that Isabella could not transmit a right she did not possess An assembly of French barons decided that a native Frenchman should receive the crown rather than Edward 2 So the throne passed instead to Charles s patrilineal cousin Philip Count of Valois Edward protested but ultimately submitted and did homage for Gascony Further French disagreements with Edward induced Philip during May 1337 to meet with his Great Council in Paris It was agreed that Gascony should be taken back into Philip s hands which prompted Edward to renew his claim for the French throne this time by force of arms 3 Edwardian Phase Edit In the early years of the war the English led by their king and his son Edward the Black Prince saw resounding successes notably at Crecy in 1346 and at Poitiers in 1356 where King John II of France was taken prisoner Caroline Phase and Black Death Edit By 1378 under King Charles V the Wise and the leadership of Bertrand du Guesclin the French had reconquered most of the lands ceded to King Edward in the Treaty of Bretigny signed in 1360 leaving the English with only a few cities on the continent In the following decades the weakening of royal authority combined with the devastation caused by the Black Death of 1347 1351 with the loss of nearly half of the French population 4 and between 20 and 33 of the English one 5 and the major economic crisis that followed led to a period of civil unrest in both countries These crises were resolved in England earlier than in France Lancastrian Phase and after Edit The newly crowned Henry V of England seized the opportunity presented by the mental illness of Charles VI of France and the French civil war between Armagnacs and Burgundians to revive the conflict Overwhelming victories at Agincourt in 1415 and Verneuil in 1424 as well as an alliance with the Burgundians raised the prospects of an ultimate English triumph and persuaded the English to continue the war over many decades However a variety of factors such as the deaths of both Henry and Charles in 1422 the emergence of Joan of Arc which boosted French morale and the loss of Burgundy as an ally marking the end of the civil war in France prevented it The Siege of Orleans in 1429 announced the beginning of the end for English hopes of conquest Even with the eventual capture of Joan by the Burgundians and her execution in 1431 a series of crushing French victories such as those at Patay in 1429 Formigny in 1450 and Castillon in 1453 concluded the war in favour of the Valois dynasty England permanently lost most of its continental possessions with only the Pale of Calais remaining under its control on the continent until it too was lost in the Siege of Calais in 1558 Related conflicts and aftereffects Edit Local conflicts in neighbouring areas which were contemporarily related to the war including the War of the Breton Succession 1341 1364 the Castilian Civil War 1366 1369 the War of the Two Peters 1356 1369 in Aragon and the 1383 85 crisis in Portugal were used by the parties to advance their agendas By the War s end feudal armies had been largely replaced by professional troops and aristocratic dominance had yielded to a democratisation of the manpower and weapons of armies Although primarily a dynastic conflict the war inspired French and English nationalism The wider introduction of weapons and tactics supplanted the feudal armies where heavy cavalry had dominated and artillery became important The war precipitated the creation of the first standing armies in Western Europe since the Western Roman Empire and helped change their role in warfare In France civil wars deadly epidemics famines and bandit free companies of mercenaries reduced the population drastically In England political forces over time came to oppose the costly venture The dissatisfaction of English nobles resulting from the loss of their continental landholdings as well as the general shock at losing a war in which investment had been so great helped lead to the Wars of the Roses 1455 1487 Causes and prelude EditDynastic turmoil in France 1316 1328 Edit Main article English claims to the French throne The question of female succession to the French throne was raised after the death of Louis X in 1316 Louis left behind a young daughter Joan II of Navarre and a son John I of France although he only lived for five days However Joan s paternity was in question as her mother Margaret of Burgundy was accused of being an adulterer in the Tour de Nesle affair Given the situation Philip Count of Poitiers and brother of Louis X positioned himself to take the crown advancing the stance that women should be ineligible to succeed to the French throne Through his political sagacity he won over his adversaries and succeeded to the French throne as Philip V When he died in 1322 leaving only daughters behind the crown then passed to his younger brother Charles IV 6 vteRoyal families involved in the Hundred Years War 1337 1453 CapetPhilip III the Bold King of Francer 1270 1285ValoisPlantagenetBloisCharlesCount of ValoisLouisCount of EvreuxEdward I Longshanks King of Englandr 1272 1307Joan IQueen of Navarrer 1274 1305Philip IV the Fair King of Francer 1285 1314 Philip IKing of Navarrer 1284 1305Edward IIKing of Englandr 1307 1327Isabella She Wolf of France Louis XKing of Francer 1314 1316 Louis IKing of Navarrer 1305 1316Philip V the Tall King of FrancePhilip IIKing of Navarrer 1316 1322Charles IV the Fair King of FranceCharles I the Bald King of Navarrer 1322 1328Philip VI the Fortunate of Valois King of Francer 1328 1350Joan of ValoisPhilip III the Noble the Wise King of Navarre jure uxorisr 1328 1343Joan IIQueen of Navarrer 1328 1349John I the Posthumous King of FranceKing of Navarrer 1316Joan of BurgundyJohn II the Good King of Francer 1350 1364Philippa of HainaultEdward IIIKing of Englandr 1327 1377Joan of the TowerDavid IIKing of Scotlandr 1329 1371Charles II the Bad King of Navarrer 1349 1387Philip of BurgundyCount of AuvergneCharles V the Wise King of Francer 1364 1380Philip the BoldDuke of BurgundyEdward of Woodstock The Black Prince John of GauntLuxembourgCharles VI the Beloved the Mad King of Francer 1380 1422Louis IDuke of OrleansCharles IVHoly Roman Emperorr 1355 1378Henry IVKing of Englandr 1399 1413Charles VII the Victorious King of Francer 1422 1461Isabella of ValoisRichard IIKing of Englandr 1377 1399Anne of BohemiaCatherine of ValoisHenry VKing of Englandr 1413 1422John of LancasterHenry VIKing of Englandr 1422 1461 r 1470 1471Charles IV died in 1328 leaving behind his young daughter and pregnant wife Joan of Evreux He decreed that if the unborn child was male he would become king If not Charles left the choice of his successor to the nobles Joan gave birth to a girl Blanche of France later Duchess of Orleans With the death of Charles IV and birth of Blanche the main male line of the House of Capet was rendered extinct By proximity of blood the nearest male relative of Charles IV was his nephew Edward III of England Edward was the son of Isabella the sister of the dead Charles IV but the question arose whether she should be able to transmit a right to inherit that she did not herself possess Moreover the French nobility baulked at the prospect of being ruled by an Englishman especially one whose mother Isabella and her lover Roger Mortimer were widely suspected of having murdered the previous English king Edward II The assemblies of the French barons prelates and the University of Paris decided that males who derive their right to inheritance through their mother should be excluded from consideration Therefore excluding Edward the nearest heir through the male line was Charles IV s first cousin Philip Count of Valois and it was decided that he should take the throne He was crowned Philip VI in 1328 In 1340 the Avignon papacy confirmed that under Salic law males would not be able to inherit through their mothers 6 2 Eventually Edward III reluctantly recognized Philip VI and paid him homage for the duchy of Aquitaine and Gascony in 1329 He made concessions in Guyenne but reserved the right to reclaim territories arbitrarily confiscated After that he expected to be left undisturbed while he made war on Scotland The dispute over Guyenne a problem of sovereignty Edit Main article Capetian Plantagenet rivalry Further information Peerage of France Homage of Edward I of England kneeling to Philip IV of France seated 1286 As Duke of Aquitaine Edward was also a vassal to the French King illumination by Jean Fouquet from the Grandes Chroniques de France in the Bibliotheque Nationale de France Paris Tensions between the French and English monarchies can be traced back to the 1066 Norman Conquest of England in which the English throne was seized by the Duke of Normandy a vassal of the King of France As a result the crown of England was held by a succession of nobles who already owned lands in France which put them among the most powerful subjects of the French King as they could now draw upon the economic power of England to enforce their interests in the mainland To the kings of France this dangerously threatened their royal authority and so they would constantly try to undermine English rule in France while the English monarchs would struggle to protect and expand their lands This clash of interests was the root cause of much of the conflict between the French and English monarchies throughout the medieval era The Anglo Norman dynasty that had ruled England since the Norman conquest of 1066 was brought to an end when Henry the son of Geoffrey of Anjou and Empress Matilda and great grandson of William the Conqueror became the first of the Angevin kings of England in 1154 as Henry II 7 The Angevin kings ruled over what was later known as the Angevin Empire which included more French territory than that under the kings of France The Angevins still owed homage for these territories to the French king From the 11th century the Angevins had autonomy within their French domains neutralising the issue 8 King John of England inherited the Angevin domains from his brother Richard I However Philip II of France acted decisively to exploit the weaknesses of John both legally and militarily and by 1204 had succeeded in taking control of much of the Angevin continental possessions Following John s reign the Battle of Bouvines 1214 the Saintonge War 1242 and finally the War of Saint Sardos 1324 the English king s holdings on the continent as Duke of Aquitaine were limited roughly to provinces in Gascony 9 The dispute over Guyenne is even more important than the dynastic question in explaining the outbreak of the war Guyenne posed a significant problem to the kings of France and England Edward III was a vassal of Philip VI of France because of his French possessions and was required to recognise the suzerainty of the King of France over them In practical terms a judgment in Guyenne might be subject to an appeal to the French royal court The King of France had the power to revoke all legal decisions made by the King of England in Aquitaine which was unacceptable to the English Therefore sovereignty over Guyenne was a latent conflict between the two monarchies for several generations During the War of Saint Sardos Charles of Valois father of Philip VI invaded Aquitaine on behalf of Charles IV and conquered the duchy after a local insurrection which the French believed had been incited by Edward II of England Charles IV grudgingly agreed to return this territory in 1325 To recover his duchy Edward II had to compromise he sent his son the future Edward III to pay homage The King of France agreed to restore Guyenne minus Agen but the French delayed the return of the lands which helped Philip VI On 6 June 1329 Edward III finally paid homage to the King of France However at the ceremony Philip VI had it recorded that the homage was not due to the fiefs detached from the duchy of Guyenne by Charles IV especially Agen For Edward the homage did not imply the renunciation of his claim to the extorted lands Gascony under the King of England Edit France in 1330 France before 1214 French acquisitions until 1330 England and Guyenne Gascony as of 1330 In the 11th century Gascony in southwest France had been incorporated into Aquitaine also known as Guyenne or Guienne and formed with it the province of Guyenne and Gascony French Guyenne et Gascogne The Angevin kings of England became Dukes of Aquitaine after Henry II married the former Queen of France Eleanor of Aquitaine in 1152 from which point the lands were held in vassalage to the French Crown By the 13th century the terms Aquitaine Guyenne and Gascony were virtually synonymous 10 At the beginning of Edward III s reign on 1 February 1327 the only part of Aquitaine that remained in his hands was the Duchy of Gascony The term Gascony came to be used for the territory held by the Angevin Plantagenet Kings of England in southwest France although they still used the title Duke of Aquitaine 11 For the first 10 years of Edward III s reign Gascony had been a major point of friction The English argued that as Charles IV had not acted in a proper way towards his tenant Edward should be able to hold the duchy free of any French suzerainty This argument was rejected by the French so in 1329 the 17 year old Edward III paid homage to Philip VI Tradition demanded that vassals approach their liege unarmed with heads bare Edward protested by attending the ceremony wearing his crown and sword 12 Even after this pledge of homage the French continued to pressure the English administration 13 Gascony was not the only sore point One of Edward s influential advisers was Robert III of Artois Robert was an exile from the French court having fallen out with Philip VI over an inheritance claim He urged Edward to start a war to reclaim France and was able to provide extensive intelligence on the French court 14 Franco Scot alliance Edit See also Auld Alliance France was an ally of the Kingdom of Scotland as English kings had for some time tried to subjugate the country In 1295 a treaty was signed between France and Scotland during the reign of Philip the Fair known as the Auld Alliance Charles IV formally renewed the treaty in 1326 promising Scotland that France would support the Scots if England invaded their country Similarly France would have Scotland s support if its own kingdom were attacked Edward could not succeed in his plans for Scotland if the Scots could count on French support 15 Philip VI had assembled a large naval fleet off Marseilles as part of an ambitious plan for a crusade to the Holy Land However the plan was abandoned and the fleet including elements of the Scottish navy moved to the English Channel off Normandy in 1336 threatening England 14 To deal with this crisis Edward proposed that the English raise two armies one to deal with the Scots at a suitable time the other to proceed at once to Gascony At the same time ambassadors were to be sent to France with a proposed treaty for the French king 16 Beginning of the war 1337 1360 EditMain article Hundred Years War 1337 1360 Animated map showing progress of the war territorial changes and the most important battles between 1337 and 1453 End of homage Edit At the end of April 1337 Philip of France was invited to meet the delegation from England but refused The arriere ban literally a call to arms was proclaimed throughout France starting on 30 April 1337 Then in May 1337 Philip met with his Great Council in Paris It was agreed that the Duchy of Aquitaine effectively Gascony should be taken back into the king s hands on the grounds that Edward III was in breach of his obligations as vassal and had sheltered the king s mortal enemy Robert d Artois 17 Edward responded to the confiscation of Aquitaine by challenging Philip s right to the French throne When Charles IV died Edward had made a claim for the succession of the French throne through the right of his mother Isabella Charles IV s sister daughter of Philip IV Any claim was considered invalidated by Edward s homage to Philip VI in 1329 Edward revived his claim and in 1340 formally assumed the title King of France and the French Royal Arms 18 On 26 January 1340 Edward III formally received homage from Guy half brother of the Count of Flanders The civic authorities of Ghent Ypres and Bruges proclaimed Edward King of France Edward s purpose was to strengthen his alliances with the Low Countries His supporters would be able to claim that they were loyal to the true King of France and were not rebels against Philip In February 1340 Edward returned to England to try to raise more funds and also deal with political difficulties 19 Relations with Flanders were also tied to the English wool trade since Flanders principal cities relied heavily on textile production and England supplied much of the raw material they needed Edward III had commanded that his chancellor sit on the woolsack in council as a symbol of the pre eminence of the wool trade 20 At the time there were about 110 000 sheep in Sussex alone 21 The great medieval English monasteries produced large surpluses of wool that were sold to mainland Europe Successive governments were able to make large amounts of money by taxing it 20 France s sea power led to economic disruptions for England shrinking the wool trade to Flanders and the wine trade from Gascony 22 Outbreak the English Channel and Brittany Edit Battle of Sluys from a BNF manuscript of Froissart s Chronicles Bruges c 1470 On 22 June 1340 Edward and his fleet sailed from England and the next day arrived off the Zwin estuary The French fleet assumed a defensive formation off the port of Sluis The English fleet deceived the French into believing they were withdrawing When the wind turned in the late afternoon the English attacked with the wind and sun behind them The French fleet was almost completely destroyed in what became known as the Battle of Sluys England dominated the English Channel for the rest of the war preventing French invasions 19 At this point Edward s funds ran out and the war probably would have ended were it not for the death of the Duke of Brittany in 1341 precipitating a succession dispute between the duke s half brother John of Montfort and Charles of Blois nephew of Philip VI 23 In 1341 conflict over the succession to the Duchy of Brittany began the War of the Breton Succession in which Edward backed John of Montfort and Philip backed Charles of Blois Action for the next few years focused around a back and forth struggle in Brittany The city of Vannes in Brittany changed hands several times while further campaigns in Gascony met with mixed success for both sides 23 The English backed Montfort finally succeeded in taking the duchy but not until 1364 24 Battle of Crecy and the taking of Calais Edit Battle of Crecy 1346 from the Grandes Chroniques de France British Library London See also Hundred Years War 1345 1347 In July 1346 Edward mounted a major invasion across the channel landing in Normandy s Cotentin at St Vaast The English army captured the city of Caen in just one day surprising the French Philip mustered a large army to oppose Edward who chose to march northward toward the Low Countries pillaging as he went He reached the river Seine to find most of the crossings destroyed He moved further and further south worryingly close to Paris until he found the crossing at Poissy This had only been partially destroyed so the carpenters within his army were able to fix it He then continued on his way to Flanders until he reached the river Somme The army crossed at a tidal ford at Blanchetaque leaving Philip s army stranded Edward assisted by this head start continued on his way to Flanders once more until finding himself unable to outmanoeuvre Philip Edward positioned his forces for battle and Philip s army attacked Edward III counting the dead on the battlefield of Crecy The Battle of Crecy of 1346 was a complete disaster for the French largely credited to the longbowmen and the French king who allowed his army to attack before it was ready 25 Philip appealed to his Scottish allies to help with a diversionary attack on England King David II of Scotland responded by invading northern England but his army was defeated and he was captured at the Battle of Neville s Cross on 17 October 1346 This greatly reduced the threat from Scotland 23 26 In France Edward proceeded north unopposed and besieged the city of Calais on the English Channel capturing it in 1347 This became an important strategic asset for the English allowing them to keep troops safely in northern France 25 Calais would remain under English control even after the end of the Hundred Years War until the successful French siege in 1558 27 Battle of Poitiers Edit Main article Battle of Poitiers The Black Death which had just arrived in Paris in 1348 began to ravage Europe 28 In 1355 after the plague had passed and England was able to recover financially 29 King Edward s son and namesake the Prince of Wales later known as the Black Prince led a Chevauchee from Gascony into France during which he pillaged Avignonet and Castelnaudary sacked Carcassonne and plundered Narbonne The next year during another Chevauchee he ravaged Auvergne Limousin and Berry but failed to take Bourges He offered terms of peace to King John II of France known as John the Good who had outflanked him near Poitiers but refused to surrender himself as the price of their acceptance This led to the Battle of Poitiers 19 September 1356 where the Black Prince s army routed the French 30 During the battle the Gascon noble Jean de Grailly captal de Buch led a mounted unit that was concealed in a forest The French advance was contained at which point de Grailly led a flanking movement with his horsemen cutting off the French retreat and succeeding in capturing King John and many of his nobles 31 With John held hostage his son the Dauphin later to become Charles V assumed the powers of the king as regent 32 After the Battle of Poitiers many French nobles and mercenaries rampaged and chaos ruled A contemporary report recounted all went ill with the kingdom and the State was undone Thieves and robbers rose up everywhere in the land The Nobles despised and hated all others and took no thought for usefulness and profit of lord and men They subjected and despoiled the peasants and the men of the villages In no wise did they defend their country from its enemies rather did they trample it underfoot robbing and pillaging the peasants goods From the Chronicles of Jean de Venette 33 Reims Campaign and Black Monday Edit Main article Reims campaign Black Monday 1360 hailstorms and lightning ravage the English army at Chartres Edward invaded France for the third and last time hoping to capitalise on the discontent and seize the throne The Dauphin s strategy was that of non engagement with the English army in the field However Edward wanted the crown and chose the cathedral city of Reims for his coronation Reims was the traditional coronation city 34 However the citizens of Reims built and reinforced the city s defences before Edward and his army arrived 35 Edward besieged the city for five weeks but the defences held and there was no coronation 34 Edward moved on to Paris but retreated after a few skirmishes in the suburbs Next was the town of Chartres Disaster struck in a freak hailstorm on the encamped army causing over 1 000 English deaths the so called Black Monday at Easter 1360 This devastated Edward s army and forced him to negotiate when approached by the French 36 A conference was held at Bretigny that resulted in the Treaty of Bretigny 8 May 1360 37 The treaty was ratified at Calais in October In return for increased lands in Aquitaine Edward renounced Normandy Touraine Anjou and Maine and consented to reduce King John s ransom by a million crowns Edward also abandoned his claim to the crown of France 38 First peace 1360 1369 Edit France at the Treaty of Bretigny English holdings in light red The French king John II had been held captive in England The Treaty of Bretigny set his ransom at 3 million crowns and allowed for hostages to be held in lieu of John The hostages included two of his sons several princes and nobles four inhabitants of Paris and two citizens from each of the nineteen principal towns of France While these hostages were held John returned to France to try and raise funds to pay the ransom In 1362 John s son Louis of Anjou a hostage in English held Calais escaped captivity So with his stand in hostage gone John felt honour bound to return to captivity in England 32 39 The French crown had been at odds with Navarre near southern Gascony since 1354 and in 1363 the Navarrese used the captivity of John II in London and the political weakness of the Dauphin to try to seize power 40 Although there was no formal treaty Edward III supported the Navarrese moves particularly as there was a prospect that he might gain control over the northern and western provinces as a consequence With this in mind Edward deliberately slowed the peace negotiations 41 In 1364 John II died in London while still in honourable captivity 42 Charles V succeeded him as king of France 32 43 On 16 May one month after the dauphin s accession and three days before his coronation as Charles V the Navarrese suffered a crushing defeat at the Battle of Cocherel 44 French ascendancy under Charles V 1369 1389 EditAquitaine and Castile Edit Main article Hundred Years War 1369 1389 See also Castilian Civil War In 1366 there was a civil war of succession in Castile part of modern Spain The forces of the ruler Peter of Castile were pitched against those of his half brother Henry of Trastamara The English crown supported Peter the French supported Henry French forces were led by Bertrand du Guesclin a Breton who rose from relatively humble beginnings to prominence as one of France s war leaders Charles V provided a force of 12 000 with du Guesclin at their head to support Trastamara in his invasion of Castile 45 Statue of Bertrand du Guesclin in Dinan Peter appealed to England and Aquitaine s Black Prince for help but none was forthcoming forcing Peter into exile in Aquitaine The Black Prince had previously agreed to support Peter s claims but concerns over the terms of the treaty of Bretigny led him to assist Peter as a representative of Aquitaine rather than England He then led an Anglo Gascon army into Castile Peter was restored to power after Trastamara s army was defeated at the Battle of Najera 46 Although the Castilians had agreed to fund the Black Prince they failed to do so The Prince was suffering from ill health and returned with his army to Aquitaine To pay off debts incurred during the Castile campaign the prince instituted a hearth tax Arnaud Amanieu VIII Lord of Albret had fought on the Black Prince s side during the war Albret who already had become discontented by the influx of English administrators into the enlarged Aquitaine refused to allow the tax to be collected in his fief He then joined a group of Gascon lords who appealed to Charles V for support in their refusal to pay the tax Charles V summoned one Gascon lord and the Black Prince to hear the case in his High Court in Paris The Black Prince answered that he would go to Paris with sixty thousand men behind him War broke out again and Edward III resumed the title of King of France 47 Charles V declared that all the English possessions in France were forfeited and before the end of 1369 all of Aquitaine was in full revolt 48 With the Black Prince gone from Castile Henry of Trastamara led a second invasion that ended with Peter s death at the Battle of Montiel in March 1369 The new Castilian regime provided naval support to French campaigns against Aquitaine and England 46 In 1372 the Castilian fleet defeated the English fleet in the Battle of La Rochelle 1373 campaign of John of Gaunt Edit Main article John of Gaunt s chevauchee of 1373 In August 1373 John of Gaunt accompanied by John de Montfort Duke of Brittany led a force of 9 000 men from Calais on a chevauchee While initially successful as French forces were insufficiently concentrated to oppose them the English met more resistance as they moved south French forces began to concentrate around the English force but under orders from Charles V the French avoided a set battle Instead they fell on forces detached from the main body to raid or forage The French shadowed the English and in October the English found themselves trapped against the River Allier by four French forces With some difficulty the English crossed at the bridge at Moulins but lost all their baggage and loot The English carried on south across the Limousin plateau but the weather was turning severe Men and horses died in great numbers and many soldiers forced to march on foot discarded their armour At the beginning of December the English army entered friendly territory in Gascony By the end of December they were in Bordeaux starving ill equipped and having lost over half of the 30 000 horses with which they had left Calais Although the march across France had been a remarkable feat it was a military failure 49 English turmoil Edit The Franco Castilian Navy led by Admirals de Vienne and Tovar managed to raid the English coasts for the first time since the beginning of the Hundred Years War With his health deteriorating the Black Prince returned to England in January 1371 where his father Edward III was elderly and also in poor health The prince s illness was debilitating and he died on 8 June 1376 50 Edward III died the following year on 21 June 1377 51 and was succeeded by the Black Prince s second son Richard II who was still a child of 10 Edward of Angouleme the Black Prince s first son had died sometime earlier 52 The treaty of Bretigny had left Edward III and England with enlarged holdings in France but a small professional French army under the leadership of du Guesclin pushed the English back by the time Charles V died in 1380 the English held only Calais and a few other ports 53 It was usual to appoint a regent in the case of a child monarch but no regent was appointed for Richard II who nominally exercised the power of kingship from the date of his accession in 1377 52 Between 1377 and 1380 actual power was in the hands of a series of councils The political community preferred this to a regency led by the king s uncle John of Gaunt although Gaunt remained highly influential 52 Richard faced many challenges during his reign including the Peasants Revolt led by Wat Tyler in 1381 and an Anglo Scottish war in 1384 1385 His attempts to raise taxes to pay for his Scottish adventure and for the protection of Calais against the French made him increasingly unpopular 52 1380 campaign of the Earl of Buckingham Edit In July 1380 the Earl of Buckingham commanded an expedition to France to aid England s ally the Duke of Brittany The French refused battle before the walls of Troyes on 25 August Buckingham s forces continued their chevauchee and in November laid siege to Nantes 54 The support expected from the Duke of Brittany did not appear and in the face of severe losses in men and horses Buckingham was forced to abandon the siege in January 1381 55 In February reconciled to the regime of the new French king Charles VI by the Treaty of Guerande Brittany paid 50 000 francs to Buckingham for him to abandon the siege and the campaign 56 French turmoil Edit After the deaths of Charles V and du Guesclin in 1380 France lost its main leadership and overall momentum in the war Charles VI succeeded his father as king of France at the age of 11 and he was thus put under a regency led by his uncles who managed to maintain an effective grip on government affairs until about 1388 well after Charles had achieved royal majority With France facing widespread destruction plague and economic recession high taxation put a heavy burden on the French peasantry and urban communities The war effort against England largely depended on royal taxation but the population was increasingly unwilling to pay for it as would be demonstrated at the Harelle and Maillotin revolts in 1382 Charles V had abolished many of these taxes on his deathbed but subsequent attempts to reinstate them stirred up hostility between the French government and populace Philip II of Burgundy the uncle of the French king brought together a Burgundian French army and a fleet of 1 200 ships near the Zeeland town of Sluis in the summer and autumn of 1386 to attempt an invasion of England but this venture failed However Philip s brother John of Berry appeared deliberately late so that the autumn weather prevented the fleet from leaving and the invading army then dispersed again Difficulties in raising taxes and revenue hampered the ability of the French to fight the English At this point the war s pace had largely slowed down and both nations found themselves fighting mainly through proxy wars such as during the 1383 1385 Portuguese interregnum The independence party in the Kingdom of Portugal which was supported by the English won against the supporters of the King of Castile s claim to the Portuguese throne who in turn was backed by the French Second peace 1389 1415 EditSee also Armagnac Burgundian Civil War France in 1388 just before signing a truce English territories are shown in red French royal territories are dark blue papal territories are orange and French vassals have the other colours The war became increasingly unpopular with the English public due to the high taxes needed for the war effort These taxes were seen as one of the reasons for the Peasants Revolt 57 Richard II s indifference to the war together with his preferential treatment of a select few close friends and advisors angered an alliance of lords that included one of his uncles This group known as Lords Appellant managed to press charges of treason against five of Richard s advisors and friends in the Merciless Parliament The Lords Appellant were able to gain control of the council in 1388 but failed to reignite the war in France Although the will was there the funds to pay the troops was lacking so in the autumn of 1388 the Council agreed to resume negotiations with the French crown beginning on 18 June 1389 with the signing of the three year Truce of Leulinghem 58 In 1389 Richard s uncle and supporter John of Gaunt returned from Spain and Richard was able to rebuild his power gradually until 1397 when he reasserted his authority and destroyed the principal three among the Lords Appellant In 1399 after John of Gaunt died Richard II disinherited Gaunt s son the exiled Henry of Bolingbroke Bolingbroke returned to England with his supporters deposed Richard and had himself crowned Henry IV 52 59 In Scotland the problems brought in by the English regime change prompted border raids that were countered by an invasion in 1402 and the defeat of a Scottish army at the Battle of Homildon Hill 60 A dispute over the spoils between Henry and Henry Percy 1st Earl of Northumberland resulted in a long and bloody struggle between the two for control of northern England resolved only with the almost complete destruction of the House of Percy by 1408 61 In Wales Owain Glyndŵr was declared Prince of Wales on 16 September 1400 He was the leader of the most serious and widespread rebellion against England authority in Wales since the conquest of 1282 1283 In 1405 the French allied with Glyndŵr and the Castilians in Spain a Franco Welsh army advanced as far as Worcester while the Spaniards used galleys to raid and burn all the way from Cornwall to Southampton before taking refuge in Harfleur for the winter 62 The Glyndŵr Rising was finally put down in 1415 and resulted in Welsh semi independence for a number of years 63 clarification needed Assassination of Louis I Duke of Orleans in Paris in 1407 In 1392 Charles VI suddenly descended into madness forcing France into a regency dominated by his uncles and his brother A conflict for control over the Regency began between his uncle Philip the Bold Duke of Burgundy and his brother Louis of Valois Duke of Orleans After Philip s death his son and heir John the Fearless continued the struggle against Louis but with the disadvantage of having no close relation to the king Finding himself outmanoeuvred politically John ordered the assassination of Louis in retaliation His involvement in the murder was quickly revealed and the Armagnac family took political power in opposition to John By 1410 both sides were bidding for the help of English forces in a civil war 64 In 1418 Paris was taken by the Burgundians who were unable to stop the massacre of Count of Armagnac and his followers by a Parisian crowd with an estimated death toll between 1 000 and 5 000 65 Throughout this period England confronted repeated raids by pirates that damaged trade and the navy There is some evidence that Henry IV used state legalised piracy as a form of warfare in the English Channel He used such privateering campaigns to pressure enemies without risking open war 66 The French responded in kind and French pirates under Scottish protection raided many English coastal towns 67 The domestic and dynastic difficulties faced by England and France in this period quieted the war for a decade 67 Henry IV died in 1413 and was replaced by his eldest son Henry V The mental illness of Charles VI of France allowed his power to be exercised by royal princes whose rivalries caused deep divisions in France In 1414 while Henry held court at Leicester he received ambassadors from Burgundy 68 Henry accredited envoys to the French king to make clear his territorial claims in France he also demanded the hand of Charles VI s youngest daughter Catherine of Valois The French rejected his demands leading Henry to prepare for war 68 Resumption of the war under Henry V 1415 1429 EditMain article Hundred Years War 1415 1453 Burgundian alliance and the seizure of Paris Edit Battle of Agincourt 1415 Edit Main article Battle of Agincourt Fifteenth century miniature depicting the Battle of Agincourt of 1415 In August 1415 Henry V sailed from England with a force of about 10 500 and laid siege to Harfleur The city resisted for longer than expected but finally surrendered on 22 September Because of the unexpected delay most of the campaign season was gone Rather than march on Paris directly Henry elected to make a raiding expedition across France toward English occupied Calais In a campaign reminiscent of Crecy he found himself outmanoeuvred and low on supplies and had to fight a much larger French army at the Battle of Agincourt north of the Somme Despite the problems and having a smaller force his victory was near total the French defeat was catastrophic costing the lives of many of the Armagnac leaders About 40 of the French nobility was killed 4 Henry was apparently concerned that the large number of prisoners taken were a security risk there were more French prisoners than there were soldiers in the entire English army and he ordered their deaths 68 Treaty of Troyes 1420 Edit Main article Treaty of Troyes Henry retook much of Normandy including Caen in 1417 and Rouen on 19 January 1419 turning Normandy English for the first time in two centuries A formal alliance was made with Burgundy which had taken Paris in 1418 before the assassination of Duke John the Fearless in 1419 In 1420 Henry met with King Charles VI They signed the Treaty of Troyes by which Henry finally married Charles daughter Catherine of Valois and Henry s heirs would inherit the throne of France The Dauphin Charles VII was declared illegitimate Henry formally entered Paris later that year and the agreement was ratified by the Estates General French Les Etats Generaux 68 Death of the Duke of Clarence 1421 Edit Clan Carmichael crest with a broken lance commemorating the unseating of the Duke of Clarence leading to his death at the Battle of Bauge On 22 March 1421 Henry V s progress in his French campaign experienced an unexpected reversal Henry had left his brother and presumptive heir Thomas Duke of Clarence in charge while he returned to England Clarence engaged a Franco Scottish force of 5000 men led by Gilbert Motier de La Fayette and John Stewart Earl of Buchan at the Battle of Bauge Clarence against the advice of his lieutenants before his army had been fully assembled attacked with a force of no more than 1500 men at arms Then during the course of the battle he led a charge of a few hundred men into the main body of the Franco Scottish army who quickly enveloped the English In the ensuing melee the Scot John Carmichael of Douglasdale broke his lance unhorsing the Duke of Clarence Once on the ground the duke was slain by Alexander Buchanan 69 The body of the Duke of Clarence was recovered from the field by Thomas Montacute 4th Earl of Salisbury who conducted the English retreat 70 English success Edit Henry V returned to France and went to Paris then visiting Chartres and Gatinais before returning to Paris From there he decided to attack the Dauphin held town of Meaux It turned out to be more difficult to overcome than first thought The siege began about 6 October 1421 and the town held for seven months before finally falling on 11 May 1422 68 At the end of May Henry was joined by his queen and together with the French court they went to rest at Senlis While there it became apparent that he was ill possibly dysentery and when he set out to the Upper Loire he diverted to the royal castle at Vincennes near Paris where he died on 31 August 68 The elderly and insane Charles VI of France died two months later on 21 October Henry left an only child his nine month old son Henry later to become Henry VI 71 On his deathbed as Henry VI was only an infant Henry V had given the Duke of Bedford responsibility for English France The war in France continued under Bedford s generalship and several battles were won The English won an emphatic victory at the Battle of Verneuil 17 August 1424 At the Battle of Bauge the Duke of Clarence had rushed into battle without the support of his archers At Verneuil the archers fought to devastating effect against the Franco Scottish army The effect of the battle was to virtually destroy the Dauphin s field army and to eliminate the Scots as a significant military force for the rest of the war 72 French victory 1429 1453 EditMain article Hundred Years War 1415 1453 Joan of Arc and French revival Edit The first Western image of a battle with cannon the Siege of Orleans in 1429 From Les Vigiles de Charles VII Bibliotheque nationale de France Paris Joan of Arc picture 1429 The appearance of Joan of Arc at the siege of Orleans sparked a revival of French spirit and the tide began to turn against the English 71 The English laid siege to Orleans in 1428 but their force was insufficient to fully invest the city In 1429 Joan persuaded the Dauphin to send her to the siege saying she had received visions from God telling her to drive out the English She raised the morale of the troops and they attacked the English redoubts forcing the English to lift the siege Inspired by Joan the French took several English strongholds on the Loire 73 The English retreated from the Loire Valley pursued by a French army Near the village of Patay French cavalry broke through a unit of English longbowmen that had been sent to block the road then swept through the retreating English army The English lost 2 200 men and the commander John Talbot 1st Earl of Shrewsbury was taken prisoner This victory opened the way for the Dauphin to march to Reims for his coronation as Charles VII on 16 July 1429 73 74 After the coronation Charles VII s army fared less well An attempted French siege of Paris was defeated on 8 September 1429 and Charles VII withdrew to the Loire Valley 75 Henry s coronations and the desertion of Burgundy Edit Henry VI was crowned king of England at Westminster Abbey on 5 November 1429 and king of France at Notre Dame in Paris on 16 December 1431 71 Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundians at the siege of Compiegne on 23 May 1430 The Burgundians then transferred her to the English who organised a trial headed by Pierre Cauchon Bishop of Beauvais and a collaborator with the English government who served as a member of the English Council at Rouen 76 Joan was convicted and burned at the stake on 30 May 1431 73 she was rehabilitated 25 years later by Pope Callixtus III After the death of Joan of Arc the fortunes of war turned dramatically against the English 77 Most of Henry s royal advisers were against making peace Among the factions the Duke of Bedford wanted to defend Normandy the Duke of Gloucester was committed to just Calais whereas Cardinal Beaufort was inclined to peace Negotiations stalled It seems that at the congress of Arras in the summer of 1435 where the duke of Beaufort was mediator the English were unrealistic in their demands A few days after the congress ended in September Philip the Good duke of Burgundy deserted to Charles VII signing the Treaty of Arras that returned Paris to the King of France This was a major blow to English sovereignty in France 71 The Duke of Bedford died on 14 September 1435 and was later replaced by Richard Plantagenet 3rd Duke of York 77 French resurgence Edit The Battle of Formigny 1450 The allegiance of Burgundy remained fickle but the Burgundian focus on expanding their domains in the Low Countries left them little energy to intervene in the rest of France 78 The long truces that marked the war gave Charles time to centralise the French state and reorganise his army and government replacing his feudal levies with a more modern professional army that could put its superior numbers to good use A castle that once could only be captured after a prolonged siege would now fall after a few days from cannon bombardment The French artillery developed a reputation as the best in the world 77 By 1449 the French had retaken Rouen In 1450 the Count of Clermont and Arthur de Richemont Earl of Richmond of the Montfort family the future Arthur III Duke of Brittany caught an English army attempting to relieve Caen and defeated it at the Battle of Formigny in 1450 Richemont s force attacked the English army from the flank and rear just as they were on the verge of beating Clermont s army 79 French conquest of Gascony Edit Charles the Victorious by Jean Fouquet Louvre Paris After Charles VII s successful Normandy campaign in 1450 he concentrated his efforts on Gascony the last province held by the English Bordeaux Gascony s capital was besieged and surrendered to the French on 30 June 1451 Largely due to the English sympathies of the Gascon people this was reversed when John Talbot and his army retook the city on 23 October 1452 However the English were decisively defeated at the Battle of Castillon on 17 July 1453 Talbot had been persuaded to engage the French army at Castillon near Bordeaux During the battle the French appeared to retreat towards their camp The French camp at Castillon had been laid out by Charles VII s ordinance officer Jean Bureau and this was instrumental in the French success as when the French cannon opened fire from their positions in the camp the English took severe casualties losing both Talbot and his son 80 End of the war Edit Although the Battle of Castillon is considered the last battle of the Hundred Years War 80 England and France remained formally at war for another 20 years but the English were in no position to carry on the war as they faced unrest at home Bordeaux fell to the French on 19 October and there were no more hostilities afterwards Following defeat in the Hundred Years War English landowners complained vociferously about the financial losses resulting from the loss of their continental holdings this is often considered a major cause of the Wars of the Roses that started in 1455 77 81 The Hundred Years War almost resumed in 1474 when the duke Charles of Burgundy counting on English support took up arms against Louis XI Louis managed to isolate the Burgundians by buying Edward IV of England off with a large cash sum and an annual pension in the Treaty of Picquigny 1475 The treaty formally ended the Hundred Years War with Edward renouncing his claim to the throne of France However future Kings of England and later of Great Britain continued to claim the title until 1803 when they were dropped in deference to the exiled Count of Provence titular King Louis XVIII who was living in England after the French Revolution 82 Some historians use the term The Second Hundred Years War as a periodisation to describe the series of military conflicts between Great Britain and France that occurred from about 1689 or some say 1714 to 1815 83 Likewise some historians refer to the Capetian Plantagenet rivalry series of conflicts and disputes that covered a period of 100 years 1159 1259 as The First Hundred Years War Significance Edit Burgundian territories orange yellow and limits of France red after the Burgundian War Historical significance Edit The French victory marked the end of a long period of instability that had been seeded with the Norman Conquest 1066 when William the Conqueror added King of England to his titles becoming both the vassal to as Duke of Normandy and the equal of as king of England the king of France 84 When the war ended England was bereft of its Continental possessions leaving it with only Calais on the continent until 1558 The war destroyed the English dream of a joint monarchy and led to the rejection in England of all things French although the French language in England which had served as the language of the ruling classes and commerce there from the time of the Norman conquest left many vestiges in English vocabulary English became the official language in 1362 and French was no longer used for teaching from 1385 85 National feeling that emerged from the war unified both France and England further Despite the devastation on its soil the Hundred Years War accelerated the process of transforming France from a feudal monarchy to a centralised state 86 In England the political and financial troubles which emerged from the defeat were a major cause of the War of the Roses 1455 1487 81 The spread of the Black Death with modern borders Historian Ben Lowe argued in 1997 that opposition to the war helped to shape England s early modern political culture Although anti war and pro peace spokesmen generally failed to influence outcomes at the time they had a long term impact England showed decreasing enthusiasm for conflict deemed not in the national interest yielding only losses in return for high economic burdens In comparing this English cost benefit analysis with French attitudes given that both countries suffered from weak leaders and undisciplined soldiers Lowe noted that the French understood that warfare was necessary to expel the foreigners occupying their homeland Furthermore French kings found alternative ways to finance the war sales taxes debasing the coinage and were less dependent than the English on tax levies passed by national legislatures English anti war critics thus had more to work with than the French 87 A 2021 theory about the early formation of state capacity is that interstate war was responsible for initiating a strong move toward states implementing tax systems with higher state capabilities For example see France in the Hundred Years War when the English occupation threatened the independent French Kingdom The king and his ruling elite demanded consistent and permanent taxation which would allow a permanent standing army to be financed The French nobility which had always opposed such an extension of state capacity agreed in this exceptional situation Hence the inter state war with England increased French state capability 88 Bubonic plague and warfare reduced population numbers throughout Europe during this period France lost half its population during the Hundred Years War 4 with Normandy reduced by three quarters and Paris by two thirds 89 During the same period England s population fell by 20 to 33 percent 5 Military significance Edit The first regular standing army in Western Europe since Roman times was organised in France in 1445 partly as a solution to marauding free companies The mercenary companies were given a choice of either joining the Royal army as compagnies d ordonnance on a permanent basis or being hunted down and destroyed if they refused France gained a total standing army of around 6 000 men which was sent out to gradually eliminate the remaining mercenaries who insisted on operating on their own The new standing army had a more disciplined and professional approach to warfare than its predecessors 90 The Hundred Years War was a time of rapid military evolution Weapons tactics army structure and the social meaning of war all changed partly in response to the war s costs partly through advancement in technology and partly through lessons that warfare taught The feudal system slowly disintegrated as well as the concept of chivalry By the war s end although the heavy cavalry was still considered the most powerful unit in an army the heavily armoured horse had to deal with several tactics developed to deny or mitigate its effective use on a battlefield 91 The English began using lightly armoured mounted troops known as hobelars Hobelars tactics had been developed against the Scots in the Anglo Scottish wars of the 14th century Hobelars rode smaller unarmoured horses enabling them to move through difficult or boggy terrain where heavier cavalry would struggle Rather than fight while seated on the horse they would dismount to engage the enemy 90 92 The closing battle of the war the Battle of Castillon was the first major battle won through the extensive use of field artillery 93 Timeline Edit Battles Edit Further information List of Hundred Years War battlesProminent figures EditFrance Edit Arms Historical Figure Life Role s King Philip VI 1293 1350Reigned 1328 1350 Charles of Valois son King John II 1319 1364Reigned 1350 1364 Philip VI s son King Charles V 1338 1380Reigned 1364 1380 John II s son Bertrand du Guesclin 1320 1380 Commander Louis IDuke of Anjou 1339 1384Regent 1380 1382 John II s son King Charles VI 1368 1422Reigned 1380 1422 Charles V s son King Charles VII 1403 1461Reigned 1422 1461 Charles VI s son Joan of Arc 1412 1431 Religious visionary La Hire 1390 1443 Commander Jean Poton de Xaintrailles 1390 1461 Commander John IIDuke of Alencon 1409 1476 Commander Jean de Dunois 1402 1468 Commander Jean Bureau 1390 1463 Master Gunner Gilles de Rais 1405 1440 CommanderEngland Edit Arms Historical Figure Life Role s Isabella of France 1295 1358Regent of England 1327 1330 Queen consort of England wife of Edward II mother of Edward III regent of England sister of Charles IV and daughter of Philip IV of France King Edward III 1312 1377Reigned 1327 1377 Philip IV s grandson Henry of GrosmontDuke of Lancaster 1310 1361 Commander Edward the Black Prince 1330 1376 Edward III s son and Prince of Wales John of GauntDuke of Lancaster 1340 1399 Edward III s son King Richard II 1367 1400Reigned 1377 1399 Son of the Black Prince Edward III s grandson King Henry IV 1367 1413Reigned 1399 1413 John of Gaunt s son Edward III s grandson King Henry V 1387 1422Reigned 1413 1422 Henry IV s son Catherine of Valois 1401 1437 Queen consort of England daughter of Charles VI of France mother of Henry VI of England and by her second marriage grandmother of Henry VII John of LancasterDuke of Bedford 1389 1435Regent 1422 1435 Henry IV s son Sir John Fastolf 74 1380 1459 Commander John TalbotEarl of Shrewsbury 1387 1453 Commander King Henry VI 1421 1471Reigned 1422 1461 also 1422 1453 as king Henry II of France Henry V s son grandson of Charles VI of France Richard PlantagenetDuke of York 1411 1460 CommanderBurgundy Edit Arms Historical Figure Life Role s Philip the BoldDuke of Burgundy 1342 1404Duke 1363 1404 Son of John II of France John the FearlessDuke of Burgundy 1371 1419Duke 1404 1419 Son of Philip the Bold Philip the GoodDuke of Burgundy 1396 1467Duke 1419 1467 Son of John the FearlessSee also Edit War portal United Kingdom portal France portalAnglo French relations British military history Capetian Plantagenet rivalry this conflict is also called by some historians the First Hundred Years War French military history Influence of French on English List of battles involving France in the Middle Ages Medieval demography Second Hundred Years War this is the name given by some historians to the near continuous series of conflicts between Britain and France from 1688 to 1815 beginning with the Glorious Revolution and ending with the Battle of Waterloo Timeline of the Hundred Years WarNotes Edit Fought against England during Despenser s Crusade Fought with England during the Caroline War Fought with England during Despenser s Crusade 24 May 1337 is the day when Philip VI of France confiscated Aquitaine from Edward III of England who responded by claiming the French throne Bordeaux fell to the French on 19 October 1453 there were no more hostilities afterwards References Edit Guizot Francois 1997 The History of Civilization in Europe translated by William Hazlitt 1846 Indiana USA Liberty Fund pp 204 205 ISBN 978 0 86597 837 9 a b Previte Orton 1978 p 872 Previte Orton 1978 pp 873 876 a b c Turchin 2003 pp 179 180 a b Neillands 2001 pp 110 111 a b Brissaud 1915 pp 329 330 Bartlett 2000 p 22 Bartlett 2000 p 17 Gormley 2007 Harris 1994 p 8 Prestwich 1988 p 298 Prestwich 1988 p 298 Prestwich 2007 pp 292 293 Wilson 2011 p 194 Prestwich 2007 p 394 a b Prestwich 2007 p 306 Prestwich 2007 pp 304 305 Sumption 1999 p 180 Sumption 1999 p 184 Prestwich 2003 pp 149 150 a b Prestwich 2007 pp 307 312 a b Friar 2004 pp 480 481 Glassock R E England circa 1334 p 160 in Darby 1976 Sumption 1999 pp 188 189 Sumption 1999 pp 233 234 a b c Rogers 2010 pp 88 89 Auray France Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 15 April 2018 Retrieved 14 April 2018 a b Prestwich 2007 pp 318 319 Rogers 2010 pp 55 45 Grummitt 2008 p 1 The Black Death transl amp ed Rosemay Horrox Manchester University Press 1994 9 Hewitt 2004 p 1 Hunt 1903 p 388 Le Patourel 1984 pp 20 21 Wilson 2011 p 218 a b c Guignebert 1930 Volume 1 pp 304 307 Venette 1953 p 66 a b Prestwich 2007 p 326 Le Patourel 1984 p 189 Apr 13 1360 Hail kills English troops History com Archived from the original on 5 September 2012 Retrieved 22 January 2016 Le Patourel 1984 p 32 Guignebert 1930 Volume 1 pp 304 307 Le Patourel 1984 pp 20 21 Chisholm 1911 p 501 Chisholm 1911 p 501 Wagner 2006 pp 102 103 Ormrod 2001 p 384 Backman 2003 pp 179 180 Nobles captured in battle were held in Honorable Captivity which recognised their status as prisoners of war and permitted ransom Britannica Treaty of Bretigny Archived 1 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 September 2012 Wagner 2006 p 86 Curry 2002 pp 69 70 a b Wagner 2006 p 78 Wagner 2006 p 122 Wagner 2006 p 122 Wagner 2006 pp 3 4 Sumption 2012 pp 187 196 Barber 2004 Ormrod 2008 a b c d e Tuck 2004 Francoise Autrand Charles V King of France in Vauchez 2000 pp 283 284 Sumption 2012 pp 385 390 396 399 Sumption 2012 p 409 Sumption 2012 p 411 Baker 2000 p 6 Baker 2000 p 6 Neillands 2001 pp 182 184 Neillands 2001 pp 182 184 Curry 2002 pp 77 82 Mortimer 2008 pp 253 254 Mortimer 2008 pp 263 264 Bean 2008 Agincourt Myth and Reality 1915 2015 p 70 Smith 2008 Curry 2002 pp 77 82 Sizer 2007 Ian Friel The English and War at Sea c 1200 c 1500 in Hattendorf amp Unger 2003 pp 76 77 a b Nolan The Age of Wars of Religion p 424 a b c d e f Allmand 2010 Allmand 2010 Wagner 2006 pp 44 45 Harriss 2010 a b c d Griffiths 2015 Griffiths 2015 Wagner 2006 pp 307 308 a b c Davis 2003 pp 76 80 a b Sir John Fastolf MC 2833 1 Norwich Norfolk Record Office Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 20 December 2012 Jaques 2007 p 777 Pernoud Regine Joan of Arc By Herself And Her Witnesses pp 159 162 165 a b c d Lee 1998 pp 145 147 Sumption 1999 p 562 Nicolle 2012 pp 26 35 a b Wagner 2006 p 79 a b Every version of the complaints put forward by the rebels in 1450 harps on the losses in France Webster 1998 pp 39 40 Neillands 2001 pp 290 291 Buffinton Arthur H 1929 The Second Hundred Years War 1689 1815 New York Henry Holt and Company Crouzet Francois 1996 The Second Hundred Years War Some Reflections French History 10 4 432 450 doi 10 1093 fh 10 4 432 Scott H M 1992 Review The Second Hundred Years War 1689 1815 The Historical Journal 35 443 469 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00025887 JSTOR 2639677 S2CID 162306794 Janvrin amp Rawlinson 2016 p 15 Janvrin amp Rawlinson 2016 p 16 Holmes amp Schutz 1948 p 61 Lowe 1997 pp 147 195 Baten Joerg Keywood Thomas Wamser Georg 2021 Territorial State Capacity and Elite Violence from the 6th to the 19th century European Journal of Political Economy 70 102037 doi 10 1016 j ejpoleco 2021 102037 S2CID 234810004 Ladurie 1987 p 32 a b Preston Wise amp Werner 1991 pp 84 91 Powicke 1962 p 189 Colm McNamee Hobelars in Rogers 2010 pp 267 268 Jones 2008 pp 1 17 Castillon 17 juillet 1453 le canon arme fatale de la guerre de Cent Ans Sciences et Avenir in French 4 September 2019 Sources EditAllmand C 23 September 2010 Henry V 1386 1422 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12952 Archived from the original on 10 August 2018 Subscription or UK public library membership required Backman Clifford R 2003 The Worlds 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membership required Grummitt David 2008 The Calais Garrison War and Military Service in England 1436 1558 Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 398 7 Guignebert Charles 1930 A Short History of the French People Vol 1 Translated by F G Richmond New York Macmillan Company Harris Robin 1994 Valois Guyenne Studies in History Series Studies in History Vol 71 Royal Historical Society ISBN 978 0 86193 226 9 ISSN 0269 2244 Harriss G L September 2010 Thomas duke of Clarence 1387 1421 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 27198 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hattendorf J amp Unger R eds 2003 War at Sea in the Middle Ages and Renaissance Woodbridge Suffolk Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 903 4 Hewitt H J 2004 The Black Prince s Expedition Barnsley S Yorkshire Pen and Sword Military ISBN 978 1 84415 217 9 Holmes U Jr amp Schutz A in German 1948 A History of the French Language revised ed Columbus OH Harold L Hedrick Jaques Tony 2007 Paris 1429 Hundred Years War Dictionary of Battles and Sieges P Z Greenwood Publishing Group p 777 ISBN 978 0 313 33539 6 Jones Robert 2008 Re thinking the origins of the Irish Hobelar PDF Cardiff Historical Papers Cardiff School of History and Archaeology Janvrin Isabelle Rawlinson Catherine 2016 The French in London From William the Conqueror to Charles de Gaulle Translated by Read Emily Wilmington Square Books ISBN 978 1 908524 65 2 Lee C 1998 This Sceptred Isle 55 BC 1901 London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 026133 2 Ladurie E 1987 The French Peasantry 1450 1660 Translated by Sheridan Alan University of California Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 520 05523 0 Hunt William 1903 Edward the Black Prince In Lee Sidney ed Index and Epitome Dictionary of National Biography Cambridge University Press p 388 Lowe Ben 1997 Imagining Peace History of Early English Pacifist Ideas University Park PA Penn State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 01689 4 Mortimer I 2008 The Fears of Henry IV The Life of England s Self Made King London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 1 84413 529 5 Neillands Robin 2001 The Hundred Years War revised ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 26131 9 Nicolle D 2012 The Fall of English France 1449 53 PDF Campaign Vol 241 Illustrated by Graham Turner Colchester Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84908 616 5 Archived PDF from the original on 8 August 2013 Ormrod W 2001 Edward III Yale English Monarchs series London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11910 7 Ormrod W 3 January 2008 Edward III 1312 1377 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 8519 Archived from the original on 16 July 2018 Subscription or UK public library membership required Le Patourel J 1984 Jones Michael ed Feudal Empires Norman and Plantagenet London Hambledon Continuum ISBN 978 0 907628 22 4 Powicke Michael 1962 Military Obligation in Medieval England Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 820695 8 Preston Richard Wise Sydney F Werner Herman O 1991 Men in arms a history of warfare and its interrelationships with Western society 5th ed Beverley MA Wadsworth Publishing Co Inc ISBN 978 0 03 033428 3 Prestwich M 1988 Edward I Yale English Monarchs series University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 06266 5 Prestwich M 2003 The Three Edwards War and State in England 1272 1377 2nd ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 30309 5 Prestwich M 2007 Plantagenet England 1225 1360 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 922687 0 Previte Orton C 1978 The shorter Cambridge Medieval History Vol 2 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20963 2 Rogers C ed 2010 The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533403 6 Sizer Michael 2007 The Calamity of Violence Reading the Paris Massacres of 1418 Proceedings of the Western Society for French History 35 hdl 2027 spo 0642292 0035 002 ISSN 2573 5012 Smith Llinos 2008 Glyn Dŵr Owain c 1359 c 1416 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 10816 Subscription or UK public library membership required Sumption J 1999 The Hundred Years War 1 Trial by Battle Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 571 13895 1 Sumption J 2012 The Hundred Years War 3 Divided Houses London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 24012 8 Tuck Richard 2004 Richard II 1367 1400 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 23499 Subscription or UK public library membership required Turchin P 2003 Historical Dynamics Why States Rise and Fall Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11669 3 Vauchez Andre ed 2000 Encyclopedia of the Middle ages Volume 1 Cambridge James Clark ISBN 978 1 57958 282 1 Venette J 1953 Newall Richard A ed The Chronicle of Jean de Venette Translated by Birdsall Jean Columbia University Press Wagner J 2006 Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War PDF Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 32736 0 Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2018 Webster Bruce 1998 The Wars of the Roses London UCL Press ISBN 978 1 85728 493 5 Wilson Derek 2011 The Plantagenets The Kings That Made Britain London Quercus ISBN 978 0 85738 004 3 Further reading EditBarker J 2012 Conquest The English Kingdom of France 1417 1450 PDF Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 06560 4 Archived from the original PDF on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2020 Corrigan Gordon 2014 A Great and Glorious Adventure A Military History of the Hundred Years War Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 84887 927 0 Cuttino G P The Causes of the Hundred Years War Speculum 31 3 1956 pp 463 477 online Favier Jean 1980 La Guerre de Cent Ans Paris Fayard ISBN 978 2 213 00898 1 Froissart Jean 1895 Macaulay George Campbell ed The Chronicles of Froissart Translated by Bourchier John Lord Berners London Macmillan and Son Retrieved 24 September 2012 Green David 2014 The Hundred Years War A People s History New Haven and London Yale ISBN 978 0 300 13451 3 Lambert Craig L 2011 Edward III s siege of Calais A reappraisal Journal of Medieval History 37 3 245 256 doi 10 1016 j jmedhist 2011 05 002 S2CID 159935247 Postan M M Some Social Consequences of the Hundred Years War Economic History Review 12 1 2 1942 pp 1 12 online Seward D 2003 The Hundred Years War The English in France 1337 1453 Brief Histories revised ed London Robinson ISBN 978 1 84119 678 7 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Hundred Years War Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hundred Years War The Hundred Years War and the History of Navarre Timeline of the Hundred Years War Archived from the original on 26 March 2017 The Hundred Years War 1336 1565 by Dr Lynn H Nelson University of Kansas Emeritus The Hundred Years War information and game Jean Froissart On The Hundred Years War 1337 1453 from the Internet Medieval Sourcebook Online database of Soldiers serving in the Hundred Years War University of Southampton and University of Reading Causes of the Wars of the Roses An Overview Luminarium Encyclopedia Online Resource ed 26 April 2007 Retrieved 14 September 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hundred Years 27 War amp oldid 1134184365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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