Hundred Years' War
Series of conflicts over the French throne. Black Prince at Crécy and Agincourt; Joan of Arc's victories reversed English gains. Ended with France driving England from all its French territories except Calais. France's population halved.
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Belligerents
- Kingdom of England
- Kingdom of France
- Duchy of Burgundy
Casualties
~3 million (battle + famine + plague)
Key events
- 1346 — Crécy
- 1356 — Poitiers (King John II captured)
- 1415 — Agincourt
- 1429 — Joan of Arc relieves Orléans
- 1453 — Castillon (war ends)
Aftermath
Forged French and English national identities. Ended feudalism's military relevance — by 1453, France had Europe's first standing professional army. England, expelled from France, turned to the sea — preconditions for the British Empire. Guns + standing armies + central tax = the modern state.
Weapons & matériel
- English longbow (12 arrows/min, 250m range)
- French knight's lance & plate armour
- Early cannon (Crécy 1346, first battlefield use in Europe)
- Pike formations
Technology
Longbow ended cavalry dominance; cannon began ending the castle; Joan of Arc's revival fused religious authority with military command
Cost
Drove fiscal reform on both sides — emergence of permanent taxation (taille, poll tax), standing armies, and centralized states
Sources
- Froissart's Chronicles
- Monstrelet
- Joan of Arc trial records