THE HUNDRED YEARS WAR
THE HUNDRED YEARS WAR:
The name the Hundred Years’ War has been used by historians
since the beginning of the nineteenth century to describe the long conflict
that pitted the kings and kingdoms of France and England against each other
from 1337 to 1453. Two factors lay at the origin of the conflict: first, the
status of the duchy of Guyenne (or Aquitaine)-though it belonged to the kings
of England, it remained a fief of the French crown, and the kings of England
wanted independent possession; second, as the closest relatives of the last
direct Capetian king (Charles IV, who had died in 1328), the kings of England
from 1337 claimed the crown of France.
Theoretically, the French kings, possessing the financial
and military resources of the most populous and powerful state in western
Europe, held the advantage over the smaller, more sparsely populated English
kingdom. However, the expeditionary English army, well disciplined and
successfully using their longbows to stop cavalry charges, proved repeatedly
victorious over much larger French forces: significant victories occurred by
sea at Sluys (1340), and by land at Crecy (1346) and Poitiers (1356). In 1360,
King John of France, in order to save his title, was forced to accept the
Treaty of Calais, which granted complete independence to the duchy of Guyenne,
now considerably enlarged to include almost a third of France. However, his son
Charles V, with the help of his commander in chief Bertrand du Guesclin, by
1380 had succeeded in reconquering almost all the ceded territory, notably by a
series of sieges.
After a hiatus, Henry V of England renewed the war and
proved victorious at Agincourt (1415), conquered Normandy (1417-1418), and then
attempted to have himself crowned as the future king of France by the Treaty of
Troyes (1420). But his military successes were not matched by political
successes: although allied with the dukes of Burgundy, the majority of the
French refused English domination. Thanks to Joan of Arc, the siege of Orleans
was lifted (1429). Then Paris and the lle-de-France were liberated (1436-1441),
and after the French army had been reorganized and reformed (1445-1448),
Charles VII recaptured the duchy of Normandy (the Battle of Formigny, 1450),
and then seized Guyenne (the Battle of Castillon, 1453). The end of the
conflict was never marked by a peace treaty but died out because the English
recognized that the French troops were too strong to be directly confronted.
English territory in France, which had been extensive since
1066 (see Hastings, Battle of) now remained confined to the Channel port of
Calais (lost in 1558). France, at last free of the English invaders, resumed
its place as the dominant state of western Europe.
And here you have a short video about it :
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