The Rest Is History - 488. Hundred Years' War: The Road to Agincourt (Part 2)
Episode Date: August 28, 2024On the 11th of August 1415, King Henry V of England - an austere, pious, thoughtful and terrifying warlord in only his late-twenties - set sail for France. He embarked in the largest ship ever built o...n English soil at the head of some 15,000 ships, his nobles, brothers and hordes of Welsh longbow-men in tow. Two days later, they made land, and their target: the Port of Harfleur, a nest of state-sponsored pirates. Henry’s intention was to use it as a spring-board to a wider campaign in France, capitalising on the chaos that raged there, before eventually annexing Normandy. The assault on Harfleur that followed was bloody and brutal. The first Norman town to be pulverised by artillery, the English canons created a hellish scene of smoke and fire. However, the siege went on longer than Henry had hoped, inflicting terrible devastation upon the city and his forces. Furthermore, large numbers of his men were falling sick and their supplies growing thin. Finally, after four long weeks of terrible siege warfare, the city fell. However, a massive French force was now assembling to recapture the fallen city, potentially undermining all the money and men that Henry had already spent on the campaign. With the clock ticking for the English towards the end of 1415, what would Henry’s next move be? First, in a daring move of legendary chivalry, he challenged the portly French Dauphin to a duel, to no avail. So it was that he decided to march right across France and take Calais; a bold public proclamation of his right to the whole of France. Would Henry’s plan prove overly ambitious, or would he get the decisive battle he craved…? Join Tom and Dominic as they discuss Henry V’s first bloody forays into France, enacting his claim to the French crown that he truly believed was his by divine ordination, and thereby reigniting the tumultuous Hundred Years’ War…. _______ *The Rest Is History LIVE in the U.S.A.* If you live in the States, we've got some great news: Tom and Dominic will be performing throughout America in November, with shows in San Francisco, L.A., Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Boston and New York. *The Rest Is History LIVE at the Royal Albert Hall* Tom and Dominic, accompanied by a live orchestra, take a deep dive into the lives and times of two of history’s greatest composers: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Ludwig van Beethoven. Tickets on sale now at TheRestIsHistory.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Thank you for listening to The Rest Is History. For weekly bonus episodes,
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go to therestishistory.com and join the club. That is therestishistory.com. Play with your fancies, and then behold upon the hemp and tackle shipboys climbing.
Hear the shrill whistle, which doth order give to sounds confused.
Behold the thread and sails, born with invisible and creeping wind,
draw the huge bottoms through the furrowed sea
breasting the lofty surge oh do but think you stand upon the rivage and behold a city on the
inconstant billows dancing for so appears this fleet majestical holding due course to Hafla. Follow, follow.
So that was the chorus in William Shakespeare's Henry V
and describing the departure of the English fleet
for the mouth of the River Seine.
And to recap from last time, Tom,
Henry V, in his late 20s, this austere, deeply dedicated, serious, slightly terrifying warlord.
I think very terrifying, let's be honest.
Well, he's not terrifying if you're English.
I think he is quite terrifying, even if you're English.
I think he's inspiring.
Well, we'll find out how and why he's terrifying if you're English later on.
He has set off across the channel, his destination, Harfleur, a nest of pirates who are state-sponsored pirates
i suppose it's fair to say this is going to be his first target on the french mainland his ambition
is not just to capture harfleur but is to use harfleur as the springboard for a wider campaign
in france to capitalize on the chaos there and initially to annex the formerly English
territory of Normandy.
But Tom, like a man invading Russia, he has made a mistake, hasn't he?
He's started too late in the year.
So it's already mid-August by the time they land at Hafler, which means that Henry, I
mean, he needs to capture the town very, very quickly
because otherwise, as you say, it'll be too late. Autumn will be coming on. He needs to crack on.
So he's in the mouth of the Seine in this kind of great bay. And as we described at the end of
the last episode, there's this rocky beach, there's a shallow cliff, there's a kind of plateau
and Harfleur is three miles away. And Henry has chosen it because it is so unexpected.
It is therefore unlikely to be guarded.
But of course, he needs to be sure.
And so he turns to a Holland, I'm very proud to say.
Specifically, the 19-year-old John Holland, who is the son of the Duke of Exeter,
who'd been a half-brother of Richard II and had been embroiled in the first great conspiracy against Henry IV back in Epiphany
1400. And he'd been executed. So poor John Holland hadn't been allowed to inherit his father's
titles, but he's hoping to create a good impression on this campaign and maybe get them.
And he does create a good impression.
And I'm happy to say that he actually gets his titles the following year.
So that's good to know.
And so he goes back and says, yeah, all clear.
And so the landings begin and you have these shallow kind of barges
which have been brought over the channel and men and horses are loaded into them.
And then they come crunching up onto the rocky beach.
And the whole process
takes three days and as anyone knows from later Normandy landings on D-Day it's the landing that
is always the most dangerous particularly if you're being attacked so the fact that the English
are not attacked this is a good start for the campaign. Because the French don't know that
they're there? They've been taken by surprise? No, they don't. And it's too late to marshal the resources that would enable them to
oppose the landing. So on the 17th of August, three days after the landing, Henry is ready
to advance on Harfleur and he invests the city on the western side, which is the side nearest
the landing point, and he's occupying the heights kind of above the city and on the
evening of the following day he wants to invest the heights that stand on the other side so on
the eastern side and so he sends his brother the duke of clarence with a large part of the english
army to do that so that they will then be on both sides of harfleur it's actually a tricky task
because harfleur has this river the the Les Arts, which flows through it.
And on the south side, it flows through kind of mud flats.
And when the tide comes in, these mud flats and the Les Arts itself kind of vanish beneath the waters and the waves reach all the way up to the walls of Harfleur.
But on the north side, you know, you've got this river valley and the Les Arts has flooded the river valley.
So it's all very marshy and swampy. You know, you've got this river valley and the Lazard has flooded the river valley.
So it's all very marshy and swampy.
And so Clarence and his men, it takes them basically kind of, you know, they have to walk nine or ten miles to avoid the floods.
And it's not until dawn on the 19th that Clarence's men appear on the crest of the far hills from Henry's side.
And the town is now effectively sealed off because you've got the tidal estuary on the other side. You've got this river valley. There is no way anyone can approach it. The
English completely control access. And this is very bad news for Havelaar because its defences
aren't really very strong. It's an important city. So it's on the site of where La Havre is now. It's
kind of been swallowed up by La Havre's industrial zone. And in the early 15th century, it covers about 20 hectares, population of around 4,500, 5,000 perhaps. And its walls stretch for two and a half miles. But these walls are about 70 years old. They haven't been repaired. The French haven't really thought that it's going to be attacked. And so because the French haven't been anticipating an English attack, there aren't that many men.
I mean, the garrisons may be, by some estimates, as low as 35, with a few crossbowmen who were
there as well. And they haven't really stocked up on provisions. And to make things worse for
the people of Harfleur, the Duke of Clarence, while he was marching around to take up his
position on the opposite heights to Henry,
had captured a wagon train with provisions and indeed some cannon.
So this is bad.
Yeah, but there's an interesting, not paradox, I'm not sure what the word is, an irony or something.
Henry has landed in a kingdom that he believes is his own.
So Harfleur is the first target.
And this is the first test, I suppose, because is he going
to come as a rampaging king of England, fighting his ancestral enemies, or is he arriving as le
bon papa? It's a reference from our French Revolution series to Louis XVI. Is he the
benevolent French king returning to his own inheritance? Well, what's a promising sign for the people
of Fafleur is that when Henry lands, he does not unfurl his banner. And if he'd unfurled his
banner, that would be a sign that, you know, pile in, crack on, loot and pillage and do everything
you want. He doesn't do that. And he issues various ordinances of war that there are to be
no attacks on churches or priests or on women and no setting
fire to crops, no incineration of buildings. To that extent, he is the King of France. He's
looking after his subjects. And listeners may be tempted to view this with scepticism.
But I think that these ordinances of war, Henry is going to uphold them because you said he's not a particularly
intimidating figure to the English. I think he is because he is going to punish infractions.
So even before he'd set sail from England, a group of Lancastrian archermen had been coming
south to join the expedition and they had passed through my native town of Salisbury,
where they behaved disgracefully and attacked the locals
and killed four of them. And they were very, very severely punished. So that's an example of what
will happen if Henry's troops do not obey these ordinances. I think he's doing this both because
he thinks it's his duty, you know, his God-ordained duty, but also because he genuinely has hopes of
winning the French round. You know, we mentioned in the previous episode,
Henry is kind of admired by people in France,
but probably not by the people of our fleur,
who find themselves surrounded by his cannon and his archers.
They are not in a mood to accept the fact that he's actually the king of France
and they should surrender to him.
So they defy him.
And that, of course, means that, in Henry's opinion,
they are now rebels against their anointed king.
In that case, they're fair game.
They are fair game.
And so the assault on Harfleur is a bloody, brutal battle, isn't it?
It really is, yes.
And it's the first Norman town to be pulverized by artillery of course it won't be the last right
and there's a french account which describes henry's cannon as being of monstrous size spewing
out great boulders amid clouds of thick smoke and a noise like the fires of hell and so the once more
under the breach speech that henry gives you know this famous that you delivered so beautifully in
the previous episode it's actually pretty accurate because it is all about using the cannon to blast holes in
the walls and then English soldiers forcing their way through the breach. But the problem for Henry
is that all the rubble and the devastation means that there is raw material for the citizens of
Harfleur to use to patch up every breach. So actually the siege is going on longer than he'd hoped
and it's having to inflict more damage on Harfleur
than Henry had hoped.
Because of course what he wants is to make it
into a kind of second Calais, an English stronghold.
And if he's smashing the walls
and pulverising all the buildings,
then that's really bad.
He's going to have to repair it.
And it also means that if he captures it
and there are great holes in the wall,
then the city will be very vulnerable to recapture. So all of this is bad news. And there is also
further bad news for Henry, which is, as Anne Currie, the doyen of Agincourt historians, puts it,
that Henry had too large an army for the purpose. And what she means by that is that they are forced to camp in quite marshy and therefore
pestilential areas. You know, this is this flood plain. And so it's not a good place to be. And
sickness starts to spread through the English camp. And Thomas Walsingham, the monk at St.
Albans, he talks about how there are fetid corpses of animals who've been drowned in the flooding, who are kind of floating down.
And this is not a good sign, you know, if you're camped out.
There are also reports that the English eat underripe grapes, which is not good for the bowels, and shellfish.
Yeah, you don't want to mess with the shellfish.
Yeah, so people fall very ill.
The Duke of Clarence among them, the Earl of Arundel,
Henry's great friend, he falls sick.
All this raises the issue that it's all very well to be great at fighting battles
and to have loads of archers, but an assault on France requires
you have to supply your army and keep it supplied and healthy.
You do.
A long way from your native land.
So there is no supply chain, I guess, once you go inland into
France. So that's going to be a problem for Henry further down the line, isn't it?
It absolutely is. And of course, it's also difficult to replace men who you've lost a
disease, which is by now starting to sweep the English camp. And so the people of Harfleur
managed to hold out for four weeks weeks which is much longer than Henry had
been anticipating and by mid-September finally it's clear that the end is clear they've run out
of food they've had high casualties from Henry's artillery and even those who are not being wounded
by arrow fire or cannonballs are falling sick because disease is sweeping the city as well
and so on the 15th of September,
they send a message to Clarence in his camp asking for a three-week truce. And Clarence says, no,
but you can have three days. And on the 18th of September, the garrison agrees that it will
surrender in four days time. So on the 22nd of September at one o'clock in the afternoon,
if no French relief force has come. And Henry accepts this
and no relief comes. And so at one o'clock on the 22nd of September, all the captains and the
leading citizens of Harfleur walk out in sombre procession and they walk to Henry V who is in his
tent and he keeps them waiting on their knees for a long
time before he will even look at them. And the mayor of the city has the keys of the town and
he hands them over to the king and the city has now surrendered apart from a tiny group of holdouts
who continue to hold out in the tower for a few more days. And the king says he will not, as he feels entitled to,
completely annihilate them. But his terms are pretty brutal. The garrison are to be treated
as prisoners of war. The old and infirm are expelled and the women and children are given
the option of either staying or kind of leaving the town, probably heading for Rouen. And Henry isn't
being cruel here. He's essentially giving them the chance to get out of a place that is a hellhole,
basically. It's been a scene of war, there's disease and everything. So he gives them money
if they want to go. So this is the end of September. It's gone on much longer than he
thought. Autumn is coming in after winter. He's lost already some of his men have been lost,
presumably killed in the siege or to disease. Halfler is a definite victory for England. I mean,
it's a feather in his cap. So the French at this point, you know, they've suffered this great
humiliation, I guess, of Henry landing on their coast. I think it is seen as a humiliation across
France. Right. Yes. And what are they going to do about it? Well, it's not just that it's been lost,
but that no attempt was made to relieve it.
And so, of course, in situations like this,
you always have the blame game.
And the guy who is chiefly blamed for it
is our friend, the Duke of Alençon,
who listeners may remember from the previous episode.
He's the bruiser, the boar-like figure
who is always a man for charging in.
So it might be thought it's
surprising that he didn't lead the attack. I think it's just that he didn't have enough resources
available to him and the attack came as a surprise. So he's dismissed as the commander-in-chief in
Normandy and he is replaced by the most famous soldier, maybe not just in France, but in the whole of Christendom. And this is Marshal Boussico,
who we last met holding the lists at St. Angliver, the most famous tournament in late
14th century history, where he had fought with the future Henry IV and with Hotspur.
And he's had a tremendous career. So he fought at the great Christian defeat at Nicopolis in 1396 against the Turks,
where he'd performed very, very creditably and ended up being ransomed.
He then helped the Roman emperor, the Byzantine emperor,
Emmanuel II, against the Turkish siege of Constantinople.
He'd come back to France.
He'd founded a chivalric order dedicated to the ideals of courtly love.
He's basically a complete legend.
Right. Okay.
He's the absolute model of what a French knight would want to be. The French, I think even more
than the English, are obsessed by Arthurian romance. Loads of French knights, I mean,
unlike the English, are named after Arthurian. So you get loads of people who are called Lancelot
or Percival or Galahadda or whatever, whereas the English all tend to be called William or Edward English are named after Arthurians. So you get loads of people who are called Lancelot or
Percival or Galahad or whatever, whereas the English all tend to be called William or Edward
or whatever. Yeah, or worse, Thomas. I mean, that's a tremendous name. You can't argue with
that. So the fact that Bouticot is coming in, this great hero, this paladin of France,
this is a sign that the French are taking the invasion seriously. So also is the fact that in the last week of August, a royal proclamation had been issued proclaiming a general summons across the
whole of France, calling people to throw the English back into the sea. And the Dauphin,
despite being a late riser... You said he was too fat.
Yeah, he's a bit podgy. He's come to Normandy to serve as the captain general.
I mean, basically, he's a figurehead because he's inexperienced.
Unlike Henry, when he was a teenager, he hasn't been off fighting.
He's been lounging around in bed ogling girls.
But he's come, so that's credit to him.
He's actually in quite poor health as well.
So he's not an ideal figure.
But it's good for morale to have the Dauphin there, of course.
The real commander, the guy who is in charge overall, so who Boussico answers to and who is
the power behind the Dauphin's throne, is another professional soldier like Boussico. So a guy who
has devoted his whole life to the art of warfare. And he is the constable of France, the kind of the
leading military figure. And this is a man called Charles d'Aubray. And he is the constable of France, the kind of the leading military figure.
And this is a man called Charles d'Abray. And he has been fighting the English for a very,
very long time. So he's old enough to have fought against them under Bertrand de Guesclin,
who was the French military leader who essentially had thrown the English out of France back in the
latter days of Edward III. He's basically on the Armagnac side. So he'd been
dismissed as constable by John the Fearless when John the Fearless was in power. And then when John
was chased out of Paris, Charles d'Albray had been given back his office as a constable.
So Boussico and d'Albray are both very competent soldiers. They don't want to just rush in. They
want to concentrate as large a force of manpower as they
can possibly get. They hope to relieve Harfleur by mid-September, but it's in mid-September that
Harfleur falls. And so now they have a massive force. But if Henry decides to skedaddle back to
England, they can then move on Harfleur and hopefully recapture it
because the walls are all pockmarked.
And for Henry, this is a huge problem
because all he has to show
for all this money,
all this manpower,
all this effort
is a kind of devastated
single French port.
Okay.
So he's got this port.
He's lost his mental disease.
Two of the big wigs in his expedition, so Clarence and Arundel,
they actually have to go home because they are invalided out.
Yeah, and Arundel dies a few days after landing in England.
The clock is ticking towards the end of 1415.
He's obviously not going to take Normandy by the end of the year.
So he could go home, and he doesn't go home, does he,
because he thinks that would be humiliating.
That's not enough of a return.
What does he do now? That's the question.
Well, the first thing he does is challenge the Dauphin to a duel,
which unsurprisingly the Dauphin's not very keen.
So a description of the Dauphin at this time from someone who was in
his train, the Dauphin was fat in his body, heavy and slow and not at all agile. So I think if
that's your level of training, you wouldn't want to go head to head with Henry. The Dauphin is not
dual body ready. He is not dual body ready, no. So when the option for having a duel is thrown
back in his teeth, Henry decides that what he will do instead, rather than sail back to England, is he will march from Huffler across northern France to the other port that England holds, which is Calais.
And he will then sail back to England from Calais.
And what's the point of this march?
It has several advantages.
So the first is it spares him the embarrassment of leaving for England early.
By going across France,
he's making a public proclamation of the fact
that there is nowhere within his kingdom
that he cannot visit.
He has the right to go where he wishes.
It means that he can leave his fleet at Harfleur
to keep the garrison there supplied with
building materials and with more men and with food. So that's important because he cannot afford
to lose Harfleur. And of course, it also means on that score that if he's marching across France,
then the likelihood is that this vast French force, which is gathering, will go for him rather than for Haveler.
Well, that's the key thing, isn't it?
So he's a kind of decoy.
He's drawing the French army away from his one captured city, his one prize. And maybe he'll
get to Calais and be able to spend the winter in Calais. Is that what he's thinking?
No, he'll sail back. When he gets to Calais, he'll sail back and he'll be able to give a
good talk. I've captured Harfleur.
I've marched through France.
They couldn't stop me.
It's great.
But my hunch is, and we have no way of knowing this,
but my hunch is also that Henry suspects
that he will get a battle.
And I think that he alone,
maybe in the entire expedition, wants this.
And he wants it, I think,
because he thinks he will win this battle for all the reasons that we looked at in the entire expedition wants this. And he wants it, I think, because he thinks he will
win this battle for all the reasons that we looked at in the previous episode. But also,
I think because as the Christian king that he is, he wants to put it to the test. He wants to
reassure himself that God is on his side, that he is entitled to the throne of France.
He knows that God is on his side. God's an instrument. Well, I think that that is why he's prepared to take this enormous risk, because it is
a huge risk. There is this vast army accumulating. He knows that if he's cornered and defeated,
disaster will follow. I mean, he'll either be killed or maybe, you know, from England's point
of view, even worse, captured, because that would then bleed England dry, or maybe alternatively
precipitate a coup against the absent Henry, the collapse of the Lancastrian regime. So the stakes
are now even higher than they were when he was setting sail from England earlier in the year.
And that's why a large majority of his council, when he summons them and says this is his plan,
they urge him not to do it. And Clarence,
his brother, I mean, is very, very insistent. He's sick. He's about to leave home. He's obviously
not in a good mood. He doesn't feel that the expedition is going well, but he's very, very
blunt. He warns Henry to consider the great and infinite multitude of their enemies, which then
were assembled to prevent and hinder the king's passage by land, whereof by their spies they had knowledge.
So they know what is brewing.
But Henry decides, no, I'm going to risk it.
And so on the 8th of October,
which I think not coincidentally is the feast day
of the patron saint of France, Saint-Denis,
he leaves Huffler for Calais.
There is debate about how many men he has with him
and we'll come to this in due course, but probably about 6,000 men.
Not a massive army by any means.
Of whom about 5,000 are archers, so he's only got 1,000 men at arms.
Yeah.
To face a French army, that's not many.
And off he sets, and effectively the ball is now in the court of the French.
The ball is in the French court, Tom.
That tennis ball analogy again.
What is going to happen?
Will the French return serve with a vengeance?
Find out after the break.
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Also, most high and powerful prince, and my most honoured and gracious lord,
of the news of these parts, may it please your lordship to know that by the arrival of divers
good friends repairing to this town and marches, as well from France as from Flanders, it is
generally reported to me that without doubt the king, our Lord, will be fought by his adversaries within 15 days from this time at the latest.
And it is said that the Duke of Lorraine, amongst others, has already assembled 50,000 men and that when they all meet, there will not be less than 100,000 or more. So that was William Bardolph, the Lieutenant Governor of Calais,
and he was writing to Henry V's brother, the Duke of Bedford, who listeners may remember was left
behind to run England. And he is writing to him on the 7th of October, the day before Henry V sets out from Hafler on this very risky march all the way to Calais.
And Tom, obviously these numbers, like basically all numbers before about 1700,
are kind of made up, massively exaggerated.
But what that letter captures is this sense that Henry is taking a hell of a gamble
because the French undoubtedly
have a much bigger force. There are all these reports coming in of French troops assembling.
What is he thinking? What's he playing at? Right. So Henry's objective, as we said in the
first half, his aim is to march from Havle to Calais. And there's a priest in Henry's train. We've already quoted
him and he provides a kind of an eyewitness account of this expedition. And he says in his
account that the direct route from Harfleur to Calais is about a hundred miles, but Henry knows
better. He knows that it's 150 miles. He's expecting that this will take eight days to cover
and this should be doable. So Henry is leaving the sick behind. He's not that this will take eight days to cover. And this should be doable.
So Henry is leaving the sick behind.
He's not taking them with him.
Because there's only about 6,000 men, they can use all their horses.
So essentially, they'll be riding rather than walking.
And because Henry is not planning to lay siege to any castles or towns, there's no need to
bring the cannon.
There is, however, of course, a need to bring
large quantities of arrows because Henry, as a young man at the Battle of Shrewsbury,
had fought against Hotspur and Hotspur's archers had run out of arrows and that had doomed him.
So Henry, having brought all these archers, does not want to be in a situation where
the firepower runs out. And are they taking food with
them? I mean, this is key, right? They think it'll take eight days. Do they have eight days worth of
food to take with them? They do. So this is the assumption. It will take eight days. And so they
take eight days worth of food. And again, because traditionally English armies going through France
had, you know, they'd done what were called chevauchee, great plundering sweeps through the
French countryside.
Henry is making his march as someone who thinks he is the king of France.
And so he is not prepared to allow that.
And so this is why he is taking food with him.
He doesn't want his men going out and plundering and raping or whatever.
But if anything goes wrong, he doesn't have more than eight days food, does he?
No, he doesn't.
He doesn't.
And so this then
focuses the challenge for the French. The French have the problem that it's Henry who's setting
out. And so to begin with, he has the initiative. The French can't know where Henry is going to be
going, but they do know that if Henry is to reach Calais, he's going to have to cross the River Somme,
which is quite a broad river, quite hard for a large expedition to cross. And an army trying
to cross a river is always incredibly vulnerable. And so the French strategy is to essentially
block any of the obvious crossing points and force Henry either to advance under attack across the
river or to go inland to try and find a fording place, which then means, of course, that it will
take him much longer than he'd been planning to. And also he will be going further and further away
from Calais. So this is their plan. And their immediate target is a place called Blanchetac,
which is a ford. It's just a few miles down from where the Somme meets the Channel. And it was so
named after the white stones that marked it, so Blanchetac. And this is where Edward III had
crossed the Somme on his expedition, which then culminated in the Battle of Crecy. So it has a
kind of resonant role in the history of the wars of the French
and the English. And it's very useful because people can cross 12 men abreast there. It would
be a quick crossing. And so the French assume that this is where Henry will try and make his
crossing. And Dalbray, the constable who'd been in Rouen with the Dauphin, he marches at top speed
to this ford with 6,000 men
and they fortify the far bank and block the passage with stakes. And meanwhile, other
contingents, they're fanning out down the length of the Somme and they're demolishing bridges,
smashing up causeways, trying to make it very, very difficult for Henry to cross the river.
So that will push him south. If he can't cross, he will have to turn to his right and march
up the River Somme, south into the heart of France, try and find a crossing place. And of course,
he will run out of food and they'll be able to surround and kill him.
Exactly. And it is a massive problem for Henry because absolutely Blanchetac, this ford near
the sea, is exactly where he is hoping to cross and he approaches it and they
capture a prisoner and this prisoner says you know your majesty um the far side is uh is fortified
it's got stakes it's got dalbray it's got six thousand men uh you you know you don't want to
cross it and henry isn't a hundred certain that he believes this. So he continues
to interview the prisoner. And at the end of the interview, he's been convinced. He thinks, yes,
the prisoner is telling the truth. And so he halts the march. He summons his magnates and
they have a council of war and they debate for a couple of hours and then they decide we can't
risk it. You know,
we'll be slaughtered if they really are there. We've got no choice but to start marching up
river. There's no question at that point of turning back to our floor. No, it's an interesting
one. They don't. I, because I think it would be too great a humiliation. So now instead of doing
that, they take this mad gamble really of saying we're going to turn in inland into the heart of france well i
think that's the measure of both henry's determination not to be humiliated on the stage
of france and indeed of christendom and also his you know his inner confidence this is such
alexander the great behavior i think as of course in shakespeare's play the welsh captain fluellen
likewise compares henry v to alexander that's uh that's the welsh blood speaking to you tom I think. As of course, in Shakespeare's play, the Welsh captain Flewellyn, likewise, compares
Henry V to Alexander. That's the Welsh blood speaking to you, Tom.
Absolutely. So as you say, this is very, very bad for morale because Henry's men, they know that
they haven't got much food. They're now having to march inland away from Calais and they can't
be sure that they're going to find a
crossing point. So this is all very, very alarming. And what's even more unsettling for them as they
start to get a bit peckish is that Henry continues to uphold the ordinances of war. He is still not
going to allow them to plunder and to loot and to strip the cottages and the villages of his French subjects of their food.
And to impose this, he instructs that only certain officers can have dealings with the French. So in
other words, there's going to be a clear chain of communication that he could control. He's not
having people just fanning out. And as a marker of his absolute determination to uphold these rules, when one of
his soldiers steals a silver fitting from a church, this guy is publicly hanged. And in Shakespeare's
play, this is a character called Bardolph, who was one of Henry V's drinking companions.
One of Falstaff's cronies.
When he was Prince Hal. Yeah, he was Falstaff's cronies. Back when he was Prince Hal.
Yeah, he was Falstaff's servant.
And in the Kenneth Branagh film,
he's played by Richard Bryars,
who is the hero of The Good Life,
who I think you wrote about, didn't you?
I have written about The Good Life.
Though for me, Richard Bryars' best role
was in Ever-Decreasing Circles, Tom.
You were not wrong.
You were not wrong.
So anyway, so poor Richard Bryars gets hanged.
And this is all about upholding discipline.
Henry also insists that every English soldier should wear the cross of St. George so that
they can be identified.
And discipline is very, very strict.
And Dominic, I'm proud, proud to say that even the French acknowledge this.
Saw this.
This brought tears to my eyes, actually.
It's wonderful.
So a French chronicler says,
Henry always observed proper and honourable practices.
And there's another French chronicler
who contrasts the behaviour of the English,
who are notorious in France
for the brutality of their chevauchée.
But they say that this time, no, they behaved very well.
And it's the French who behave badly
as they're kind of charging across Normandy
to try
and block off all these crossing points on the Somme and they did nothing according to this
chronicler save robbing and pillaging towns monasteries and abbeys and violating women.
Plus ça change Tom I mean that basically set the tone for the next 600 years didn't it?
I think the most ringing endorsement of the behaviour of the English on this march
is given by Anne Currie who it's fair to say is not team Henry V, but even she
acknowledges that the overall impression is that the English were better disciplined.
That's coming from a herald.
It's coming from a herald, so she'd know.
Yeah.
Yes. So I think all English listeners can feel very proud of that. So hooray for Henry. But of
course, none of this helps them cross the Somme and none of this helps them stay well fed. And so as they march
along the line of the Somme, they're getting more and more depressed. And what adds to their sense
of depression is the realisation that they're being shadowed on the other side of the river.
So at this point, they can see the French. They have a sense of them.
Well, they either see them or they, you know, Henry has spies who are bringing in news. And
these spies report that these French armies are being led by D'Abré and by Boussico,
who are the two greatest soldiers in France.
So they clearly mean business.
And so we have a brilliant account of how it felt for them that comes from this chaplain
in Henry's train.
And he writes, at the time, we thought of nothing else but this, that after the eight
days assigned for the march had expired and our provisions had run out,
the enemy craftily hasting on ahead and laying waste the countryside in advance would impose on us, hungry as we should be, a really dire need of food.
And at the head of the river, if God did not provide otherwise, would, with their great and countless host and the engines of war and devices available to them overwhelm us so very few as we
were and made faint by great weariness and weak from lack of food so you know not not a cheery
state of play and it comes to seem worse and worse the deeper and deeper into france they go so three
days go by four days five days since their failure to ford the Somme at Blanchetac. And then finally,
at dawn on the 19th of October, at last, the English get the news that they've been waiting
for. There's not one ford ahead, there are two. And it's unclear how they're discovered, but it's
likely that Henry gets told about them by a kind of local who wants the English off his lands.
These fords are going to be perilous to cross because they have to be approached through a marsh.
And obviously for an army to go through a marsh, that's very vulnerable.
And the causeways have been smashed up.
So Boussica had been there earlier and his men had kind of smashed them up.
But it was still possible with difficulty and in a single file.
But the opposite bank is not guarded.
So if the luck of the English holds, if no French forces come while they're engaged in
this operation to cross the Somme, they will be able to get across.
Why is it not guarded? Because the French think they've smashed the causeways and therefore...
Because the Somme is so long, there are so many potential crossing points.
Okay.
You know, they're scattered.
So it's absolutely a moment of excruciating danger.
And Henry knows this, but he also knows he has no choice.
So what happens is he orders some of his archers in the vanguard to go first.
And they get their bows, they get their quivers, they hold them up over their heads.
They don't want their bowstrings to get wet.
And they cross and then they take up a position on the far bank
to protect those who are going to be following them.
The men-at-arms follow, and then the horses of the vanguard.
So to be clear, of course, most men have not been travelling on horseback.
They've been just trudging.
Yeah, most people have been riding on horseback.
Oh, sorry. They have been.
Yeah, there have been enough horses for them to be doing that.
So the horses are important because it expedites their speed.
So once the vanguard is across, you've got the archers,
you've got the men-at-arms,
they are then in a position to hold off an attacking force.
And while they've been crossing,
everybody else has been kind of smashing up local settlements,
taking the rubble, using it to build up the causeway
so that it can then be crossed.
And by one o'clock in the afternoon, so it's taken them the wholeble, using it to build up the causeway so that it can then be crossed. And by one o'clock in the afternoon, so it's taken them the whole morning, the causeways can be negotiated by three
men marching abreast and the full scale operation happens. And Henry risks dividing up his army.
So the body of men cross one of the causeways, the luggage train with all the arrows and supplies and everything
crosses the other. And they make it across, even though while they're doing it, a squad of French
horsemen do ride up and observe them, but they realise that they haven't got enough men to attack
Henry's force. And so it is an amazing feat to pull this off. And English morale surges
correspondingly. And the chaplain is so excited
about it that he thinks the way to Calais is now open. And that the news that the English have made
it across, in despite of all the French, this will be so demoralising for the French, their morale
will plummet. And in the words of the chaplain, they will be disinclined to follow after us to
do battle. But unfortunately for him and for the rest of the
English, the opposite is actually the case. Because once the English have crossed the Somme,
this vast French army, they know that it's no longer their business to kind of fan out along
the length of the river. They need to concentrate and block the path to Calais and engage the English in battle and hopefully wipe them out.
Because in a way, although the English are across,
they've basically walked into, it's not really a trap,
but they've walked into the killing ground.
The French army is huge, it's there, and the English now are tired.
Yeah, they're hungry.
Yeah, hungry.
They're famished, they're wet.
Exactly, exactly.
I mean, it's like a kind of
imagine a you know a 10-day walking holiday in the lake district where you're completely lost
just rains all the time you haven't got any food and then you've got to fight at the end and then
you've got to fight the french yeah so here's the thing the constable is there the guy alonso
the bruiser is there busicoadin. Yeah, he's there.
What about the Dauphin?
Because you said the Dauphin was, dare I say, too fat to fight.
The Dauphin, so there's this great council of war
where all these various magnates are in attendance.
It's held on the 19th of October,
which of course is the same day that the English are crossing the Somme.
And it's agreed that if the English do manage to get across,
then they will give battle.
And as many men as possible will be summoned. So they shouldn't rush into fighting the English do manage to get across, then they will give battle and as many men as possible will
be summoned. So they shouldn't rush into fighting the English immediately that they cross the river.
They should try and get as many people as possible to make the odds absolutely overwhelming,
but that they should definitely fight. Now, what will be the role of the Dauphin or even more,
you know, the king? Because ideally you want someone from the royal family to lead this expedition. It's decided that the king obviously is in no state.
He's made of glass. Be mad to put him in a battle.
You don't want him shattering. The Dauphin, as you say, is a bit podgy,
but that's not actually the reason I think why he doesn't go. It's because there are very vivid
memories of Poitiers where the king got captured and that
bled France dry. They don't want to risk any prospect of the king or the Dauphin being
captured and then having to be ransomed. But there's also a more immediate and vivid reason,
which is that the vast proportion of people in this council of war are from the Armagnac faction.
And so they are worried about John the Fearless because Henry is about to
advance into Burgundian territory and they don't trust the Duke of Burgundy necessarily to be on
their side. And so the Dauphin will stay behind and he will be in command of troops that will
essentially serve as a screen between Paris and the forces of the Duke of Burgundy. As he's raising men, the people in
this council of war are wondering, is it to attack the English or is it to attack Paris?
So the Burgundians have raised an army, but they haven't joined with the Armenecs,
and they're just sort of waiting. Are they waiting to see who wins?
So the shadow of the civil war between the Dukes of Orléans and Burgundy continues to be a massive
problem for the French, even with Henry on their doorstep. So because the King and the Dauphin
are not going to be present with this army, it's important to have a member of the royal family.
And so the Duke of Orléans goes. He's been preparing for his 21st birthday party. So he's
due to be 21 on the 26th of October.
So he's obviously been kind of hanging around, getting ready, you know, hiring the disco
and all that kind of thing.
And then he gets a summons, no, you've got to come.
So he comes galloping up.
But of course, his arrival means that there's no way the Duke of Burgundy is going to join
them.
And actually, neither the Duke nor the Duke of Lorraine, who was mentioned
by the Lieutenant of Calais, the reading that you gave at the beginning of this half, and it's
feared that he'll be coming with vast forces. He doesn't arrive either because he's an ally of the
Duke of Burgundy and nor does the Duke of Burgundy's son, the future Philip the Good, he doesn't arrive
either. And this will become a cause of great shame to both John the Fearless
and to Philip the Good, the fact that they weren't at Agincourt. And John the Fearless
subsequently will explain this by saying that he had been forbidden by the king and by the royal
council to come. I mean, it may be plausible, and it's certainly the case that his two brothers,
so the Duke of Brabant and the Count of Nevers, do ride to battle.
And lots of his kind of liegemen, his bannermen from Picardy,
which is the region that Enra will be marching through, they do go as well.
So it's not like there are no one from the Burgundian side present at Agincourt. But I think that John the Fearless is deliberately sitting it out
because obviously if the Armagnacs get wiped out, if maybe the Duke of Orleans will be killed in
battle, this would all be great for him and he would then be in pole position to capitalise on
it. So I think that that's why he's not present. And of course, for a council of war that is dominated by the Armagnacs,
I mean, this isn't bad news.
They don't want him turning up because they don't want to share the glory of the victory
and they don't want the risk of him, I mean, he might be in negotiations with Henry.
And they have enough men, right?
How many men do they have by this point?
We will come to this in the next episode when we look at the actual battle
because it is a topic of more debate now than it has been for several centuries. Okay. But they definitely have
more than Henry V. They definitely have more. And spoiler alert, I think they have substantially
more. Okay. But it is more of a live debate than it has been for a while, as I say. So we'll talk
about it. But yeah, they have a large force. And so therefore they are pretty
confident of victory. They have more than sufficient numbers to do the job. And so the day
after this council of war, the 20th of October, they send a herald to ride to Henry and to formally
issue him with a challenge to battle. So this is kind of very Arthurian. This is chivalry and all
that kind of thing. And Henry, like the chivalrous knight that
he is, he receives this herald very graciously and he sends a herald of his own back to the French.
And the message that this herald delivers, it is not necessary to pick a day nor a place,
for every day they could find him in the open fields without any difficulty. In other words,
you know, if you want it, come and
get it. And so from this point on, he orders all his men to wear the coats of arms on their circuits
if they're entitled to do this. And this is a signal to the French that they are ready to fight.
They are ready for combat. But in the meanwhile, they continue their march towards Calais. The road
is now direct. There are no real kind of impediments. And they do it expecting the
French to attack them at any moment. They are becoming increasingly nervous. The surge of
morale that had followed the crossing of the Somme is starting to subside. And then their mood of
anxiety is absolutely heightened by a time where
they're going along the road and suddenly they see ahead of them that the road has been completely
churned up. They can see that a massive force has gone ahead of them. And they realise that this
must be the French forces under Dalbray and Boussico, the two great leaders of the French
force, who are looking for a suitable
place to offer battle. And so that at some point in the next day, maybe the day after that,
they're going to find the French army drawn across the road to Calais is going to be impassable.
But for three days after that, they continue marching northwards. The conditions are
completely grim. There's icy rain, gusting winds. Their food
supplies now are really, really low. They're all feeling really, really hungry. And the terrain is
becoming increasingly kind of hilly. They're having to go up and down, up and down.
And a lot of them are ill, aren't they, at this point? They have colds or dysentery or whatever,
don't they?
No, I don't think they're too ill. It's not like Harfleur. I mean,
of course, you know, some are, but no, I think they're despondent and wet and miserable and
hungry, but they're still kind of just about in a fit state to fight a battle. But their hope is
actually, you know, as the days pass and they still don't run into the French, maybe they'll do it. So by the 24th of October, they're only about 40 miles from Calais. I mean,
they can almost feel that they're there. And on the 24th of October, early morning,
the English are descending into a river valley and ahead of them is a river called the Ternoise.
It's not a massive river,
but you don't want to be caught crossing it. So they're coming down towards the river when
Henry's scouts come galloping up and they say, Your Majesty, alarming news. There are large
numbers of French gathering in the road about three miles beyond the river. And it looks like this is what we've
been waiting for. They are massing there and they are ready to offer battle. And for Henry,
this is alarming news because he's got to get across this river. The Ford may be held against
him. Even if it isn't, if the French attack him while he's crossing this river, that would be
not ideal. So he turns to his men and he says, onwards, we've got to make full steam ahead.
So they hurry down towards the river.
Huge relief.
They find that the Ford is not held against them.
They cross the river at top speed and then they march up the hill again towards the crest
of the next ridge.
And they reach the crest of the hill.
And at the top of the hill, they gaze at the vista that they see before them and
the sight is a terrifying one and i quote about half a mile away the grim looking ranks of the
french and these ranks are being added to all the time as they stand there on the ridge, the English can see ever more squadrons of French
marching in, riding in, swelling the numbers of the army that is blocking the road to Calais.
And Henry asks his spies, these two villages ahead of us, I can see that the French are kind
of massing there around them.
What are the names of these villages? And he is told, well, one of them is called Risseville, and the other, Your Majesty, the name of this village, it is Agincourt.
Well, if you want to hear what happens next right away, then you can join the Rest Is History Club at therestishistory.com.
But either way, we will be back with the Battle of Agincourt.
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