At Patay in 1429 the archers were killed. The French knights began using milanese armour which the arrows couldn't penetrate, and cut them down. From then on, the English struggled in France.
Only men of a certain status were generally counted, a “man at arms” being the lowest rank counted. There were probably many more soldiers of common rank that weren’t counted, perhaps because they didn’t have their own weapons and armor. This, of course, applies to both sides.
Also, the 'experts' here think they know everything! The English 'nobility' was few and thin on Henry V's side, the number of barons, princes even from Germany, etc. top nobility on the French side was overwhelmingly many more than the English side which was more like a roaming foraging party, not a major war party. The French, alarmed at Henry's successes called upon all their top nobility to try to stop him. Compare this to the number of high nobility and barons, etc. fighting each other in England! These major battles killed as many 'nobles' as the Agincourt battle killed French nobility.
The bloody War of the Roses decimated the English nobility every bit as harshly as the English archers killed in France. And that war happened because the King of England married the Princess of a crazy king in France and she gave birth to a crazy son whose utter disconnect from reality led to the War of the Roses and England lost every inch of French territory in the following chaos and destruction inside England, itself.
Someone always changes the rules/logic so they can rewrite history. Napolean wasn't short, Washington didn't cross the Delaware, Popcorn hasn't always been buttered...
I jump to watch anything that Tim is involved with...he is an incredible and superb scholar and archaeologist...Just as Sue Black and her team are as well.
It's really amazing that France as a country still exists today. They seem to have gotten the short end of the stick during pivotal moments in history that could easily have seen them become part of other countries.
I love the history surrounding Agincoirt and the 100yr war. Bernard Cornwell's historical fiction novels set during this war are some of my favorite books.
Yep, all the countries in Europe from Roman times..fought for land, borders, feeding each other..keeping going..history is so cool. Read how France did get going..start with the Merovingian dynasty and go on..all the countries fascinating
I am American and I love English history it is amazing especially the 100 hundred years war such a fantastic time period from King Edward lll to King Henry 5👑🏴 🏹
@fredericksandelia9648 . The English Kings spoke English by this time. The nobility had French ancestory sure, but they didn't think of themselves as French. National identity wasn't as strong as in our age of nation states. It was much more about your local lord back then. The archers were from England too. You had to practice archery on a Sunday by law at that time. The war didn't start going badly until Charles the Mad died, and England got its own mad king, Henry VI. But objectively, England had little chance of winning with a population of under 2 million against a country of 10 million.
If you guys enjoy this story, you all have to read Agincourt/Azincourt by Bernard Cornwell!! It's historical fiction novel about a character that fights in this battle as an archer. I learned more about English longbows and archery in that book than anywhere else lol Plus, Bernard Cornwell is one of the greatest historical-fiction writers of all-time.
@@barbaralamson7450 You're very welcome Barbara. On a slightly less historical note, I also HIGHLY recommend his King Arthur trilogy. I truly believe it to be the best version of the King Arthur myth ever written down.
Sometimes I hate history. After my friend, driving a brand-new Buick, hit a tree headon and we both survived, I found that being housebound with major bone breaks meant having tutors, which meant I could actually study history. THAT's an awfully big deal when you are an American getting public education. I learned about Agincourt, The War of the Roses, and all sorts of things about the American War of Independence that I'm fairly certain I would never have appreciated had I not had our basketball coach/history teacher coming to hear my oral reports. What a good sport! And also, I might never have found Jodi Taylor, an English writer who based her main character around Agincourt.
Basketball coach being the history teacher! That is so funny and on point! Middle school and high school Basketball coaches were both the history teachers who could care less about history. It’s like they just checked off the federal governments checklist and moved on without a care about it. It’s sad really.
Thomas B Chastain wrote a detailed family history of the Plantagenet (sorry I slaughtered it) dynasty of England, and excellent read. Edward Gibbons Decline and fall of the Roman Empire will give you the answer to any questions about Rome. And Sir Steven Runciman wrote a history of the crusades. These three I cannot highly recommend enough for you. They are all action packed.
I always enjoy learning from Dr. Malin, she’s a true expert and professional. Most documentaries only give material written and presented by actors, like Tony Robinson.
With all the recent downplaying I’ve been hearing, of the battle numbers at Towton and Agincourt for instance, it feels a bit to me like historians not giving the capabilities of the Medieval man enough credit.
Appreciate the new takes on old givens. So much of our collective history is wrapped up in folk tales and accounts written centuries later. By using other branches of science, we can actually realize the reality of history.
@Ludo M i don’t live in the UK, and this is part of history lessons in my country too..! But of course our victories over the English are far more known, including sailing undiscovered over the Theems, to set fire to 13 ships and stealing the Royal Charles and got out without a scratch. Our moments of glory right there. Only 500 years ago Haha.
Curry has been largely discredited vis her estimation of army sizes - French records are sparse, so you certainly can't extrapolate from them with any real confidence. There are clear primary source lists that give 100+ lords and bannerets (including 3 dukes), 3000 other knights, and 2500+ men-at-arms not wearing heraldic identification as killed at Agincourt. A further 2 dukes, 4 counts and about 700 other knights are recorded by - name - as prisoners. Anyone who knows anything about Medieval French armies would realize that an army that included 5 dukes and over 100 other lords and bannerets would be able to muster 30,000 men minimum. Curry seems unaware that, for each knight, a squire (armed and equipped the same) and a page (also mounted and armed) would have gone into battle with the lords and knights. Should have found a more credible expert for this doc.
I think the size of the battle field played apart, long tappering, heavey muddy under foot, lots of heavy armored knights, etc, lighter foot soliders who could escaped the invaders
Having coincidentally read some of Anne Curry's work while looking into this subject, I believe she may have been, to a certain degree, misrepresented by the writers of this documentary. At the very least, she doesn't come off as the type to say "The rolls say X, so there must be X people". I wonder whether her talking about the size of the armies during the actual interview had more "but"s and uncertainties that were cut for the documentary for writing and pacing purposes. After all, this documentary is not a scientific journal, and should be expected to be at the very least less nuanced than one.
I agree, I was furious when she pretended both armies were the same size. Not only were there most of the top French nobility there but also from Germany and the Low Lands! Funniest thing, though, was the fact that many 'royals' were killed on the French side and then France became STRONGER while the British King who won...went home with his French Princess and she produced an insane son and the many intact nobles in England (all relatives of King Henry V) went to war with each other viciously and murderously and the horrors of the War of the Roses and the deaths of the Princes in the Tower and the hunchback king Richard...was the final outcome of the 'victory' in France.
If Liberty 🗽 has found it's stronghold in the United States , it's front lines and beginning starts with France Viva la revolution Viva la liberty. Protect the birth of freedom
Many Thanks to the Marquis de Lafayette!! He was critical to our own success in the American Revolution! We in the U.S. are, or should be, very grateful for his enthusiasm for our cause!! We are also thankful that Napoleon Bonaparte won his release from prison!! 😃 His support for the American Revolution until it's end in 1783 and his continued desire to obtain Liberty in France before and after his arrest warrant and 5 year imprisonment never wavered!! He continued his passion for Liberalism and Natural Rights after his release... staying true to his principles!! Be Well!!
The KINGDOM OF FRANCE won the Hundred Years' War. Agincourt is just one battle romanticized by English historians. It was a war between French noble houses and one of them just happened to be rulers of England. What was at stake was the throne of France claimed by an "English" king whose father belonged to the French Plantagenet dynasty ruling in England and whose mother, the Queen of England, was the daughter of a Capetian King of France. If the rulers of England that time were not French, there would be no "English" claim to the French throne at all.
This is true of course, but by this time the English royal House no longer thought of itself as French. This happened as a direct result of the hundred years war. Edward I d. 1407 was the first English king since the Norman Conquest not to speak French.
It is a classic case of overconfidence and that led to their defeat. They totally discounted the English Longbow. Prior to this, a mounted knight was exceptionally strong. They looked across the battlefield and saw a lack of the mounted knights in the English lines. They did not realize that the longbow totally negated the advantage of the knights. Thus, they confidently charged into their defeat.
@@brianeleighton the French were well aware of English tactics having been defeated at Crecy. They also had competent leadership, who were very experienced in war. It seems they couldn’t control the noblemen who did exactly what they didn’t want them to do multiple times. Overconfidence by the noblemen played a major role.
@@barnsnoble3105 That's right. Their senior commanders were experienced and competent. Their younger, less experienced subordinates couldn't contain themselves.
The English marched straight toward them, provoked them by firing arrows at them from 400m, and hoped they would engage on terms suitable for the English. They should have stood still. Longbows aren't that effective from that range.
@@barnsnoble3105 yes, agree. The guy in charge was of lower status than the nobles. This happened at Bannockburn too, when the nobles conducted unsupported cavalry charges with disastrous results.
According to records I have a Grandfather Ancestor named Piers Leigh who fought there in Henry’s Army. He was badly wounded there but later died near Paris
This program was posted up years ago after this program 1st aired. And I watched it many times…. But now someone has re-posted it with a cool image to click on when scrolling through topics. Wonder why?
OK documentary - establishes that the facts of Azincourt are not known - nor even the exact location. Could have used some drone footage of the battle field area.
It's not just about bravery, it's also about glory. The men didn't have an idea that they were fighting for their lives ... How vacuous can some of these commentaries get?
Just a little aside. If you are of 100% English lineage and born in 1980, you had 14 male great grandparents 17 times removed at Agincourt. I had 7 because half of my family is scots/Irish, so I would have been well represented at Bannockburn. :)
I am downloading the audiobook Bernard Cornwall, Agincourt. I watched all of Sharpes Rifles and loved it. Will have to do those in audio also! Thanks for the info.
It’s completely untrue and ridiculous that the French “thought they were going to a party”. Why make the French sound stupid and naive? They weren’t, their only mistakes were perhaps over-relying on their splendid cavalry and underestimating the number and effectiveness of the English/Welsh long-bow men. “The flower of French Chivalry” was once a good phrase, but it’s been done to death, like “the sands of time”.
That’s like counting the Commissioned Officers and not counting any of the enlisted. It was like the Airforce where the Officers went to battle and enlisted don’t have wings. One noble thing is that the aristocracy who owned the land went to fight themselves rather than sending in the peasants to do that fighting considering that it was their own interest rather than the plebs and surfs
As if these times was not horrible enough. Living to your 25th birthday was quite a blessing (reader being the judge)itself. Marching around with bleeding feet, fouled food and water. The smell of cheese from your infected friends. My god have we gotten blunt in minds.
If you are still interested in the subject, I recommend checking out "Arrows vs Armour" by the UA-cam channel Tod's Workshop. In the video they use historically accurate armour, arrows as well as longbow in order to test the piercing capabilities of arrows as they would have been during the Battle of Agincourt. A very interesting watch.
It could pierce armour close-up. It was more a psychological weapon against armour, but if you weren't wearing good armour, it was devastating, especially as the archers put the arrowhead in the soil, which made sure the wound would go septic. That was deliberate by the way.
I can understand why the French people weren't helpful to Woodford, after all they had just suffered another defeat by the English. Woodford may have been a respectful good man, but you don't know what the men he had with him might have been saying to the locals. Although I would think some French archeologists would be interested in such a mystery. They might have more luck.
Apparently, the French forgot about the Battle of Crecy, some 70 years earlier. In Crecy, as in Agincourt, English archers decimated the French ranks, allowing another overwhelming English rout.
This is last part of. The 100 years war…still France is hell of a lot bigger than England…his son could never reign France and England, maybe Henry could have reigned France and England if he did not die of dysentery in France, but I don’t think so…
I’m a bit puzzled by Professor Curry’s idea that the two armies were similar & proportional in terms of class composition. If Henry V had a fighting force of 7000 archers and 1500 men at arms (plus baggage train), how is that akin to an army of 1400 mounted knights, 5000 archers and crossbowmen, plus a further 5-8,000 French UN mounted knights & men at arms? Archers were lightly armoured, had backup weapons for their bows & arrows, and were taken from the lower class & rural populations. So, like so many English armies, the victors of Agincourt indeed were predominantly “ordinary Tommies”, unless I’m misunderstanding something.
My own Brit side of the family was at the Battle of Hastings as one of the invaders back then. We went around the earth, invading this and that. Some ended up in the New World, too. Multiple sons in the lower nobility had to find some place to invade and take over since they inherited no lands in England as was the custom.
Your great grandfather 17 times removed. You have 2,000 of those. There were only around 700,000 male adults in England at the time, and just under 1.5 % of them were at Agincourt. All other things being equal, 14 of your direct but distant male bloodline were at Agincourt. And 7 of mine because I have 2 irish/Scots male great grandparents
I love how historians act like they know everything and exactly what people were thinking centuries ago with very little evidence. 14:15 the French knights didn't think it was a real fight?!?
True, and yet they don't even know where the actual battle took place. So they're trying to write history the way they envision it in their minds, which has nothing to do with any archaeological evidence, because there is none
The FRENCH did ride down the archers earlier before the battle that's why they were ordered to carry a stake. The rich families sent servants to retrieve the bodies of their dead menfolk to be burred in hallowed ground near their estates.
Fitting that the church bells would ring as he mentions the sad circumstances of those soldiers remains not being interred in the memorial chapel. Almost like they heard him and acknowledged he was speaking of them.
bring in Sir Tony Robinson and the 'Time Team' for their famous 3-day scans and excavations and history people locating documents that shed immense amounts of light on things! Always entertaining, respectful and informative!
My grandmother was from France and was very patriotic about France and the French and all things French as a Ww2 survivor and the ss always looking for her father in hiding with the French resistance. I’m surprised they lasted the years as a separate country. They lived to much for joy and didn’t get the good end of many historical events because of arrogance and self indulgence and the cost of to many wars and defeats plus inner turmoils.
I often wonder how many of those poor 🐎🐴 horses perished in battle. They never get any recognition. I mean that is how they traveled right...Wasn't like they rode in on goats.
Long ago I learned that there was never any form of peace treaty after Agincourt - so that technically speaking, England and France are still at war! Actually I assume that there are many battles and wars which start and end without declarations of war and peace treaties... but interesting for someone to research, maybe?
You maybe wouldn't be typing this comment if people didn't defend whether ideologically or by physical force. Otherwise one civilization that only agrees with "war" would just take over the entire planet and would have never lost control. All species are at some form of war, war is a fact of life. Wars can be pointless, of course, but given the time span of all species some are inevitable.
@@Despond How do wars end? Lots of people die and then the sides finally talk it over and make a settlement. Wouldn't it be better if we would talk to one another about our disputes long before it boiled over into war? Wouldn't that save more lives and aren't lives more important than any of the bullshit we fight over in the world?
This makes the English sound like a small band of desperadoes. In reality, this expedition was meticulously planned, staffed and abundantly funded and supplied. I suppose it makes the English seem more glorious to pretend that their chances of winning were small.
In truth it was just like that most of Henry's men were extremely sick at the time and archers historically speak were not known to stand and fight against an on coming charge of heavy cavalry. And it's a fact the English were heavily outnumbered. Even though battlefield numbers may have been exaggerated. And add to that the fact that before this battle arrows had little to no effect on plate armor. It was only with the bodkin arrow and a close range that the French knights armor was punctured and obviously their mounts were also killed decreasing their combat effectiveness almost in half. So the odds were I fact against the English , thought it was a well planned and funded expedition.
I cannot imagine the suffering and hardship these guys went through both in battle and just life in general during this time. I read a book a while back (I think called the Face of Battle) that did an in depth study of all the chronicles and sources of the Battle of Agincourt and I remember it said a good amount of knights on both sides were suffering from dysentery but because of the time consuming effort to remove and put armor back on, they just had to relieve themselves inside their armor. Another thing I remember from the book was that a lot of the combatants got drunk before the battle to calm the nerves.
Um, drinking and fighting have been hand in glove since the invention of swords and booze! Yup. For real! Muslims had to do this with drugs since booze was verboten. Then everyone else discovered this, too. So both are enablers. See, you DON'T FEEL PAIN. Trust me on this.
After Agincourt, the King married a French Princess whose daddy was insane. His son, Henry VI was born, daddy died in France and baby grew up...INSANE. This led to the infamous War of the Roses wherein the British royals tried to exterminate each other including killing young children, too. Few survived.
If you see the amount of arrows fired vs the amount of French deaths ( even if we assume every Frenchmen was killed by an arrow which is far from the case ) I wouldn’t call it a nuclear missile. While the longbow did have a use by injuring the horses and forcing the heavy armored knights to proceed on foot Agincourt was mainly fought hand to hand. The new spike defenses and muddy terrain was the real winner of Agincourt. Especially considering it has already been proven that 1 the longbow would be unable to pierce a knights plate and 2 the longbow was used horizontally at a closer range than initially thought instead of the previously thought long range arched volley. This documentary has quiet a few flaws.
Admittedly haven’t watched the whole thing, but she didn’t mention England’s siege of Harfleur that brought about killed, injured, as well as desertion and disease in the aftermath.
Henry sent for reinforcements during the siege to replace losses and the sick. The army that left Harfleur was not disease ridden and bedraggled, but reinforced and freshly supplied. Henry would not have marched around northern France with a decimated sickly army.
What's this about? The battle of Agincourt? Or is it about Woodford? Is this an archeological program? Or a drama about the misconceptions about Woodford, and what a fantastic idea he had to follow, for archeoligists?
He stands with those who believe him the Europe are Catholic the English kicked the Catholics out and were given the blessings of Israel that's how they got to rule the world
This documentary is completely unhelpful, especially the part wbere the two men have a l-o-n-g conversation. Could have wrapped the whole documentary up in 5 minutes-"We looked and found nothing. Good night."
It happens occasionally in archeology. You don't always find what you are looking for. However that doesn't detract from the fact it was an interesting documentary on a fairly controversial and rather well known subject. You didn't like it but that's your opinion and opinions are not facts. Don't try to downplay it based on that alone. They followed in another's footsteps. It's hard to follow the facts when they were mixed up and twisted over time
@@derrickguffey4775 Oh, I'm sorry. This was the number one blockbuster at the theater and drew the biggest audience since the super bowl!! Seriously, though, you are correct, that sometimes in archeology you find nothing. With that said, instead of the title that they did use, instead they should have named it "Two Guys Having a Really Long Boring Conversation.." The video also should have come with a disclaimer that "an intense need for interest in medieval history and a healthy dose of No-Doz was required."
@@The_Dudester arrogance does not become you your screen name though does reveal something about you. Haughty and prideful. Again qualities in a person that are less than desirable. If you think you could in fact produce a better documentary then why haven't you. Where is your UA-cam channel pray tell. Until you can do better then it's best not to criticize
I'm guessing the reason little to no excavation has been completed is it's the English wanting to excavate. Also thinking the shame & resentment of the loss is the reason the French don't excavate the site to find their own dead. Some wounds don't heal.
Maybe french don't care... Azincourt was à small battle for the french, and this battle don't allow the english to win the war so we just don't care ^^ It's make me laught to see the english men celebrating again and again a battle that mean nothing in the war... And it's really surprising to see that no french historian are presented to share an other point of view ^^ It's look like propaganda :) So if this battle is so important why Aquitaine Still french today ? And why I can't see on english Chanel the french victory of the hundred year war.... Maybe thinking the shame & resentiment of the loss is the reason the english don't talk about the other battle of the hundred year war...some wounds don't heal...^^
I doubt they see it like that. They probably don't know about it. We English all know Crecy, Agincourt, and Poitiers, because we won them. Castille, Patay etc are less known, but I bet your average French man can name them.
@@luismackenson but seriously; do you know better the battles you won or the battles you lost? Knowledge of the hundred years war is limited to the victories here, and, Agincourt gets special attention because of Shakespeare's Henry V.
For the French, these battles were only one aspect of the so-called Hundred Years War. Joan of Arc, the Black Death, the Armagnacs and the Bourguignon conflict, the _routiers and écorcheurs_ , Jean & Gaspard Bureau, La Hire, etc. For the British, it's a nation-building myth. What does the British know about this war except 3 battles? Not much.
If you do the research you'd find out quite a bit about your surname. Though the bow started its long history as a hunting weapon so it could be possible you are descended from a hunter as well
@@derrickguffey4775 Many British names were based on one's occupation. I have Bard members in my family tree, for example. Obviously, one of them was called 'the Bard' and entertained royalty in the Middle Ages.
@@emsnewssupkis6453 that's a fact I'm rather well aware of and I'm my original comment I didn't disagree whatsoever. In fact if you read what I said you'll find I did in fact agree.
@@derrickguffey4775 My other ancestors came from a French Huguenot family named 'Pettit' which is French for 'small businessmen in towns and cities' and when the Queen mother of France ordered the extermination of all Huguenots, he was at sea and couldn't return so he became a pirate and traces of my family's activities in the New World are easy to find because they named every town they created here either 'Lima' or 'Peru' as a inside joke about where the money for this came from originally. Gold and silver the Spanish exported from the Americas were stamped with either name showing where it came from!
How come no one mentions the fact that the French Battle Plan was found out by Henry's army the French plan is not a bad plan bit the Henry's army knowing the plan was able to pick a spot on the battle field to nullify the Calvary if they said it I didn't hear it
2 роки тому+1
Lol, It's war, we'll be fine no one dies in war of Frenchies what are you thinking
I'm not altogether sure how strong feelings of nationalism were at this time. This was an era of dynasties and local loyalties. Certainly we know that Scottish nationalism was well nigh nonexistent at Bannockburn. The age of nationalism had not arrived yet.
YAY - they are wearing gloves. It is so frustrating seeing even trained archeologists handling artefacts (particularly parchments and papers) not wearing gloves - here they are (mostly).
To be fair, gloves aren't always considered the gold standard practice anymore. Many encourage instead thorough hand washing. It's thought that gloves can cause damage as well. They certainly sacrifice dexterity, which is risky with archival materials and artifacts.
The French also had some notable victories between Crecy and Aginciurt. They're just not talked about in England because they spoil our national myth of the invincibility of the longbow. Keegan ascribes their defeat to leaving their positions in treacherous muddy conditions. The men at arms found it hard to keep their footing. The French army broke the cardinal rule medieval warfare. Let your enemy come to you.
@fredericksandelia9648 the French did rather well in the 1380s I believe. The war didn't become terminal until the 1440s. In hindsight the English had no chance. They were fighting a country of 10 million people with a population of 2 million, dependent on disunity in France and an alliance with Burgundy. Henry V. wasn't seeking a decisive engagement in 1415, just to let the French know he hadn't rescinded his claim.
Well, uh, can we come up and have a look? Of course not! You are English Type! Well what are you then!? I'm French! Why do you think I have this outrageous accent you silly king!
@@2l84t At the beginning of the war the English claimed and/or occupied a large portion of France, and even the throne of France. At the end of the war they only held Calais, which they also lost. Both sides fought for power and territory not the "100 Year War Cup" or to marry the beautiful French princess (which happened any way). The English won most of the glamorous battles the French won the war. WINNING- its not how you start its how you finish.
So half of this video is then trying to find a burial site and all they found so far was a drill pipe?!? It's like when you have a term paper and you secretly increase the font size and double spacing to 2.5 just to make it long enough. Just pointless filler.
Perhaps if the French had not flown their Oriflamme flag (take no prisoners) so many of them would not have been slaughtered by the cornered English. Bernard Cornwell has an excellent novel "Agincourt" very well worth reading. How timely. Just finished reading the novel in October!!
I am so fascinated with Medieval English History!
A great example of using weather and landscape to your advantage. Also a testament to English archers, this has to be their finest hour.
At Patay in 1429 the archers were killed. The French knights began using milanese armour which the arrows couldn't penetrate, and cut them down. From then on, the English struggled in France.
When you have your enemy cornered, always leave him a way out as when one fights out of the desperation of survival they may surprise you.
that is why when taking a tall building
you go in through the roof
Never under estimate your enemy…
Can we talk about the horses, not just the men…there was all kinds of animals and people that died..
@@obtuseonone3133 well it's also easier to fight a downhill battle instead of an uphill one. Tactical advantage.
Only men of a certain status were generally counted, a “man at arms” being the lowest rank counted. There were probably many more soldiers of common rank that weren’t counted, perhaps because they didn’t have their own weapons and armor. This, of course, applies to both sides.
Also, the 'experts' here think they know everything! The English 'nobility' was few and thin on Henry V's side, the number of barons, princes even from Germany, etc. top nobility on the French side was overwhelmingly many more than the English side which was more like a roaming foraging party, not a major war party. The French, alarmed at Henry's successes called upon all their top nobility to try to stop him. Compare this to the number of high nobility and barons, etc. fighting each other in England! These major battles killed as many 'nobles' as the Agincourt battle killed French nobility.
The bloody War of the Roses decimated the English nobility every bit as harshly as the English archers killed in France. And that war happened because the King of England married the Princess of a crazy king in France and she gave birth to a crazy son whose utter disconnect from reality led to the War of the Roses and England lost every inch of French territory in the following chaos and destruction inside England, itself.
Someone always changes the rules/logic so they can rewrite history. Napolean wasn't short, Washington didn't cross the Delaware, Popcorn hasn't always been buttered...
Nobody asked you
@@emsnewssupkis6453 "the experts here think they know everything"
Lmao, they're not like you.
I jump to watch anything that Tim is involved with...he is an incredible and superb scholar and archaeologist...Just as Sue Black and her team are as well.
It's really amazing that France as a country still exists today. They seem to have gotten the short end of the stick during pivotal moments in history that could easily have seen them become part of other countries.
The church and a large population.
They should have due to poor management, but the church…
They are so rude ppl just give it back. Excellent tactic.
Weee
Well if France keeps bending at the knee for Muslim immigrants. It won't exist in another 50 years
I love the history surrounding Agincoirt and the 100yr war. Bernard Cornwell's historical fiction novels set during this war are some of my favorite books.
Yep, all the countries in Europe from Roman times..fought for land, borders, feeding each other..keeping going..history is so cool. Read how France did get going..start with the Merovingian dynasty and go on..all the countries fascinating
England lost the 100 year war after the battle of Orleans.
I am American and I love English history it is amazing especially the 100 hundred years war such a fantastic time period from King Edward lll to King Henry 5👑🏴 🏹
It all went a bit pear-shaped after that. C'est la vie!
@fredericksandelia9648 . The English Kings spoke English by this time. The nobility had French ancestory sure, but they didn't think of themselves as French. National identity wasn't as strong as in our age of nation states. It was much more about your local lord back then. The archers were from England too. You had to practice archery on a Sunday by law at that time. The war didn't start going badly until Charles the Mad died, and England got its own mad king, Henry VI. But objectively, England had little chance of winning with a population of under 2 million against a country of 10 million.
If you guys enjoy this story, you all have to read Agincourt/Azincourt by Bernard Cornwell!!
It's historical fiction novel about a character that fights in this battle as an archer.
I learned more about English longbows and archery in that book than anywhere else lol Plus, Bernard Cornwell is one of the greatest historical-fiction writers of all-time.
Thanks for Book Author's name ------
Thank you 😊.
@@barbaralamson7450 You're very welcome Barbara. On a slightly less historical note, I also HIGHLY recommend his King Arthur trilogy. I truly believe it to be the best version of the King Arthur myth ever written down.
@@Beofware
I am very pleased you read them. Whilst looking for the first recommendation I did notice those. I am back to Amazon.
Thank you again 😊.
I have it and about three more of his books he's also the writer of the Sharps tales as well .
Sometimes I hate history. After my friend, driving a brand-new Buick, hit a tree headon and we both survived, I found that being housebound with major bone breaks meant having tutors, which meant I could actually study history. THAT's an awfully big deal when you are an American getting public education. I learned about Agincourt, The War of the Roses, and all sorts of things about the American War of Independence that I'm fairly certain I would never have appreciated had I not had our basketball coach/history teacher coming to hear my oral reports. What a good sport! And also, I might never have found Jodi Taylor, an English writer who based her main character around Agincourt.
Basketball coach being the history teacher! That is so funny and on point! Middle school and high school
Basketball coaches were both the history teachers who could care less about history. It’s like they just checked off the federal governments checklist and moved on without a care about it. It’s sad really.
Sorry for accident, but history is everything….widens your mind..
You should not hate history, why not read about your own history..the us..
Thomas B Chastain wrote a detailed family history of the Plantagenet (sorry I slaughtered it) dynasty of England, and excellent read. Edward Gibbons Decline and fall of the Roman Empire will give you the answer to any questions about Rome. And Sir Steven Runciman wrote a history of the crusades. These three I cannot highly recommend enough for you. They are all action packed.
I always enjoy learning from Dr. Malin, she’s a true expert and professional. Most documentaries only give material written and presented by actors, like Tony Robinson.
you may like Helen Castor's Agincourt presentation at Gresham College on youtube
With all the recent downplaying I’ve been hearing, of the battle numbers at Towton and Agincourt for instance, it feels a bit to me like historians not giving the capabilities of the Medieval man enough credit.
Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!
Very excited about this.
Thank you.
Enjoy!
This is one of my favorite series
Appreciate the new takes on old givens. So much of our collective history is wrapped up in folk tales and accounts written centuries later. By using other branches of science, we can actually realize the reality of history.
Nah this is BS
Great channel!
The St. Crispin's Day speech is pretty good. Henry the 5th is a great play by Shakespeare.
Everybody loves Agincourt...except the French of course.
la malheureuse journee
@Ludo M i don’t live in the UK, and this is part of history lessons in my country too..! But of course our victories over the English are far more known, including sailing undiscovered over the Theems, to set fire to 13 ships and stealing the Royal Charles and got out without a scratch. Our moments of glory right there. Only 500 years ago Haha.
@Ludo M You must be French
@Ludo M Yes
Same for the anglos with Castillon and Poitiers. France won the HYW but anglo revisionism like to pretend they didn’t.
Man.... really leaves on a cliff hanger doesn't it.
This is so good
never, never underestimate your enemy.
Yes,Or U Could End Up Like France
@@jameskpolkastronomyhistory5984 You mean winning the war ?
Curry has been largely discredited vis her estimation of army sizes - French records are sparse, so you certainly can't extrapolate from them with any real confidence. There are clear primary source lists that give 100+ lords and bannerets (including 3 dukes), 3000 other knights, and 2500+ men-at-arms not wearing heraldic identification as killed at Agincourt. A further 2 dukes, 4 counts and about 700 other knights are recorded by - name - as prisoners. Anyone who knows anything about Medieval French armies would realize that an army that included 5 dukes and over 100 other lords and bannerets would be able to muster 30,000 men minimum. Curry seems unaware that, for each knight, a squire (armed and equipped the same) and a page (also mounted and armed) would have gone into battle with the lords and knights. Should have found a more credible expert for this doc.
I think the size of the battle field played apart, long tappering, heavey muddy under foot, lots of heavy armored knights, etc, lighter foot soliders who could escaped the invaders
Having coincidentally read some of Anne Curry's work while looking into this subject, I believe she may have been, to a certain degree, misrepresented by the writers of this documentary. At the very least, she doesn't come off as the type to say "The rolls say X, so there must be X people". I wonder whether her talking about the size of the armies during the actual interview had more "but"s and uncertainties that were cut for the documentary for writing and pacing purposes.
After all, this documentary is not a scientific journal, and should be expected to be at the very least less nuanced than one.
I agree, I was furious when she pretended both armies were the same size. Not only were there most of the top French nobility there but also from Germany and the Low Lands! Funniest thing, though, was the fact that many 'royals' were killed on the French side and then France became STRONGER while the British King who won...went home with his French Princess and she produced an insane son and the many intact nobles in England (all relatives of King Henry V) went to war with each other viciously and murderously and the horrors of the War of the Roses and the deaths of the Princes in the Tower and the hunchback king Richard...was the final outcome of the 'victory' in France.
Keegan says 18,000 v 12,000, and that the French third line did not engage due to the mud, as the men at arms couldn't keep their footing.
I don't believe the French thought they were to attend a mediaeval festival..🤷🏼♂️
If Liberty 🗽 has found it's stronghold in the United States , it's front lines and beginning starts with France Viva la revolution Viva la liberty. Protect the birth of freedom
Many Thanks to the Marquis de Lafayette!! He was critical to our own success in the American Revolution!
We in the U.S. are, or should be, very grateful for his enthusiasm for our cause!!
We are also thankful that Napoleon Bonaparte won his release from prison!! 😃
His support for the American Revolution until it's end in 1783 and his continued desire to obtain Liberty in France before and after his arrest warrant and 5 year imprisonment never wavered!!
He continued his passion for Liberalism and Natural Rights after his release... staying true to his principles!!
Be Well!!
Syllabus for Philosophy:
A. Rational Philosophy
2. On Interpretation
3. Prior Analytics
4. Posterior Analytics
5. Topics
6. Sophistical Refutations
B. Moral Philosophy
1. Nicomichian Ethics
2. Politics
C. Natural Philosophy
1. Physics
2. Metaphysics
The KINGDOM OF FRANCE won the Hundred Years' War. Agincourt is just one battle romanticized by English historians. It was a war between French noble houses and one of them just happened to be rulers of England. What was at stake was the throne of France claimed by an "English" king whose father belonged to the French Plantagenet dynasty ruling in England and whose mother, the Queen of England, was the daughter of a Capetian King of France. If the rulers of England that time were not French, there would be no "English" claim to the French throne at all.
This is true of course, but by this time the English royal House no longer thought of itself as French. This happened as a direct result of the hundred years war. Edward I d. 1407 was the first English king since the Norman Conquest not to speak French.
How fascinating!
The French were extremely poorly led. There was no good reason to engage the English in that place and time.
It is a classic case of overconfidence and that led to their defeat. They totally discounted the English Longbow. Prior to this, a mounted knight was exceptionally strong. They looked across the battlefield and saw a lack of the mounted knights in the English lines. They did not realize that the longbow totally negated the advantage of the knights. Thus, they confidently charged into their defeat.
@@brianeleighton the French were well aware of English tactics having been defeated at Crecy. They also had competent leadership, who were very experienced in war.
It seems they couldn’t control the noblemen who did exactly what they didn’t want them to do multiple times.
Overconfidence by the noblemen played a major role.
@@barnsnoble3105 That's right. Their senior commanders were experienced and competent. Their younger, less experienced subordinates couldn't contain themselves.
The English marched straight toward them, provoked them by firing arrows at them from 400m, and hoped they would engage on terms suitable for the English. They should have stood still. Longbows aren't that effective from that range.
@@barnsnoble3105 yes, agree. The guy in charge was of lower status than the nobles. This happened at Bannockburn too, when the nobles conducted unsupported cavalry charges with disastrous results.
According to records I have a Grandfather Ancestor named Piers Leigh who fought there in Henry’s Army. He was badly wounded there but later died near Paris
This program was posted up years ago after this program 1st aired. And I watched it many times…. But now someone has re-posted it with a cool image to click on when scrolling through topics. Wonder why?
so we could enjoy it.
Someone bought the rights and re-released it.
OK documentary - establishes that the facts of Azincourt are not known - nor even the exact location. Could have used some drone footage of the battle field area.
The Netflix movie the King covers leading up to and including this battle... Wicked good.
@Ludo M I never said it was a documentary. Most movies based on history or books are changed for a multitude of reasons.
Love that movie ! It’s a good film, just as William wrote those plays. Just entertainment
I started watching thinking it would not be my thing but well it was over even before I realized
The movie absolutely butchered Agincourt (which baffle me since that's what the movie is based around) but it def had it's moments
Title of this Netflix movie is:????
It's not just about bravery, it's also about glory. The men didn't have an idea that they were fighting for their lives ... How vacuous can some of these commentaries get?
Lol
Just a little aside. If you are of 100% English lineage and born in 1980, you had 14 male great grandparents 17 times removed at Agincourt. I had 7 because half of my family is scots/Irish, so I would have been well represented at Bannockburn. :)
I am downloading the audiobook Bernard Cornwall, Agincourt. I watched all of Sharpes Rifles and loved it. Will have to do those in audio also! Thanks for the info.
It is a good read. Recommended.
"I have the best armour of the world. Would it were day!"
Uhhhh
What?
@@ReynOnLife From Shakespeare's Henry V. The French bragging before the Battle of Agincourt.
Love the confusion you caused in the comments section 😉
They had good armour. The bodkin arrow could only penetrate close-up. The problem they had at Agincourt was the muddy ground.
Through tactics and bravery they won the day. Glorious.
It’s completely untrue and ridiculous that the French “thought they were going to a party”. Why make the French sound stupid and naive? They weren’t, their only mistakes were perhaps over-relying on their splendid cavalry and underestimating the number and effectiveness of the English/Welsh long-bow men. “The flower of French Chivalry” was once a good phrase, but it’s been done to death, like “the sands of time”.
That's not what the French chroniclers and eye-witnesses say...
They definitely were arrogant. They also ignored the weather. Ask any Russian, who wins the most wars? Humans or the weather?
That’s like counting the Commissioned Officers and not counting any of the enlisted. It was like the Airforce where the Officers went to battle and enlisted don’t have wings. One noble thing is that the aristocracy who owned the land went to fight themselves rather than sending in the peasants to do that fighting considering that it was their own interest rather than the plebs and surfs
As if these times was not horrible enough. Living to your 25th birthday was quite a blessing (reader being the judge)itself.
Marching around with bleeding feet, fouled food and water. The smell of cheese from your infected friends. My god have we gotten blunt in minds.
I've heard no mention of the Bodkin Arrowhead. Was it not most instrumental in piercing armor?
If you are still interested in the subject, I recommend checking out "Arrows vs Armour" by the UA-cam channel Tod's Workshop. In the video they use historically accurate armour, arrows as well as longbow in order to test the piercing capabilities of arrows as they would have been during the Battle of Agincourt.
A very interesting watch.
It could pierce armour close-up. It was more a psychological weapon against armour, but if you weren't wearing good armour, it was devastating, especially as the archers put the arrowhead in the soil, which made sure the wound would go septic. That was deliberate by the way.
I can understand why the French people weren't helpful to Woodford, after all they had just suffered another defeat by the English. Woodford may have been a respectful good man, but you don't know what the men he had with him might have been saying to the locals.
Although I would think some French archeologists would be interested in such a mystery. They might have more luck.
Apparently, the French forgot about the Battle of Crecy, some 70 years earlier. In Crecy, as in Agincourt, English archers decimated the French ranks, allowing another overwhelming English rout.
This is last part of. The 100 years war…still France is hell of a lot bigger than England…his son could never reign France and England, maybe Henry could have reigned France and England if he did not die of dysentery in France, but I don’t think so…
I’m a bit puzzled by Professor Curry’s idea that the two armies were similar & proportional in terms of class composition. If Henry V had a fighting force of 7000 archers and 1500 men at arms (plus baggage train), how is that akin to an army of 1400 mounted knights, 5000 archers and crossbowmen, plus a further 5-8,000 French UN mounted knights & men at arms?
Archers were lightly armoured, had backup weapons for their bows & arrows, and were taken from the lower class & rural populations. So, like so many English armies, the victors of Agincourt indeed were predominantly “ordinary Tommies”, unless I’m misunderstanding something.
My name is Stephen holwell. My direct ancestor from this fight was Stephen holwell. Who was a archer
My own Brit side of the family was at the Battle of Hastings as one of the invaders back then. We went around the earth, invading this and that. Some ended up in the New World, too. Multiple sons in the lower nobility had to find some place to invade and take over since they inherited no lands in England as was the custom.
Your great grandfather 17 times removed. You have 2,000 of those. There were only around 700,000 male adults in England at the time, and just under 1.5 % of them were at Agincourt. All other things being equal, 14 of your direct but distant male bloodline were at Agincourt. And 7 of mine because I have 2 irish/Scots male great grandparents
I love how historians act like they know everything and exactly what people were thinking centuries ago with very little evidence. 14:15 the French knights didn't think it was a real fight?!?
I agree. There is also nothing new and much left out. So speculation is presented as fact.
True, and yet they don't even know where the actual battle took place. So they're trying to write history the way they envision it in their minds, which has nothing to do with any archaeological evidence, because there is none
The FRENCH did ride down the archers earlier before the battle that's why they were ordered to carry a stake. The rich families sent servants to retrieve the bodies of their dead menfolk to be burred in hallowed ground near their estates.
Fitting that the church bells would ring as he mentions the sad circumstances of those soldiers remains not being interred in the memorial chapel. Almost like they heard him and acknowledged he was speaking of them.
Or the sound editor added it post production…
Wide scan ground-penetrating radar should be used on the entire area. All would be revealed.
That’s what I thought…
bring in Sir Tony Robinson and the 'Time Team' for their famous 3-day scans and excavations and history people locating documents that shed immense amounts of light on things! Always entertaining, respectful and informative!
Yes, the Time Team and of course Tony Baldrick Robinson!
My grandmother was from France and was very patriotic about France and the French and all things French as a Ww2 survivor and the ss always looking for her father in hiding with the French resistance.
I’m surprised they lasted the years as a separate country.
They lived to much for joy and didn’t get the good end of many historical events because of arrogance and self indulgence and the cost of to many wars and defeats plus inner turmoils.
I hope you realize how addictive these are
Because they were paid by the man - It was common for a noble on either side to exaggerate the force he was bringing to the war...
Hard to believe we may have the wrong battle ground for Agincourt.
I often wonder how many of those poor 🐎🐴 horses perished in battle. They never get any recognition. I mean that is how they traveled right...Wasn't like they rode in on goats.
They often shot the horses. They had armour though.
"History is made up of the lies that everyone agrees with" (Napoleon Bonaparte)
Long ago I learned that there was never any form of peace treaty after Agincourt - so that technically speaking, England and France are still at war! Actually I assume that there are many battles and wars which start and end without declarations of war and peace treaties... but interesting for someone to research, maybe?
Very sad, especially considering that we, as a species, still haven't learned that no one wins a war.
You maybe wouldn't be typing this comment if people didn't defend whether ideologically or by physical force. Otherwise one civilization that only agrees with "war" would just take over the entire planet and would have never lost control. All species are at some form of war, war is a fact of life. Wars can be pointless, of course, but given the time span of all species some are inevitable.
@@Despond How do wars end? Lots of people die and then the sides finally talk it over and make a settlement. Wouldn't it be better if we would talk to one another about our disputes long before it boiled over into war? Wouldn't that save more lives and aren't lives more important than any of the bullshit we fight over in the world?
We should honor long dead veterans who died for what they believed regardless of the sides involved.
The chroniclers who were there would know more about the number of troops
I JUST WATCHE THE KING LAST NIGHT :D
This makes the English sound like a small band of desperadoes. In reality, this expedition was meticulously planned, staffed and abundantly funded and supplied. I suppose it makes the English seem more glorious to pretend that their chances of winning were small.
In truth it was just like that most of Henry's men were extremely sick at the time and archers historically speak were not known to stand and fight against an on coming charge of heavy cavalry. And it's a fact the English were heavily outnumbered. Even though battlefield numbers may have been exaggerated. And add to that the fact that before this battle arrows had little to no effect on plate armor. It was only with the bodkin arrow and a close range that the French knights armor was punctured and obviously their mounts were also killed decreasing their combat effectiveness almost in half. So the odds were I fact against the English , thought it was a well planned and funded expedition.
It was a glorious victory against the odds...get over it
I cannot imagine the suffering and hardship these guys went through both in battle and just life in general during this time. I read a book a while back (I think called the Face of Battle) that did an in depth study of all the chronicles and sources of the Battle of Agincourt and I remember it said a good amount of knights on both sides were suffering from dysentery but because of the time consuming effort to remove and put armor back on, they just had to relieve themselves inside their armor. Another thing I remember from the book was that a lot of the combatants got drunk before the battle to calm the nerves.
Um, drinking and fighting have been hand in glove since the invention of swords and booze! Yup. For real! Muslims had to do this with drugs since booze was verboten. Then everyone else discovered this, too. So both are enablers. See, you DON'T FEEL PAIN. Trust me on this.
Thanks for the book suggestion I'll try to find it! :)
What a dumb comment
The skeletons at Towton revealed that they had been clenching their teeth so hard out of fear during the battle that some of their crowns broke.
So what did the English do after the rout ? Joan wouldn't calm things until 15 year later.
After Agincourt, the King married a French Princess whose daddy was insane. His son, Henry VI was born, daddy died in France and baby grew up...INSANE. This led to the infamous War of the Roses wherein the British royals tried to exterminate each other including killing young children, too. Few survived.
@Frederick Sandelia Crecy was early on in the 100 years war.
Longbowen, the nuclear missile of their day.
Machine gun perhaps
Until 1429 at Patay of course. After that the crossbow was king.
If you see the amount of arrows fired vs the amount of French deaths ( even if we assume every Frenchmen was killed by an arrow which is far from the case ) I wouldn’t call it a nuclear missile. While the longbow did have a use by injuring the horses and forcing the heavy armored knights to proceed on foot Agincourt was mainly fought hand to hand. The new spike defenses and muddy terrain was the real winner of Agincourt. Especially considering it has already been proven that 1 the longbow would be unable to pierce a knights plate and 2 the longbow was used horizontally at a closer range than initially thought instead of the previously thought long range arched volley.
This documentary has quiet a few flaws.
Admittedly haven’t watched the whole thing, but she didn’t mention England’s siege of Harfleur that brought about killed, injured, as well as desertion and disease in the aftermath.
Also you have to garrison what you take.
Henry sent for reinforcements during the siege to replace losses and the sick. The army that left Harfleur was not disease ridden and bedraggled, but reinforced and freshly supplied. Henry would not have marched around northern France with a decimated sickly army.
A British documentary with the phrase "French disaster" in the title. About what you would expect.
What's this about? The battle of Agincourt? Or is it about Woodford? Is this an archeological program? Or a drama about the misconceptions about Woodford, and what a fantastic idea he had to follow, for archeoligists?
And to think this was all About religious beliefs. It's been a war for over 2,000 years. There's still no God has stood up for himself.
He stands with those who believe him
the Europe are Catholic
the English kicked the Catholics out and were given the blessings of Israel
that's how they got to rule the world
It was a dynastic claim.
This documentary is completely unhelpful, especially the part wbere the two men have a l-o-n-g conversation. Could have wrapped the whole documentary up in 5 minutes-"We looked and found nothing. Good night."
Totally.
It happens occasionally in archeology. You don't always find what you are looking for. However that doesn't detract from the fact it was an interesting documentary on a fairly controversial and rather well known subject. You didn't like it but that's your opinion and opinions are not facts. Don't try to downplay it based on that alone. They followed in another's footsteps. It's hard to follow the facts when they were mixed up and twisted over time
@@derrickguffey4775 Oh, I'm sorry. This was the number one blockbuster at the theater and drew the biggest audience since the super bowl!!
Seriously, though, you are correct, that sometimes in archeology you find nothing. With that said, instead of the title that they did use, instead they should have named it "Two Guys Having a Really Long Boring Conversation.." The video also should have come with a disclaimer that "an intense need for interest in medieval history and a healthy dose of No-Doz was required."
@@The_Dudester arrogance does not become you your screen name though does reveal something about you. Haughty and prideful. Again qualities in a person that are less than desirable. If you think you could in fact produce a better documentary then why haven't you. Where is your UA-cam channel pray tell. Until you can do better then it's best not to criticize
Henry's army was ravaged by illness and at the end of a long campaign. More like 6,000
Henry V reinforced and resupplied his force before leaving Harfleur.
We could use an “Agincourt II” right now
This channel needs more views not the other useless garbage on UA-cam
I'm guessing the reason little to no excavation has been completed is it's the English wanting to excavate. Also thinking the shame & resentment of the loss is the reason the French don't excavate the site to find their own dead. Some wounds don't heal.
Maybe french don't care...
Azincourt was à small battle for the french, and this battle don't allow the english to win the war so we just don't care ^^
It's make me laught to see the english men celebrating again and again a battle that mean nothing in the war...
And it's really surprising to see that no french historian are presented to share an other point of view ^^
It's look like propaganda :)
So if this battle is so important why Aquitaine Still french today ? And why I can't see on english Chanel the french victory of the hundred year war....
Maybe thinking the shame & resentiment of the loss is the reason the english don't talk about the other battle of the hundred year war...some wounds don't heal...^^
I doubt they see it like that. They probably don't know about it. We English all know Crecy, Agincourt, and Poitiers, because we won them. Castille, Patay etc are less known, but I bet your average French man can name them.
@@luismackenson but seriously; do you know better the battles you won or the battles you lost? Knowledge of the hundred years war is limited to the victories here, and, Agincourt gets special attention because of Shakespeare's Henry V.
For the French, these battles were only one aspect of the so-called Hundred Years War. Joan of Arc, the Black Death, the Armagnacs and the Bourguignon conflict, the _routiers and écorcheurs_ , Jean & Gaspard Bureau, La Hire, etc. For the British, it's a nation-building myth. What does the British know about this war except 3 battles? Not much.
🏴🏴🏴❤️❤️❤️
I'm pretty sure it has something to do with my surname, but I've always been fascinated by the 100 year war, and the English archers.
If you do the research you'd find out quite a bit about your surname. Though the bow started its long history as a hunting weapon so it could be possible you are descended from a hunter as well
@@derrickguffey4775 Many British names were based on one's occupation. I have Bard members in my family tree, for example. Obviously, one of them was called 'the Bard' and entertained royalty in the Middle Ages.
@@emsnewssupkis6453 that's a fact I'm rather well aware of and I'm my original comment I didn't disagree whatsoever. In fact if you read what I said you'll find I did in fact agree.
@@derrickguffey4775 My other ancestors came from a French Huguenot family named 'Pettit' which is French for 'small businessmen in towns and cities' and when the Queen mother of France ordered the extermination of all Huguenots, he was at sea and couldn't return so he became a pirate and traces of my family's activities in the New World are easy to find because they named every town they created here either 'Lima' or 'Peru' as a inside joke about where the money for this came from originally.
Gold and silver the Spanish exported from the Americas were stamped with either name showing where it came from!
@@emsnewssupkis6453 I have Huguenots as well. Des Agee family of Nantes. Bonjour!
How come no one mentions the fact that the French Battle Plan was found out by Henry's army the French plan is not a bad plan bit the Henry's army knowing the plan was able to pick a spot on the battle field to nullify the Calvary if they said it I didn't hear it
Lol, It's war, we'll be fine no one dies in war of Frenchies what are you thinking
Agincourt is one of the most known battles in medieval European history.
Your face is a well known battle.
@@vapingotter7518 so dumb yet made me laugh
I'm not altogether sure how strong feelings of nationalism were at this time. This was an era of dynasties and local loyalties. Certainly we know that Scottish nationalism was well nigh nonexistent at Bannockburn. The age of nationalism had not arrived yet.
It was feodality. People did serve their overlord. Many "French" noblemen were more powerful than the King of France himself.
If they pulled in ever peasant and commoner I could see the French having 20k-25k
YAY - they are wearing gloves. It is so frustrating seeing even trained archeologists handling artefacts (particularly parchments and papers) not wearing gloves - here they are (mostly).
To be fair, gloves aren't always considered the gold standard practice anymore. Many encourage instead thorough hand washing. It's thought that gloves can cause damage as well. They certainly sacrifice dexterity, which is risky with archival materials and artifacts.
Didn't the French have another disaster a bit earlier at Crecy? The Agincourt French army must have known of Crecy.
They were eager to redeem tgeir fathers' dishonor -- too eager.
The French also had some notable victories between Crecy and Aginciurt. They're just not talked about in England because they spoil our national myth of the invincibility of the longbow. Keegan ascribes their defeat to leaving their positions in treacherous muddy conditions. The men at arms found it hard to keep their footing. The French army broke the cardinal rule medieval warfare. Let your enemy come to you.
@fredericksandelia9648 the French did rather well in the 1380s I believe. The war didn't become terminal until the 1440s. In hindsight the English had no chance. They were fighting a country of 10 million people with a population of 2 million, dependent on disunity in France and an alliance with Burgundy. Henry V. wasn't seeking a decisive engagement in 1415, just to let the French know he hadn't rescinded his claim.
At what point does desecrating war graves become archaeology?
Understanding history via archeology is preserving it.
A bit of anticlimax with the ending. Documented letters with no clues and ending in presumption.
Yea religious people never lie 🤔
The French king should not have sent him those tennis balls. 😁😂
French King was insulting him, saying if you wanna throw down, you need balls and I've got plenty to spare.
600 years of ‘ The French army, what is that?’ followed. The longest burn in history.
Ask my homie Napoleon about it...
That's why the english have always paid for European coalitions in order to avoid fighting alone against them.
I’ve always rooted for the French vs the British 🍻 just the vibe I suppose 🥂
Well, uh, can we come up and have a look?
Of course not! You are English Type!
Well what are you then!?
I'm French! Why do you think I have this outrageous accent you silly
king!
In the end the french won.
You have an interesting definition of winning.
@@2l84t At the beginning of the war the English claimed and/or occupied a large portion of France, and even the throne of France.
At the end of the war they only held Calais, which they also lost. Both sides fought for power and territory not the "100 Year War Cup" or to marry the beautiful French princess (which happened any way). The English won most of the glamorous battles the French won the war. WINNING- its not how you start its how you finish.
Document about finding remains of men who died in that battle. They found nothing. Useless document.
this show much what we "know" about that battle is not very solid...
British use AP round
So half of this video is then trying to find a burial site and all they found so far was a drill pipe?!? It's like when you have a term paper and you secretly increase the font size and double spacing to 2.5 just to make it long enough. Just pointless filler.
He did find a date on the Church wall LOL
Perhaps if the French had not flown their Oriflamme flag (take no prisoners) so many of them would not have been slaughtered by the cornered English. Bernard Cornwell has an excellent novel "Agincourt" very well worth reading. How timely. Just finished reading the novel in October!!
Wood make a good show after all the wokeists are gone
Yes, a fight to the finish...note how the Spartans were renown for being able to take on entire massive armies when they fought to the last man.
Regulae Britannia
watched to 30 minutes = is mainly about the story of the historians and their journey, very little about the battle of Agincourt. thumbs down
Well do your own video.
60.000 French knights??? Maybe 6 mil? Why not 60 millions? You're so humble.
Got enough ads? Jesus Christ most unchill shit ever. "The year is 14- TRY MY PILLOW NOW"
Henry the 5th