Gone Medieval - Hundred Years' War

Episode Date: November 6, 2021

Over 100 years of conflict, two warring nations, five monarchs on either side and countless casualties in a dispute over claims to the throne: in this episode, our very own Matt Lewis unravels the num...bers. He takes us through the biggest turning points of the Hundred Years’ War chronologically, and gives us some insight into the personalities involved on the English and French sides. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:27 with a brand-new release every week exploring everything from the ancient world, to World War II. Just visit historyhit.com forward slash subscribe. Welcome to this episode of Gone Medieval from History Hit. I'm Matt Lewis. I don't have a guest joining me today. I thought instead we could talk a bit about the hundred years war. It was a prolonged series of offensives, battles and political manoeuvrings in a war between England and France, a struggle for the French crown that began in 1336. and lasted for roughly 100 years, depending on when you consider it to have ended precisely.
Starting point is 00:01:10 It saw sporadic warfare that, for a long time, left France in tatters, financially ruined and militarily embarrassed. I thought I'd take a look at some of the most important moments in this period, mainly from a military perspective. There are so many different ways to cut the 100 years' war, so many people and moments that we could discuss that this will necessarily not be an exhaust. tour of the conflict we do have lives to get back to, but rather a way to anchor it in the history of the medieval period and understand its key moments. The Hundred Years' War was, to some extent, a problem France brought upon itself. Tension between the two neighbouring kingdoms had been steadily building since the Norman conquest. That seismic moment had seen a vassal
Starting point is 00:02:02 of the French crown, the Duke of Normandy, become a king, complicating the religious relationship between them. Matters got worse when Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine came to the throne of England. Henry was Duke of Normandy, but he was also Count of Vonjou, Count of Maine, and, thanks to Eleanor, Duke of Aquitaine. He actually owned more of what we call France today than the French kings did, and they invested time and effort in splitting the Plantagenet family apart to break up these holdings. King John, Henry and Eleanor's youngest son, famously lost Normandy, and the territory held by the English crown shrank until only Gascany, an ill-defined region in southwestern France that had been part of Aquitaine remained.
Starting point is 00:02:53 It was here that trouble erupted in 1337. Following a dispute about homage for the region, King Philip VIII of France decided to take Gascany into his own hands and in return, King Edward III of England laid claim not just to Gascany but to Philip's crown. The basis for his claim lay in the break in direct male descent of the French crown in 1328, when Charles IV, the last Capitian king, died without an heir. Charles was the last of three brothers to have sat on the throne of France. Philip IV had died in 1314.
Starting point is 00:03:33 he was succeeded by his oldest son as Louis X, who died two years later in 1316. Louis had a son born after his own death, but John I would only live for five days. Louis's younger brother reigned next as Philip V, but only for less than six years. When he died in 1322 without a son, the last remaining brother became Charles IV, until his death in 1328. The death of Charles IV created a moment of real political turmoil in France. The House of Caput had ruled France for 341 years in an unbroken line from father to son, or at least to brother at worst. That ended in 1328 and left two distinct choices.
Starting point is 00:04:22 One was Philip Counter-Valwar, a grandson of King Philip III. The other was a grandson of Philip IV, but he was problematical. The main issue was that he was King Edward III of England and the French were not keen to have the Crown of France handed to the King of England nor to have a non-native as a King of France. The other issue with Edward's claim was really more like a good excuse to overlook him. The Salic law was an ancient and largely unused code
Starting point is 00:04:53 that was almost a thousand years old. New life was breathed into it because it prevented women from inheriting land or the crown, or so it was claimed. It's far less clear than that. In the late 6th century, a provision was added that if a man had neighbours, but after his death, sons and daughters remained, as long as there were sons, they should have the land just as the Salic law provides. And if the sons are already dead, then a daughter may receive the land just as the sons would have done had they lived. Nevertheless, the French establishment focused on the idea that a woman couldn't inherit the throne or pass on a claim to it, as a way to discount Edward as a potential heir. From the early
Starting point is 00:05:40 15th century, the phrase Salick law became synonymous with this single concern of female inheritance of the Crown of France. This was how the House of Valois became kings of France. Philip But the sixth would rub salt into Edward III's wounds with his decision to take Gascany as part of an ongoing disagreement about doing homage for the region. Edward retaliated by claiming Philip's entire kingdom, resurrecting the succession dispute of 1328. France was, on paper, the favourite as hostilities broke out. It was richer than England and had a larger population, and so prepared a fleet at sluice on the coast of Zeeland. There were naval skirmishes, at Cadzand in 1337 and Armourdin in 1338. On the 24th of June 1340, the English took the initiative
Starting point is 00:06:32 and attacked the French fleet. There was a fierce naval battle that raged all day and into the night. Opposing ships would be lashed together as they came close and hand-to-hand combat was supported by archers and crossbowmen. The French tactic of chaining many of their ships together backfired as the English pushed from one ship to the next until the French fleet broke. More than 150 ships were captured and more than 20 were sunk with thousands of French casualties lost in the water. The first large-scale battle of the Hundred Years' War had been a catastrophe for France. Throughout the early 1340s there was a series of battles on French soil as Edward took the fight to Philip. The English used large-scale, fast-moving, hard-hitting, hard-hitting, rail.
Starting point is 00:07:22 tactics known as the Cheveshé. The first famous encounter came on the 26th of August, 1346, with the Battle of Cressy. Edward III surprised onlookers and chroniclers with his preparations. He found a ridge of land protected at the rear by a woodland. There was nothing unusual there. It was a sound, defensible position. But then he ordered his archers to join his men at arms, who all dismounted to fight. Archers would usually be lined. up in front of the infantrymen, but Edward mixed them together most of the archers on the flanks of the men at arms, and he abandoned any cavalry. Edward also ordered pits to be dug, each a foot deep and a foot wide, to hinder a cavalry attack. Edward's other novelty was the positioning
Starting point is 00:08:11 of cannons on the battlefield. A relatively new technology used primarily for sieges, Edward thought they might be useful in the Battle of Cressy, even if just to make a noise to spook the French horses. The king then took up a position in a nearby windmill that allowed him to oversee the entire area and waited for the French. As Philip approached, he lost control of his army as it strained to get at the English. It became a matter of honour to attack quickly and to attack first. Realising his authority was wobbling, Philip gave the order to attack before he even reached the battlefield. The chronicler Fossa complained that they engaged without any proper preparation whatsoever.
Starting point is 00:08:58 As Phillips Genoese crossbowmen approached, their protection and most of their ammunition stuck further back in the baggage train, the English archers opened fire. Fassar recorded that the English archers poured out their arrows on the Genoese so thickly and evenly that they fell like snow. Shocked by the accuracy as they were peppered with arrows, the crossbowmen fell back.
Starting point is 00:09:21 Next, the impatient French cavalry launched a thundering attack. They didn't even wait for the Genoese to get out of the way, but trampled them as they tried to retreat. The archers showed their worth once more, barbed arrows biting the horses and sending them crashing out of control around the field. In the late afternoon, the main French force finally reached the battlefield, and, seeing the embarrassing carnage inflicted on their vanguard, were determined to throw everything they had at the English. The lie of the land before the English army forced the French cavalry to funnel in to the English right in order to attack. This slowed their momentum and decreased the advantage of their numbers.
Starting point is 00:10:04 It was here in the hottest part of the battlefield that Edward III placed his 16-year-old son and heir, Edward Prince of Wales, known as the Black Prince. In this bottleneck, he and his men held firm to pack more and more French cavalry into an ever tighter press. The chronicler Geoffrey LeBaker recorded that the young prince displayed marvellous courage, standing in the front line against the enemy, running through horses, felling knights, crushing helmets under his blows, and all the while he encouraged his men,
Starting point is 00:10:37 pulling fallen friends to their feet and setting everyone an example. The prince was hard-pressed, and a few men reached the king to ask for assistance. Edward III refused to send aid, Fassar recording him saying, go back to him and those who sent you and tell them from me that they are not to send for help again whatever happens as long as my son is still alive tell them that my orders are that they should let the boy win his spurs for i wish the day to be his if god wills it and that he and his companions shall have the honour of it the prince was knocked to the ground and his standard fell but it was recovered the king relented and sent his son reinforcements to help him but by the time they
Starting point is 00:11:20 arrived, the prince was already back on his feet and fighting fiercely again. Cressy saw King Philip the 6th wounded in the face by an arrow after having two horses killed under him. Several French nobleman had been killed. Another of the casualties on the French side was John the Blind, the King of Bohemia. Determined not to miss out on the chance of glory, John's horse had been lashed to two of his knights, one on either side, to guide him on the battlefield. He was found dead after the battle with the two knights who had remained at his side. Prince Edward was so struck by John's courage that he adopted John's insignia as his personal badge,
Starting point is 00:12:01 and to this day the ostrich feathers of John the Blind, King of Bohemia, are the badge of the Prince of Wales. A week after Cressy, Edward III's forces began a siege of Calais, a fortified seaport that would play a pivotal role for the rest of the medieval period. The siege lasted almost a year, from early September 1346 until early August 1347. In July 1347, Philip the 6th had marched to try and relieve Calais, but found the English siege too entrenched and impossible to dislodge. Though on food and supplies and unable to get support from the French crown, Calais was forced to surrender on the 3rd of August 1347. remain in English hands and provide a critical enclave across the channel until 1558. The year of Cressy and the capture of Calais was a new high for England and a dangerous moment
Starting point is 00:12:58 for France. The arrival in Western Europe of the Black Death, which caused devastation to life across the continent, peaking from 1346 to 1353, caused the fighting to largely cease. Queen Joan of France, Philip's wife, and one of Edward III's daughters, also named Joan were casualties as an estimated one-third to half of the population of Europe were lost to the disease. It was only in 1355 that Edward felt able to refocus on his efforts to win the French Crown. Philip VIII had died in 1350 and been succeeded by his son, King John II. Five years into his reign, John was 36, when Edward III, now in his early 40s and supported by his 25-year-old heir, famed black prince, returned his gaze to France. The next famous and defining engagement
Starting point is 00:13:54 came on the 19th of September 1356 with the Battle of Poitiers. The Black Prince was undertaking a chevalche when King John II saw an opportunity to intercept the English force with superior numbers. The armies finally encountered each other near to the Aquitania city of Poitiers. The French may have had almost double or even triple the English numbers and must have felt that they had the upper hand. When the prince was told that the fields were covered with French men at arms, he reportedly replied, well, in the name of God,
Starting point is 00:14:29 let us now study how we shall fight with them to our advantage. The black prince lined his forces up on a ridge near a bend in the River Moissan, protected by the terrain on both flanks and the approach uneven to hamper the French cavalry. The French filled up the plains below, most of the force dismounting with small cavalry units positioned on the flanks to harass the English archers. A delegation of churchmen led by the Cardinal of Perigour tried to negotiate terms. Neither side seemed interested in a compromise. The French demanded the return of all towns and any prisoners the English held, along with a promise not to take up arms for seven years against John.
Starting point is 00:15:11 They clearly felt they had the numbers and the English ought to be worried. In return, the Black Prince demanded marriage to one of John's daughters with an astronomical dowry. Needless to say, no agreement was reached, but both sides had given the appearance of taking part. Battle was now imminent. In the early morning of the 19th of September, one flank of the Prince's army suddenly began to move away with all its baggage train. spotting the retreat, the French launched their attack, but they had been deceived. As soon as they charged, the English flank hurried back into position. They had tricked the French into attacking early, rather than waiting out the smaller, hungrier English army.
Starting point is 00:15:57 The first lines of French cavalry slammed into the English and broke the lines. The archers moved around the side to get a better angle to fire at the cavalry and the supporting men at arms to devastating effect. The attack was eventually defeated and driven back, but now King John himself was gathering a horde of fresh soldiers to attack again. The English took a decisive tactical decision. Sending a small contingent to circle behind the enemy, they mounted up for a cavalry charge, an unexpected tactic that caught the French unawares. When they were also attacked from behind, they fell into disarray. King John and his closest companions all nine.
Starting point is 00:16:39 of the Order of the Star who had taken a solemn oath never to retreat from a battle fought on. Eventually, amid the carnage and death, King John and his youngest son, the 14-year-old Philip, were surrounded and captured. King John was well treated by the black prince in a chivalrous manner, the prince serving the king at table, and when he was taken back to London as a prisoner, he was welcomed as an honoured guest and celebrated. King John of France spent the next four years as an English prisoner, leaving his oldest son, the Dofan Charles, Dauphin being the French equivalent of the Prince of Wales, the King's heir, to rule a broken France. John remained a prisoner until the settling of the Treaty of Bretigny,
Starting point is 00:17:25 which brought to an end what is known as the Edwardian phase of the Hundred Years' War. The treaty was agreed in 1360 and finally ratified on the 24th of October. It saw England returned some portions of the... of land, but retain much of what it had taken around Gascany, effectively enlarging aquitaine. This was now to be held without the need to give homage to the French crown for it, and Edward III also officially gave up his claim to be the rightful king of France. John was freed with a vast ransom of three million crowns, which was more than two years' revenue for the French crown. He left hostages, including two of his sons, and was released to raise
Starting point is 00:18:09 the ransom. When one son, Louis, escaped in 1363, John was so embarrassed and dishonoured that he travelled back to England and surrendered himself as a prisoner again in early 1364. Within a few months in April 1364, he died and was succeeded by Dofans Charles as King Charles V. In May 1369, Charles declared war on England. Edward III was now in his late 50s and his health was beginning to decline. His son, the Black Prince, was almost 40, and after campaigning in Castile, was based in Gascony as his own health declined too. Charles summoned the Prince to Paris as part of a dispute in Gascony, and when the Prince refused to attend, Charles took the opportunity to renew hostilities. France gained the upper hand in early engagements, even attacking the English coast.
Starting point is 00:19:04 A French and Castilian Navy destroyed an English fleet at La Rochelle in June 13th. Charles consolidated his hold on Normandy but struggled to raise taxes. In England, the Black Prince died on the 8th of June 1376 and his father, Edward III, passed away a year later on the 21st of June 1377. Edward's grandson, the Black Prince's son, succeeded as Richard II at the age of 10. Charles V died in September 1380 and was succeeded by his son as Charles the Hello, if you're enjoying this podcast, then I know you're going to be fascinated by the new episodes of the history hit warfare podcast, from the polionic battles and Cold War confrontations to the Normandy landings and 9-11. We reveal new perspectives on how war has shaped and changed our modern world. I'm your host, James Rogers, and each week, twice a week, I team up with fellow historians, military veterans, journalists and experts from around the world to bring you inspiring leaders. If the crossroads had fallen, then what Napoleon would have achieved is he would have severed the communications between the Allied force and the Prussian force, and there wouldn't have been a Waterloo. It would have been as simple as that. At the time the weapons were tested, there was this perception of great risk and great fear during the arms race that meant that these countries disregarded these communities, health and well-being to pursue nuclear weapons instead. and war-defining strategies.
Starting point is 00:20:45 It's as though the world is incapable of finding a moderate light presence. It always wants to either swamp the place in trillion-dollar wars or it wants to have nothing at all to do with it. And in relation to a country like Afghanistan, both approaches are catastrophic. Join us on the history hit warfare podcast, where we're on the front line of military history. The Hundred Years' War sat in abeyance for a long period. Richard II faced a long minority,
Starting point is 00:21:22 followed by internal problems with his government. Charles VI had frequent bouts of ill health that saw him attack courtiers, believe he was made of glass and might shatter, refused to wash or change, or even able to recognise his own family at times. Richard II lost the throne of England in 1399 to his cousin Henry Bollingbrook,
Starting point is 00:21:45 who became King Henry IV, the first monarch of the House of Lancaster. Henry was kept focused on England by several uprisings and then his own poor health, until his death in 1413. With the accession of his oldest son, King Henry V, the Hundred Years' War, was almost immediately resurrected by England. Henry V's precise reasons for launching into the war with France are uncertain, but there were obvious benefits to it. The Lancastrian regime had met resistance, and England had been focused internally for decades under Richard II and Henry IV.
Starting point is 00:22:20 nothing unified the nation quite like a war on foreign soil. It had opportunities for glory, chivalry, brotherhood, adventure, and incalculable wealth. It would distract from internal strife. I also wonder whether there was an element of Henry seeking to place the Lancastrian claim to the throne of England before God for judgment. It would certainly make sense of some of his later actions. In 1415, Henry sailed from England. He had written to King Charles the Sixth France to offer him the opportunity of handing over the crown without any bloodshed. Charles declined, and Henry assembled a fleet and an army for what would prove a fateful campaign. The assault began with the siege of Harfleur, invested on the 18th of August, and completed with the town surrender
Starting point is 00:23:08 just over a month later on the 22nd of September 1415. On the march to Calais, the English army was shadowed by a much larger French force. Henry offered single combat to the the Dofan Louis to settle the matter without further bloodshed. Louis declined. The two armies would meet at Azingor in the county of San Paul, a place usually called Agincourt by the English. As they marched across the French countryside, the English had become hungry and sick,
Starting point is 00:23:37 many suffering with dysentery, the bane of all campaigning armies. They were between maybe six and eight thousand strong, made up mostly of archers. The French were well provisioned and had vastly superflued, and had vastly superior numbers, some estimates giving them 15,000 or more. Like Cressie and Poitiers, the French felt they had the upper hand and should win the battle easily. Henry managed to select the location for the battle, a fact that altered the course of the day. He chose a narrow strip of field with woods on either side for protection,
Starting point is 00:24:09 and the ploughed earth was made boggy by rain during the night. The English archers buried stakes into the ground against a cavalry charge. Some were reportedly so ill that they cut the backs out of their hoses so they could simply endure their diarrhoea where they stood. The French plans seemed to have been hampered by too many noblemen demanding the honour of leadership. They all jostled to be at the front of what looked like an easy win, but with no clear single voice in command, discipline slipped and organisation was lost. After several hours of stalemate, Henry realised he had to act.
Starting point is 00:24:45 The French army could wait, but he couldn't. He ordered the archers to dig up their stakes, carry them forward, and replant them within longbow range of the French lines. One of the great mysteries of Agincourt is why the French allowed this to happen without attacking the exposed and vulnerable English. Had they done so, they might have won a swift victory, but whether they thought the English meant to make a full advance to the French position, or they were simply unprepared for a cavalry charge, they missed their window. The stakes were driven back into the ground and the English archers, confident of their range, sent an arrow storm amongst the French forces.
Starting point is 00:25:23 The French cavalry charged, but like at Cressy, sharp arrows fell into the horses and drove them wild with pain. The stakes in front of the archers stopped the advance until panic caused them to turn around. Under heavy fire and with many horses out of control, the cavalry rode down its own infantry moving up behind, As the French knights abandoned their horses and advanced on foot,
Starting point is 00:25:46 they found the wet mud churned up by the cavalry. Sucking clay pulled on their legs as they tried to step over fallen comrades. The English archers continued to fire until they ran out of arrows, at which point they took up swords and axes, and even the mallets they'd used to knock the posts into the ground and fell upon the tired Frenchmen at arms. The bodies of the slain mounted up. Henry himself fought in the front lines.
Starting point is 00:26:14 When he received word that his youngest brother Humphrey had been knocked to the ground and wounded, the king took his personal bodyguard and stood over his brother's prone body while he was dragged to safety. It was at this moment that Henry received an axe blow to the helmet that knocked off a piece of the crown he wore. Henry's decision to wear a crown on his helm was an unusual one. It made him instantly identifiable and therefore a target, but I think it was also his way of placing the contested, fragile Lancasterian claim to the throne of England before God for the ultimate judgment. As he looked at the fallen French and the hundreds of prisoners his small force had taken,
Starting point is 00:26:54 he must have felt vindicated. But the day was not done yet, and there was a moment still to come that has long seen Henry criticised as a monster. At some point in the chaos, Henry ordered the killing of the French prisoners. sources are confused and uncertain about when and why precisely this happened. It seems likely that either there was news of a French force about to attack from the rear, which would have been able to free and rearm the prisoners, who might well have outnumbered their captors by this point,
Starting point is 00:27:25 or that the French launched a new assault in the front that meant there would not be enough men to guard the prisoners who could simultaneously attack the English from the rear. It is possible that not many prisoners were actually killed, before it became clear the danger had passed and the order was cancelled, though some historians believe hundreds, perhaps thousands, were slaughtered. The only thing that is certain is that no contemporary source, English or French, criticised Henry's decision in the heat of the battle.
Starting point is 00:27:53 When the battle was finally over, it was a crushing defeat for the French. Three dukes, nine counts and around a hundred lords were among the dead. The dukes of Orleans and Bourbonne and the counts of Hu van Dom, and Harcourt, as well as the Marshal of France, Jean L'Amengre, better known as Marshal Bossycore, were among the prisoners. On the English side, the Duke of York and Earl of Suffolk were the highest profile casualties. The victory was against all the odds and its reputation among the battles of the medieval period was sealed. The French leadership was decimated. Those who remained blamed each other for what went wrong as their king's health continued to cause problems.
Starting point is 00:28:38 Henry pressed his advantage in the years that followed. He conquered Normandy with another controversial and brutal moment taking place at the siege of Ruan in the winter of 1418 to 19. As the siege bit, the authorities within the city threw out all the women and children and those unable to fight to preserve food and supplies. Henry refused to let them pass the English blockade and those within were forced to watch their fellow citizens starve to death in the new. nor in cold at the foot of Ruan's walls. Was Henry Krul or those who remained inside the walls refusing to surrender? I think most of us would say both. England's ascendancy led to the Treaty of Tuat in 1420.
Starting point is 00:29:24 This marked a high point in the Hundred Years' War for England. Charles VI's mental health continued to suffer. Two of his three sons had died. The French leadership had not recovered in the five years since Saging Corps, during which Henry had seemed unstoppable. Henry had become allied to the Burgundians. In 1418, John the fearless Duke of Burgundy occupied Paris. Under the guise of peace talks on a bridge at Montreux,
Starting point is 00:29:52 Charles's remaining son, the Dauphin Charles, had murdered Duke John. A Carthusian monk showing John's skull to King Francis I in the following century reflected that the hole in this skull was the doorway through which the English had entered France. John's son, Philip the Good, threw his full weight behind the English in vengeance for this act, and the Dofan struggled to secure support. By 1420, King Charles VI had been forced to the negotiating table. The treaty that was agreed at Tuat would settle the ongoing war for the French Crown in England's favour. Henry would marry one of Charles's daughters, Catherine of Valois.
Starting point is 00:30:33 Henry would be the heir to the French Crown, becoming king on Charles' death. and would act as regent of France in the meantime. Dofan Charles was to be utterly dispossessed. Needless to say, he was less than happy with his father's settlement. Two years after the Treaty of Tuat, Henry V died on the 31st of August 1422 at the age of 35. Charles VIth of France died just weeks later on the 21st of October, aged 53. This, through the Treaty of Tuat and the settlement it represented into turmoil, Henry was succeeded by his nine-month-old baby son as King Henry VI.
Starting point is 00:31:16 When Charles died, Henry the Sixth of England effectively became King of France too, but Dofan Charles used the chaos to press his own claim. Initially, Burgundy remained behind England and Brittany joined an alliance against Charles. The English Kingdom of France was controlled by John Duke of Bedford, the brother of Henry V, who acted as regent. Henry V's youngest brother, Humphrey, who had been injured at Agincourt, played a role in English politics. The English continued to progress,
Starting point is 00:31:45 winning the Battle of Vernuille on the 17th of August, 1424, a battle dubbed the Second Agincourt. The next turning point came in 1429, with the emergence of Joan of Arc, the maid of Allion. A peasant girl from northeast France, she spoke of receiving visions of the archangel Michael and others who told her to support Dofan Charles as the rightful king of France. Charles, styling himself King Charles VIII, but as yet uncrowned, was sceptical.
Starting point is 00:32:17 Was Joan a prophet sent to save him, or a witch who would damn his soul? Unsure, he sent her with an army that was to try and relieve the siege of Aureon. When success came just nine days after her arrival, Joan was vaunted as a a hero. Charles swept through English held lands and reached reams the traditional site of coronations of kings of France and was crowned as King Charles the 7th. The English suffered another crushing defeat at the Battle of Jago on the 12th of June 1429 and at the Battle of Pate on the 18th of June 1429. Joan though was captured by the Burgundians in May 1430. Handed over to the English, she was tried for heresy. The result was a
Starting point is 00:33:01 a foregone conclusion that trial a political stunt to undermine the resurgent French cause by tainting it with ungodly heresy. Heresy could only lead to a death sentence for a repeat offence, and so when Joan continued to wear the clothes of a male soldier, it was taken as a relapse, a second offence, and the death penalty was handed down. Joan, just 19 years old, was tied to a tall pillar of wood in the Vieux Marche in Rouen on the 30th of May 1431. A crucifix was held before her as the pyre was lit and the crowd watched her burn to death. Her remains were thrown into the River Sen to prevent any relics being collected. This is one of those dark moments in history which seems all the worse because it's happening to one person and we can feel the
Starting point is 00:33:51 injustice and flinch at the pain. Joan's death and the hope she had given France, laid the foundation for the endings of the Hundred Years' War. The alliance between England and Burgundy began to unravel. John Duke of Bedford had been married to Anne, a sister of Duke Philip the Good. When she died in 1432, John married Jacketta of Luxembourg. Philip either took offence at the swift remarry marriage without consulting him or took the opportunity to break his alliance with England. He was reconciled with Charles I, the man responsible for his father's murder,
Starting point is 00:34:29 by the Treaty of Arras in 1435. Within months of the completion of this new alliance, John, Duke of Bedford, died on the 14th of September, 1435. The respect in which John was held by his enemies was demonstrated years after the French finally retook Ruan, where John was buried. Some of Louis the 11th men wanted to tear down his tomb, but Louis, Charles Iventh's son, prevented them, saying,
Starting point is 00:34:56 what honour shall it be to us or to you to break up this monument and to pull out of the ground and take up the dead bones of him whom in life neither my father nor your progenitors with all their power, puissance and friends were able to make fly one foot backward but by his strength, wit and policy kept them all out of the principal dominions of the realm of France and out of this noble and famous Duchy of Normandy
Starting point is 00:35:24 wherefore I say, first God have his soul, and let his body now lie in rest, which when alive would have disquieted the proudest of us all. And as for the tomb, I assure you, it is not decent nor convenient for him as his honour and acts deserve, although it were much richer and more beautiful. Powerful words indeed from an enemy. England tried to stabilise the situation in France, until Henry VI came of age to complete his father's work. As Henry grew, it became more and more clear that he had little interest in war with France. In 1431, Henry had been crowned King of France in Paris, making him the only person in history crowned King of England and King of France in both countries.
Starting point is 00:36:13 In 1445, he married Margaret of Anjou, a niece of Charles the Seventh's wife, accepting poor terms to secure peace with France. The war had well and truly turned. earned. Paris had surrendered to the French in 1436, driving the English back into Normandy. On the 29th of October 1449, Ruan, the capital of Normandy, fell. The Battle of Forminue on the 15th of April 1450 saw a smaller French army defeat a much larger English force in a reverse of previous English victories, and the English were pushed out of northern France with only Calais remaining in English hands. In 1453, Henry V6 decided to go on the offensive.
Starting point is 00:36:58 A fresh army under John Talbot, first Earl of Shrewsbury, the most experienced and famous English general remaining, was raised and sent to France. Talbot fought the Battle of Castillon on the 17th of July 1453. A raid lured the Earl, who was in his mid-60s, into chasing the French army. The English were routed. Talbot and his son were killed in the fighting.
Starting point is 00:37:23 It was a final crushing defeat. Cassillon in 1453 is widely considered the final action of the Hundred Years' War that had begun in 1337, and the news of the defeat may well have contributed to the breakdown in Henry VI's mental health. Edward VIII, who took the throne from Henry VI as part of the Wars of the Roses, invaded France in 1475, but was brought off by Charles' son, King Louis XI, 11th, a man known as the Universal Spider for the webs of intrigue that he span. In early 1483, France made aggressive moves towards England, but Edward IV died in April and Louis also passed away in August.
Starting point is 00:38:05 England retained Calais until 1558, and English and then British monarchs would continue to claim to be kings and queens of France until 1801 when France had shed its monarchy in favour of becoming a republic. Perhaps the epilogue to the Hundred Years' War came in 1485. France, mired in its own minority crisis that would lead to civil war between 1485 and 1488, was wary of Richard III in England. He had refused to be brought off during the 1475 invasion. France sponsored Henry Tudor, the exiled Earl of Richmond, to invade England. At the Battle of Bosworth, on the 22nd of August 1485, Henry Tudor defeated.
Starting point is 00:38:51 Richard III and became King Henry the 7th, the first of the Tudor monarchs. France had affected regime change in England. Bosworth, in 1485, was perhaps the final act of the Hundred Years' War. I hope you've enjoyed this episode, and I hope that's helped to make a little bit more sense of what is a really difficult and prolonged period to get a grip of. You can join Dr Kat Jarman on Tuesday for another brand new episode, and you can tell all of your friends and family that you've gone medieval. Anyway, I'd better let you go. I've been Matt Lewis and we've just gone medieval with history hit.

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