Battle Of Crécy Article Index for
Battle Of
Website Links For
Battle
 

Information About

Battle Of Crécy




  partof the Hundred Years' War
  date 26 August , 1346
  place South of Calais , near Crécy-en-Ponthieu
  result Decisive English victory
  combatant1 Kingdom Of England
  combatant2 France , Genoese Mercenaries, the Kingdoms of Navarre , Bohemia and the Balearic Islands
  commander1 Edward III Of England
  commander2 Philip VI Of France
  strength1 about 12,000
  strength2 30,000 to 40,000
  casualties1 150-1,000 killed and wounded
  casualties2 6,000-20,000 killed and wounded


The Battle of Crécy took place on 26 August , 1346 , near Crécy , in northern France and was one of the most important battles of the Hundred Years' War . The combination of new weapons and tactics used have caused many historians to consider this battle the beginning of the end of Chivalry .


SIGNIFICANCE

Crécy was a battle in which a much smaller English army of approximately 12,000 men, commanded by Edward III Of England and heavily outnumbered by Philip VI Of France 's force of between 30,000 and 40,000, was victorious as a result of superior weaponry and tactics demonstrating the prominence of the modern military concept of Fire Power and its importance in winning battles. It was a battle where the effectiveness of the English Longbow , used en masse, was proven against armoured knights, against the conventional wisdom of the day which held archers firing on armor would have little effect and be butchered when the armored units closed.

However in the event, the French knights, armored in mail with plate reinforcements, mired in mud and nearly exhausted by walking through a quagmire to end the advance by charging uphill into the face of the English arrow storms were cut down by the Bodkin Arrows . The result was that the flower of the French nobility died, perhaps as many as a third (the actual number for each army varies considerably, according to the source used).

As in later battles, where the longbowmen could not as easily penetrate the knights' much-improved armor, they also found flank areas of the opposition's horses which were unprotected and killed or disabled the mounts, leaving the knights floundering helplessly on foot. It consequently became a slaughter.

The battle is seen by many historians as the beginning of the end of Chivalry ; because during the course of the battle, many of the prisoners and wounded were killed. This was against the chivalric codes of warfare; and knights on horseback were no longer "undefeatable" by infantry.


BACKGROUND

Following the outbreak of war in 1337 , the Battle Of Sluys was the first great battle of the Hundred Years' War , on 23 June , 1340 . In the years after this battle, Edward attempted to invade France through Flanders , yet failed due to financial difficulties and unstable alliances. Six years later, Edward planned a different route, and attacked Normandy, winning victories at Caen on the 26 July and later the Battle Of Blanchetaque on the 24 August . A French plan to trap the English force between the Seine and the Somme Rivers failed, and the English escape led to the Battle of Crécy, the second of the great battles of the war.


ENGLISH DISPOSITIONS

As in the previous battles against the Scottish, Edward III placed his forces in an area of flat agricultural land, surrounded by natural obstacles in the flanks. The king placed himself and his staff in a windmill on a small hill that protected the rear, where he could control the course of the battle.

In a strong defensive position, Edward III ordered that everybody should fight on foot, and distributed the army between three groups. His sixteen-year-old son, Edward, The Black Prince , was to command one of them. The army's secret weapon, the Longbowmen , were formed in a "V-formation" along the crest of the hill. In the period of waiting that followed, the English built a system of ditches, pits and Caltrop s to maim and bring down the enemy Cavalry .


THE BATTLE


The French army, commanded by Philip VI, was much more disorganized, due to overconfidence on the part of his knights. Philip stationed his Genoese mercenary crossbowmen in the front line, with the cavalry in the back. French chronicler Froissart gives an account of the action:

:"The English, who were drawn up in three divisions and seated on the ground, on seeing their enemies advance, arose boldly and fell into their ranks...You must know that these kings, earls, barons, and lords of France did not advance in any regular order...There were about fifteen thousand Genoese crossbowmen; but they were quite fatigued, having marched on foot that day six leagues, completely armed, and with their crossbows. They told the constable that they were not in a fit condition to do any great things that day in battle. The earl of Alençon, hearing this, said, 'This is what one gets by employing such scoundrels, who fail when there is any need for them.'"

The first attack was from the crossbowmen, who launched a shower of volleys with the purpose of disorganizing and frightening the English infantry. This first move was accompanied by the sound of musical instruments, brought by Philip VI to scare the enemy. But the crossbowmen would prove completely useless. With a firing rate of three to five volleys a minute, they were no match for the longbowmen, who could fire ten to twelve arrows in the same period of time. Furthermore, their weapons were damaged by the rain that had fallen before the battle, while the longbowmen were able to avoid harm to their weapons by simply unstringing their bows until the weather improved. The crossbowmen did not have their Pavise s (shields), which were still in the baggage train. Frightened and confused, the Genoese crossbowmen retreated with heavy losses, some of them killed by the French cavalry, who thought they were cowards. According to Froissart, the king of France ordered their slaughter. The English continued firing as Cornish and Welsh infantry advanced and many French knights fell.

Seeing the poor performance of the crossbowmen, the French cavalry charged, organized in rows. However, the slope and man-made obstacles disrupted the charge. At the same time, the longbowmen fired a curtain of arrows upon the knights. The French attack could not break the English formation, even after 16 attempts, and they took frightful losses. Edward III's son, The Black Prince, came under attack, but his father refused to send help. The latter claimed that he wanted him to 'win his spurs'. The prince consequently proved himself to be an outstanding soldier.

At nightfall, Philip VI, himself wounded, ordered the retreat. It was a disastrous and humiliating defeat for France.


CASUALTIES

The losses were enormous:
  • French and Genoese casualties are estimated to have been from 10,000 to 30,000. The most likely figure is 12,000. Of these, eleven were princes, and 1200 were knights.

  • The English lost from 150 to 250 men. (This is probably a low estimate; and quite unreliable.)


Among the dead were important nobles such as:


AFTERMATH


After the French left the field, the Welsh and English checked the wounded French, to see who was worth taking prisoner for ransom. Those knights who were too severely wounded to be easily carried off the field were dispatched with ''misericordias'' (mercy-givers). These were long daggers which were inserted through the unprotected underarms and into the heart. This was against the chivalric codes of warfare since peasants, such as the Welsh, were killing knights; knights were also dying from anonymous arrows.

This battle established the military supremacy of the English/Welsh Longbow over the French combination of Crossbow and armoured Knights (due to a significantly greater rate of fire, and a longer range in the hands of a skilled archer), and was to alter significantly the way in which war was conducted for a considerable period of time thereafter. After the Battle of Crécy, Edward III went on to besiege the city of Calais , which surrendered to him shortly afterwards, giving the English a base in northern France. The next major battle in the Hundred Years War, the Battle Of Poitiers in 1356 , would see another defeat for the French, under very similar conditions.


FOOTNOTES