By October Edward was camped outside St Quentin, yet another
city which he was failing to capture. Suddenly news came that King Philip was
approaching with the main French army to confront the invaders. A herald rode
into the camp of the English and their allies with a message from Philip. It
was couched in the hackneyed diplomatic phrases of the time. Philip condemned
Edward for his actions, repeated the condemnation of him as a rebellious vassal
and ended by challenging him to battle at a place and time of his choosing.
Ever wanting to be seen as the perfect knight of chivalry,
Edward promptly accepted the challenge and sent scouts out to select a suitable
battlefield. Philip was taken aback by the eagerness of the English king to
face the French army, and at once began to prevaricate. Excuses were found why
the battle had to be delayed, and then delayed again. Meanwhile, Edward’s allies
were getting nervous. A border raid was one thing, but facing up to the royal
army of France was something else entirely. Using the fact that supplies were
running low, the rulers of Brabant and Brandenburg forced Edward to fall back
out of France.
Philip watched the English retreat. As he had expected, the
English king had backed down when faced by the prospect of a pitched battle
against the full might of France. The event confirmed him and his subordinates
in the belief that they had by far the best army in Christendom, and that this
fact was recognised by the English. Philip must have believed that raids and
pillaging of undefended country areas could be expected of the English, but
successful attacks on major cities were beyond them. Still less would the
English dare face up to the French king and the French army.
Content that the war would grind on in desultory fashion and
end in a compromise peace, Philip went home.
from THE BATTLE OF CRECY by Rupert Matthews
Rupert Matthews tells the story of the most dramatic
military campaign of the medieval world, a thrilling tale of action,
adventure, mystery and much more. Before the Crecy campaign began,
France was recognised to have the greatest, most powerful and most
modern army in all Christendom. England was thought of as a prosperous
but relatively backward kingdom lying somewhere in the sea off the
European coast. But six hours of bloodshed, slaughter and heroism beyond
imagining changed all that. The pride of France was humbled, her army
destroyed and her king a wounded fugitive fleeing for his life through a
foggy night. This book explains to the general reader the reality of
warfare in the year 1346. It seeks to recreate in our minds the tactics
used in the Crecy Campaign and to put them into the context of the time.
It shows what the weapons were like and how they were used in action.
It describes the tactics of the different military units involved and
how these would have impacted on each other in battle. Crucially, it
takes the reader inside the minds of the commanders to explain what they
did, why they did it and what they hoped to achieve. This is the
second in Spellmount's new series, "Campaign in Context".
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