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@danielsantiagourtado343010 ай бұрын
Love your content man! You're amazing 😊😊😊❤❤❤❤
@philippschmitt916710 ай бұрын
Can you please continue the Hannibal series.
@geraintthatcher307610 ай бұрын
The legend was before this. Edward won his victory at Halidon Hill with Archers
@rhamonalves603710 ай бұрын
Sir, your documentaries are excellent, please put an audio track in Portuguese, there are already several channels doing this. thank you for your attention!
@nobleidowu491910 ай бұрын
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ this is for the algorithm
@LookHereMars10 ай бұрын
Interesting fact, the 6,000 English and Welsh Longbowmen at Crecy could potentially, under periodic sectioned shooting, at the high end volley pace of 10 arrows per man per minute, rain down upon units of the French army as many as 60,000 arrows every 60 seconds. Sent, for a short time, on the minute every minute, truly, an astonishing rate of fire. To put that into some perspective, the volley pace of 10 from 6,000 Longbowmen is equivalent to the per minute 1,500rpm cyclic rate of 40 German MG42s. The more widely used crossbows of the period could, in comparison, loose around 4 to 6 bolts a minute at a maximum effective range of 200 yards. The Longbow could wound and potentially kill, lesser armoured targets, at 300 yards, a range at the time unheard of outside of siege artillery, a truly formidable battlefield weapon.
@MrLoobu10 ай бұрын
That is wild to consider. The major difference being that the 40 mgs would kill everyone facing them in the first minute lol.
@Davscabecinhadeguidao10 ай бұрын
Is this true?
@LookHereMars10 ай бұрын
@MrLoobu Lol indeed, the bullet is more deadly than the arrow. But, the fact that rates of fire such as this could be achieved centuries before the invention of the machine gun, by relatively small groups of archers is outstanding. Such rates of fire on the battlefield from individual units, from the end of bowmenship due to the rise of the firearm were, at least in the west, not seen again for centuries up until perhaps World War 1, 2.
@geraintthatcher307610 ай бұрын
The Longbow had been in use since the Battle of Falkirk against William Wallace
@MySmokingToaster10 ай бұрын
Think of the logistics required to supply hundreds of thousands of arrows over hundreds of miles of campaigning.
@LameGeneralissimo10 ай бұрын
Ah, now I understand the state of my local roads; they're to deter French cavalry charges.
@dillonjones81785 ай бұрын
Ahaha where u from mate
@erikjrn40805 ай бұрын
Better safe than sorry. You know, based on a statistical analysis of history, it's highly probable that England's next war will be against France.
@MrXgamer1012 ай бұрын
Yes!!!!! 😂
@Mac1Eleven2 ай бұрын
Take that frog people
@DwightStJohn-t7yАй бұрын
yah, but you're in Calgary............the new world.
@timr664210 ай бұрын
The Black Prince was 16 years old at Crecy. The age we leave school in the UK and he was holding the line aainst French cavalry.
@RKJ-c7k10 ай бұрын
I mean he was a prince
@CaptainSeato10 ай бұрын
Most 16 year olds don't have a vassal army at their beck and call.
@ferrjuan10 ай бұрын
Back then being 16 years old was old enough to be called a man since life expectancy in the medieval period was very short compared to today.
@timr664210 ай бұрын
@@ferrjuan Very good point, he died aged 35.
@Ragnarok__10 ай бұрын
@@ferrjuanMedieval life expectancy it's a History channel scam. After surviving infancy a medieval would easily reach is 60s. Many history figures reach they 90s.
@daboss_____615110 ай бұрын
One of my ancestors was actually apart of the black princes retinue. Gerad Derhodes was his name. He was one of his bodyguards
@samuelmoore6579 ай бұрын
Wow! Love that 👍
@jdlamb42123 ай бұрын
one of my ancestors broke the most rocks with his head of any man in the village. 1 rock. he died
@louiss2441Ай бұрын
The Black Prince was possibly the most hated character in European history for the next 300 years, so it shows how propaganda works. You wouldn't be so giddy claiming that your ancestors were part of a more recent maniac's retinue.
@davidwhelan1545Ай бұрын
And its also a good rhing to recognise your brave, reckless ancestors through the changing tides of history! Who was eight/weong, good/ bad, stydy real history to still remain ignorant!@louiss2441
@Cadet410 ай бұрын
Feel bad for the genoese because they're ordered to charge with no shield and then got crushed by their own allies
@brainflash110 ай бұрын
Yeah, that was bullshit.
@reeyees5010 ай бұрын
It was a war crime and helped the enemy win the battle
@Drayran10 ай бұрын
Genoese crossbowmen were some of Europe's most sought after ranged mercenaries and what they needed in this situation. Oh, the hybris of not only throwing them away but also slaying your trump card yourself.
@brainflash110 ай бұрын
@@Drayran hubris*
@davidt356310 ай бұрын
The black prince did the job for the enemy, in reality we all know he wussed out and then used obvious propaganda to say that he was amazing and fought 30 times the normal man and saved all the downed soldiers. The same crap we see from sociopaths today.
@leefox111110 ай бұрын
WHAT A VOICE, ABSOLUTE AMAZING NARRATOR.
@stevencarroll831510 ай бұрын
Amazing how the longbow changed warfare, the construction of yew, goat bones, twine and resins all adds up to a lethal weapon.
@Mael-vk1itАй бұрын
And the mandate for all British lads to train. It gave only the British the ability to use the weapons- It's like something out of Judge Dread.
@bishop621810 ай бұрын
As a frenchman it is my duty to point out that the final Q in "Montcuq" is silent. And yes, that makes it sound like "My Ass" in french. This is a subject of much rejoicing and laughter among my people.
@antred118 ай бұрын
Ah, the French version of Uranus.
@bishop62188 ай бұрын
@@antred11 something like that, yeah 😁
@MyVanir7 ай бұрын
@@antred11 Can you see it?
@Outlaw89086 ай бұрын
🤣
@eirikronaldfossheim10 ай бұрын
Have you read the PhD thesis and winner of the De Re Military award, the Verbruggen prize: War Cruel and Sharp by Rogers? Edward didn't run. He offered battles again and again. He wanted the French to attack him in a defensive position the way the Scots had done at the Siege of Berwick-upon-Tweed which resulted in the battle of Halidon Hill in 1333. That was the plan, and Edward finally managed to provoke such an attack at Crecy. This was the strategy throughout his campaigns.
@bgibeast10 ай бұрын
Running until the situation overwhelmingly favors him. Tactical/Strategic retreating? Either way, clearly the better tactic. Who the hell would send their troops into this absurd defensive posture? Oh wait... WW1 wants its casualties back.
@anzaca110 ай бұрын
@@bgibeast That's exactly what the Duke of Wellington was famous for. He would find a strong defensive position, knowing the French would attack. When he did go on the offensive, he made sure to stack the deck in his favour.
@bgibeast10 ай бұрын
@@anzaca1 Well look, I'm just a gaming nerd and armchair general. But charging straight into the fangs of machine gun nests with infantry seems like "Things Not to Do 101" in the Army General book. How could people really be so arrogant to just walk up a hill into 6000 archers? XD
@samdumaquis203310 ай бұрын
@@bgibeastthey were the best of the best knights in Europe, so not very modest AND had seen miles upon miles of destruction that their ennemies had wraught on their land, they must have been calling for blood, still... pretty stupid, especially killing the genoese
@colbygordon693610 ай бұрын
@@bgibeast It's the Fr*nch nobility. They aren't known for their humility and intelligence.
@pe41539 ай бұрын
Love that you add the human element to your videos like the Black Prince adopting John's banner as his own out of respect.
@The_ZeroLine10 ай бұрын
Love the fact the ostrich 🪶 badge of John was adopted by the Black Prince in honor of the blind Bohemian king’s 🤴 courage and is still used to this day. What lineage.
@JohnnyFilip5 ай бұрын
More famously: "Toho bohdá nebude, aby Český král z boje utíkal!" was the original quote of Bohemian king John during his charge in this battle, can be translated as: "That will not happen, so that Czech king flee from the fight!"
@joshbeckett92559 ай бұрын
The Knights Of The Garter’s portraits were so unique and good looking, Henry of Grosmont is a documentary I’m waiting for😤😤
@janpaulus194310 ай бұрын
Toho bohdá nebude aby český král z boje utíkal ( The king of Bohemia will never run from battle) Jan Lucemburský ( John of Bohemia )
@petrhorak352510 ай бұрын
27:39 Toho bohdá nebude, aby český král z boje utíkal!
@gaselstrakaty492110 ай бұрын
Frankofil, ktorého Česká nobilita nenávidela. Jako nic moc král.
@danielsantiagourtado343010 ай бұрын
YOUR 100 YEARS WAR VIDEOS ARE THE BEST! THANKS! 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@LastIberianLynx_GameDev10 ай бұрын
when your total war battle start off really bad and then you just keep experimenting stuff to see how bad it can go
@lavaman7742 ай бұрын
Lmao that’s a good one
@brainflash110 ай бұрын
"Heaven help me, but I want him to have ALL the glory."
@Spurr_ovo10 ай бұрын
Something I find fascinating is that the French never learn from their own arrogance and it causes high losses on their part. Crecy, Agincourt and many other example on the 100 years war alone. They even did it when Western Europe send a crusader force to help Hungry against the Ottomans and the wanted command of the Army even though the King of Hungry had experience fighting the Turks. The French Nobility made us loose then against the Turks. Thank you HM for another amazing video.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
They learn from their arrogance, you only had to check what happened between Poitiers in 1356 and Azincourt in 1415 and why Edward 3 had in theory half of france after Poitiers while Henry 5 only had Bordeaux, Bayonne and Calais before Azincourt.
@seigneurcanardo703010 ай бұрын
if they never learn, how did they destroy the English at Patay, La Brossiniere, Formigny or Patay?
@tomben61802 ай бұрын
@@seigneurcanardo7030Sorry, as an Englishman I’ve never heard of those places or battles 😂
@tomben61802 ай бұрын
But in all seriousness, when learning about history, it’s best not to insult an entire nation and point score. History is there and none of us alive today contributed to what happened. Just discuss the facts of what happened without getting into silly arguments
@seigneurcanardo70302 ай бұрын
@@tomben6180 never ever? and Cocherel, Saint Omer, Castillon, Pontvallain?
@theoneonlymusicchannel7 ай бұрын
The tomb of Edward, the Black Prince is in the Trinity Chapel of Canterbury Cathedral, in Kent, The Black Prince Died 1376 from dysentery aged 45
@robbabcock_10 ай бұрын
Great video! Crecy is one of the most fascinating battles of all history, IMO. Well covered!
@velvtania9 ай бұрын
Excellent work, well done! This is probably the best video on Crecy on the internet
@sterlingpratt580210 ай бұрын
Actually my favorite history-war maps channel.
@adriancastellano335610 ай бұрын
Great great video! Makes the history really enjoyable to watch and hear. Top shelf work.
@KHK00110 ай бұрын
Another great video HM! loving this series!
@month3210 ай бұрын
Let's go with no shields! What's the worse that can happen?
@eelchiong670910 ай бұрын
Get riddled by arrows?
@MyVanir7 ай бұрын
@@eelchiong6709 Pretty sure they took heavier losses from french cavalry than english longbowmen.
@OlaftheFlashy6 ай бұрын
"Nah, let's not unpack the pavises, it's two hours to sunset and going to rain. Not even our French paymasters are so mad or stupid to attack now."
@MyVanir6 ай бұрын
@@OlaftheFlashy The pavises weren't available for the unpacking, they were in the baggage train, trailing behind the army.
@sometingwong27333 ай бұрын
@@OlaftheFlashy The french supply line was shit causing the Genoese to lack of ammo and shield, they also have to fire in the rain making the string useless. French in medieval have shit tactic and then they did it again in ww2
@mohammedsaysrashid358710 ай бұрын
It was an informative and a great historical coverage video about that periods of sever competition and several military striking between French and British on French sovereigns... thank you for an excellent (History Marche) channel for sharing this magnificent video .
@_Lax_10 ай бұрын
If you guys would like to see more action of the Crecy campaign, I’d gladly recommend Tommy Otsuka’s manga Hawkwood which takes place at the start of the English invasion of Normandy and ends after the Siege of Calais (last major action of this campaign). The manga deals in some of the most interesting aspects of Medieval warfare like the Code of Chilvary, ransom, mercenary, knightly honor, logistic in war and the dominant class of knight aka the ruling class at the time. The author went into great details about every major events and minor decisions throughout the campaign so it is not simply a hack n slash no brainer experience but rather contain plenty of entertainment! (yeah last past was inspired by kcd). Anyway go check it out now b4 you forget the name Hawkwood since its truly one of the most underrated and least mentioned work of our time :)
@corpchannel252310 ай бұрын
Battle of Patay should be next
@Lucky_Dandy2 күн бұрын
Well narrated and good visuals.
@Medievalmate10 ай бұрын
Oh Boy i have been waiting for this!
@themightywookie351c310 ай бұрын
30:33 they did kill all the easily wounded and those playing dead.
@keithbodley55045 ай бұрын
Yesterday Brilliant. Thank you for passing your knowledge on to us .
@joehayward26317 ай бұрын
To start, I have been watching you channel for very very long time, easy over a year. I really enjoy how you put it in easy to follow ect. THANK YOU, YOUR TEAM HANDS DOWN HAS INFORMED THE WORLD. know so many after reading my comment will think, this man WTH. Am I just wrong?? Lol I do enjoy listening about warriors during this time. It seems France rarely won very important battles against the English. I know parts of France was England and just flip flop threw hundreds of years of waring. France out numbering, better & more food which is so important in war, better rest, many of the blood lines (for example VIKINGS & many more known warrior tribes, regions threw out now Europe) are the same or very close. I can keep going. How did the French lose so many important battles?? France had total bad butt warriors threw out time. It boggles my brain. If any thought just leave in comment section. Thank you
@HistoryMarche7 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks so much. Truly appreciate the kind words.
@BARACKOBMNANA10 ай бұрын
Average French battle: -Arrive with 10,000 more men at arms -Charge -Rain -Die -??? -Win the war?
@robhiggerson420310 ай бұрын
English soldiers: “But you merely adopted the rain. I was born in it, moulded by it. I didn’t see the sun until I was already a man, by then it was nothing to me but BLINDING!”
@stevelebreton348910 ай бұрын
Average French failed battles: - Arrive with the army - See the enemy defense is strong - Leaders meet and correctly presume a prudent strategy is the best strategy One of the following: - Our stupid leader becomes arrogant, changes his mind and attacks anyway - One stupid adviser of our stupid leader is arrogant, says he won't wait and attacks anyway thus forcing the leader to launch the attack anyway - The French soldiers become arrogant, saying they will attack anyway thus forcing the leader to launch the attack anyway - Défaite prévisible I can add for WWII this in the following choices: - English leaders are stupid, say they will not move out of the north of France cos that's where ports that are important to them are, Germans don't care about the ports, trap the two armies there and rush for the capital Paris, France politics surrender when German soldiers knock on their doors. This one is not (mainly) on us !
@ZolaMagic2510 ай бұрын
@@stevelebreton3489*cough* Maginot Line *cough, cough*
@coltoncyr228310 ай бұрын
could also add "stand, wait, watch friends die, then begin march"
@Waakrissos10 ай бұрын
Until ... enter Napoleon
@glenng818510 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video🎉
@coyote423710 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@patrickb130310 ай бұрын
I’m not French but WTF is with French military command during this period? The monumental stupidity of their tactics cost their armies countless defeats. Even with superior numbers and supply. It’s mind boggling.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
The english started to massively used the longbowmen in the early 1330's sothe tactics about defensive high ground with archers was new. Another reason why Crecy was unavoidable is that Philippe 6 avoid the fight with Edward 3 in 1340 and the nobles resent him for that so he doesn't have the choice. The harsh winter from 1315-1317 made the peasants move to cities so nobles had less money for taxes and had to gain it with ransom in war.
@alexsmart545210 ай бұрын
@@robert-surcouf yea, but dont the French make the same basic mistake 70 or so years later at Agincourt? "The english started to massively used the longbowmen in the early 1330's sothe tactics about defensive high ground with archers was new."
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
@@alexsmart5452 The Valois indeed made the same mistake at Azincourt but not for the same reasons. Since 1392, the king of france (Charles 6) become mad and until 1407, the kingdom was basically ruled by the queen and the king's brother (Louis of Orleans). In 1407, the king's brother was murdered by their cousin, the duke of Burgundy and that started a civil war between burgundians and armagnacs that ended in 1435. In 1415, the Valois army at Azincourt was a gathering of peoples that fight and killed each other for 8 years and without a clear leader (the king was lost and the 3 princes were too young) and the commanders disagreed each other but at the end, the one in command was Louis of Orleans' son and despite the older ones advices, choose the front charge. Another problem at Azincourt is that the younger ones had not lived the war by themselves (there was a peace between 1389 and 1415) while the older ones had seen only success in 1370's and 1380's and the lessons learned after Crecy and Poitiers were already forgotten.
@kidpagronprimsank057 ай бұрын
It seems to be their military culture. They had so many defeat because they kept attack and attack. Basically it took WWI to cut majority of "elan" out
@MyVanir7 ай бұрын
@@alexsmart5452 The way I understand it, they were in a catch 22 at Agincourt - either they attack at a well-defended position with little to no ability to flank due to terrain, in bad weather - or they don't and let Henry V escape. Had the French won, much of the early advantage the English had during that period would've been negated.
@aberjack9210 ай бұрын
Literally just finished reading Harlequin by Cornwell and this pops up
@joshbeckett92559 ай бұрын
Gotta be one of the dumbest charges in history. They killed their own men Charged Cavalry into potholes Charged Cavalry int literal organ guns Charged Cavalry into elevated bows Charged Calvary while separated
@augustlandmesser15208 ай бұрын
They couldn't done it better even if they wanted to lose the battle.
@Trent-m6j3 ай бұрын
But have you considered "We're the best fuckin Calvary in Europe so, fuck it, let's do it anyway." (In a haughty French accent)
@spiderbubbleАй бұрын
Seriously, seeing pot holes + tons of longbows on a hill is a recipe for disaster. And your solution is just to charge with no other strategy? This battle couldn't have been commanded any worse from the French side.
@kamaldhabliwala8321Ай бұрын
@joshbeckett9255.........also, add "Plckett's Charge!"....... dumb and dumber!!
@isileiliparis86267 ай бұрын
The black prince was a fierce warrior, such a shame he died before he could be king
@spenceralbin34410 ай бұрын
I never knew about the digging of potholes in front of the troops (as being a hinderance to the cavalry). I love the narration, the pronouncitation of the French cities is so Cool.
@dominicadrean216010 ай бұрын
The black prince would have made a great king after his father but it said he died before he could become king
@CaptainSeato10 ай бұрын
...almost like his death was planned...
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
He was already 46 and the Plantagenet were already at the losing end but he could prepared his son for the future and avoid all the civil conflicts in the 15th century.
@kyledabearsfan9 ай бұрын
@robert-surcouf in an alternate history, they avoid a lot of the wars and end up more stable? Could be a fun thought process to undertake.
@robert-surcouf9 ай бұрын
@@kyledabearsfan As long as Woodstcok could ruled for 10 years, he will be able to teach his son, gave him a good marriage for england and put the lancasters in check. Richard 2 will not be overthrown and there will not be 3 new dynasties and a civil war in the 15th century or a new war in france. It's also possible that Richard 2 will still be overthrown nevertheless but later and Richard could also be childless. Maybe the current england royal dynasty will still be the plantagenet
@eugenespicer32729 ай бұрын
@@robert-surcoufOr Stewart
@TrentBattyDrums10 ай бұрын
this video was truly magnific and had me glued to the screen. The English under The Black Prince were monsters in battle, and i would of hated to face them in the field. Thanks HistoryMarche for these AMAZING videos!
@MarquisVincentBissetdeGramont10 ай бұрын
The English archers were still defeated by the French. The Hundred Years' War is not limited to Crécy or Agincourt.
@angelastephenson195010 ай бұрын
@@MarquisVincentBissetdeGramontgot your arse kicked at potiers as well
@LuisBrito-ly1ko10 ай бұрын
@@MarquisVincentBissetdeGramont Those two aren’t the only English victories in the 100 Years War. And France didn’t lose only because Henry V died. Otherwise, the war would have ended sooner.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
@@LuisBrito-ly1ko The lancastrians still winning even after Henry 5 death so he wasn't the reason for their loss but instead, it was the civil war between 1407 and 1435 and Charles 6 madness that give Henry 5 then Bedford the edge
@Demun16499 ай бұрын
Do you know how they killed? You wouldn't think so highly of them then.
@AbhyudayaSinh3 ай бұрын
Very informative and detailed💖💖💖
@bluerubric4213 күн бұрын
Love this content! Keep it up!
@charlesjohnson677710 ай бұрын
Crazy how Alencon lost a count at crecy and a duke at agincourt. Pretty sure that would be the father and son of Ben Afflecks character in the last duel.
@MarquisVincentBissetdeGramont10 ай бұрын
John II, Duke of Alençon was Joan of Arc's comrade-in-arms, so the family took revenge on the English invader.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
Jean 1 almost won the battle by himself at Azincourt when he killed York and injured Gloucester and was close to do the same to Henry 5.
@danielsantiagourtado343010 ай бұрын
Happy new year man! Amazing work as always! Please do videos of Longshanks conquest of wales! 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥❤️❤️❤️❤️❤
@Medievalmate10 ай бұрын
Oh man i love historymarche!
@SB-qm5wg10 ай бұрын
High quality as always. TY
@Not_A_Cat2 ай бұрын
Until the rifle was invented, the longbow was the most deadly hand-held ranged weapon on any battlefield. A fight between longbowmen and Mongol horse archers would be an interesting hypothetical to game out.
@randomNacho910 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@HistoryMarche10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for supporting my work! Very kind of you. Happy 2024!
@danielsantiagourtado343010 ай бұрын
@@HistoryMarcheyou're amazing man ❤❤❤❤❤
@MrAndreg78 ай бұрын
Awesome as always
@victoriahhigman96116 ай бұрын
Thanks
@HistoryMarche6 ай бұрын
Thanks again man. Very kind of you!
@romanskokan72386 ай бұрын
"God forbid that the Bohemian king flees battle!" - John of Bohemia/Luxembourg
@jessepyles39162 ай бұрын
That I find morbidly funny is that this battle might be the only one in history where the attacking army delt out my casualties to itself than there opponents.
@cheekarp2180Ай бұрын
Hi, great video thank you.
@debmaker10344 күн бұрын
Michael Livingston's recent book Crecy: Battle of Five Kings proposes that the traditional site (shown here) is wrong. He has been on the ground and proposes an alternate site that is a better fit with what we know. It is worth considering a revision to this video for such an important battle.
@brianivey7310 ай бұрын
Thank you love these videos!
@richardwhittaker384310 ай бұрын
Great video. I love your channel and particularly enjoy your medieval episodes, including the recent Hundred Year's War videos. But I would recommend reading Michael Livingston's brilliant book, "Crecy: Battle of Five Kings". He presents a different version of events that casts a different light on the role that the Black Prince played in the battle. No doubt he would grow into a feared warrior and military commander, but I think Livingston's interpretation of events based on his own research is perhaps more likely than what has been presented in this video based on Geoffrey le Baker's fanciful account. It would be good to present different interpretations or versions of events in your videos! :)
@JohnnyFilip5 ай бұрын
Philip VI and his outrageous tactics, including Genoese with no shields given command to attack on their own and lately smashed by their own cavalry should given a title of the most stupid tactics in medieval history.
@nvelsen197510 ай бұрын
Posted 56 seconds ago? Oh no, I am late to another good HM documentary!
@milabugtcher99010 ай бұрын
Very nice video, thank you for it! And I am happy to find so many stuff about our king Jan Lucembursky (John of Bohemia) here.
@eelchiong670910 ай бұрын
What the hell was he doing there? Far west of Bohemia.
@milabugtcher99010 ай бұрын
He was old and blind and wanted to die honorably in battle, so this was kinda kamikadze attack @@eelchiong6709
@daemonad10 ай бұрын
@@eelchiong6709 they were allies. John's son Charles (the future king of Bohemia and the Holy Roman Emperor) was also present. Charles was raised at the French court. Also John was old, losing his eye-sight and wanted to fight one more time and die honorably in battle.
@Shroty07510 ай бұрын
@@eelchiong6709 He was called absentee king, because most of his reign he spent fighting in foreign wars. He was born in Luxemburg, so he didn’t feel connected to Bohemia. He did expand Bohemian lands, though. His last words were: "Far be it that the King of Bohemia should run away. Instead, take me to the place where the noise of the battle is the loudest. The Lord will be with us. Nothing to fear. Just take good care of my son." But his son, Charles IV. became like the most important Bohemian/Czech ruler ever. Thanks to the upbringing John arranged for him.
@pavelslama55438 ай бұрын
@@eelchiong6709 Czechs as allies are a bit more reliable than the French...
@terraflow__bryanburdo454710 ай бұрын
The battlefield topography reminds me of Gettysburg. With a loss ratio of 200: 15000+ this.has to be one of the most lopsided victories ever, especially of forces this large.
@thetranngoc595010 ай бұрын
I hope you can make some series about the napoleonic wars or Autrian's hungarian campagn in 1848 revolution
@ninefoldfrontman10 ай бұрын
Oh man… have you ever explored EpicHistoryTV’s channel? I’ve always just assumed that no one else wants to touch the Napoleonic era because of how incredibly well done and comprehensive EpicHistory’s channel is on him particular.
@theawesomeman982110 ай бұрын
Its hard to beat an enemy who can strike you down before you can even reach him.
@hyphenpearce322410 ай бұрын
As a point of history, I heard that the 👍 thumbs up sign came from English bowmen? They use the measure to confirm the tightness of the longbow. Any questions?
@augustlandmesser15208 ай бұрын
As far as I know; not the thumb-up (that's from the Roman era), but the V-sign (reversed): bowmen use index + middle fingers for gripping arrows and before the battle French threatened to Englishmen that will cut off their fingers to permanently disable them. But Englishmen were victorious, and afterwards become popular to mocking the French by shoving them those two fingers (with fist turned to owner in distinguish to a famous Churchill's V(ictory)-sign). Later that become universal mocking gesture in English folklore. But that was aftermath of the another one battle in a Hundred years war (if I recall correctly), at Crecy no quarter was ordered on both sides - so no prisoners with fingers to cut.
@hyphenpearce32248 ай бұрын
@@augustlandmesser1520 And Agincourt.... ;-)
@Mr-__-Sy10 ай бұрын
remember guys, no leaking of classified documents to this episode sponsor,even they are not amused as for the subject of the video... France did an oopsie again and England banked on it, as it always happened in this war, even if it's England who had the most oopsies
@brokenbridge631610 ай бұрын
I wonder which is worse for the French Crecy of Agincourt which happened later?
@SolidAvenger129010 ай бұрын
"Witness our too much memorable shame. When Cressy battle fatally was struck, And all our princes captiv’d by the hand Of that black name, Edward, Black Prince of Wales Whiles that his mountain sire, on mountain standing, Up in the air, crown'd with the golden sun, Saw his heroical seed, and smiled to see him, Mangle the work of nature and deface The patterns that by God and by French fathers Had twenty years been made. This is a stem Of that victorious stock; and let us fear The native mightiness and fate of him" -William Shakespeare, Henry V
@MarquisVincentBissetdeGramont10 ай бұрын
Blah, blah, blah... Old Shakespeare never digested the fact that the French won the war 😅
@Yellow-kp9gs10 ай бұрын
@@MarquisVincentBissetdeGramont It was mainly celebrated because of the huge power difference between England and France, historically France was the main power of Europe due to its huge population compared to most other feudal kingdoms, ie England had 3-4x less people.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
@@Yellow-kp9gs And half of France was allied with England at least one time in the 100YW
@Yellow-kp9gs10 ай бұрын
@@robert-surcouf To a degree yes, but it’s debatable if England could truly use the French man power outside of a few loyal regions like Gascony and Britanny. Many garrisons within English France were manned by English/welsh and even German troops.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
@@Yellow-kp9gs Brittany wasn't part of france until 1532 and the relationship between Brittany and England was rather up and down after 1364 but they became real ennemis only after 1435. In Gascony, the garrisons was held by gascons too and many of them fought since the beginning until the end like Poitiers (1356) or Castillon (1453). Flanders were rather ally between 1340 and 1380 then 1419 and 1435 and neutral for the remaining time and outside of Calais, there was not any real garrison. Burgundy was ally betwwen 1419 and 1435 and the duke owned Flanders since 1384 so english garrison in this regions were useless. For Normandy, Charles of Navarre owned half of it so england had security between 1350 and 1370 but they indeed had to made garrisons between 1415 and 1453. For the Poitou, many nobles were loyals to Edward because of business affairs and after Bretigny, fight for him in the 1360's and 1370's. For the Rouergue, Armagnac, Bearn or Perigord, their loyalty after Bretigny were indeed doubtful but mostly because Edward of Woodstock tax them too heavily after Najera. I can agree that England/Plantagenet/Lancaster can't always the man power for these duchy/county but it's also true for France/Valois and this is why the numbers were never worse than 1vs2 instead of 1vs5
@elliejobonney292610 ай бұрын
Love all of it..everything I've watched so far. Brilliant, I can feel my brain growing. 🧠
@Remiball122110 ай бұрын
Luv this story
@watch-Dominion-201810 ай бұрын
superb production 👌
@joeferrari7405Күн бұрын
A blinding success, was that meant!
@danielsantiagourtado343010 ай бұрын
The new thumpnail is EPIC! And fitting!🏹🏹🏹🏹🏹🏹
@Albert-n7p10 ай бұрын
Shiiii got tragic, ngl tho it looked like the French didn't even try at first
@ManuR-l4m2 ай бұрын
The direct involvement in battle of monarchs or like in this case their direct heirs often got exaggerated by the chronologists who had to please their honor thirsty lords. Its much more likely that the black prince was surrounded by an elite guard who did the fighting, keeping him safe. Wont say he didnt fight at all. But i smell shite for a reason when i hear about a 16 year old boy cutting down armored knights like grass, doesnt matter how well trained he was. If all those monarchs would ve fought like it got written down then most of them would ve died in battle. But in reality only very few got killed which means they took not as much risk as it is written. And remember, to achieve their goals, kings and their heirs needed to stay alive. To do that you cant go berserk in the first row.
@rolandlabelle18810 ай бұрын
Great narrator 😊
@ChrisisisB10 ай бұрын
11:57 ”Refug-ees” good speaker, but sometimes I wonder if it is AI, because it read words literally.
@MyVanir7 ай бұрын
There was no pause there, he just said it in a different way. Accents are a thing.
@kimcason87645 ай бұрын
'Clout' is a Form of Archery still practiced today. It's Great Fun, a Flag is placed at a Distance and Every Archer try's to hit Said Flag or Marker. To See and Loose the Arrows on Mass. It Sent Shivers up my Spine, every time. And Everyone envolved, had/have Massive smiles on their Faces..! It feels like the 'True Point of Archery..!' Cheers All. 😎
@bigsarge208510 ай бұрын
Incredible.
@artfuldodger931210 ай бұрын
The Battle of Crecy posed a significant challenge for the French forces as they were already physically drained from their long march, and to make matters worse, they had to conquer a steep hill before they could engage the British troops. The British longbowmen, renowned for their skill and prowess in combat, were a formidable force to reckon with during this period. These highly trained archers had been honing their craft since childhood, mastering the art of using the longbow with exceptional precision. Surprisingly, the French seemed to have neglected learning any valuable lessons from their encounters with the British longbowmen in the past. Instead, they stubbornly persisted in adopting the same outdated tactics, only to be met with the same predictable outcome of defeat.
@thibaultsardet739910 ай бұрын
They learned since the Valois ultimately won.
@MarquisVincentBissetdeGramont10 ай бұрын
The English archers were still defeated by the French. The Hundred Years' War is not limited to Crécy or Agincourt.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
England only used massively longbowmen since the early 1330's and used the same tactics as France previously so there was no real previous lessons.
@anonanon749710 ай бұрын
English, not British. Britain wasn't a united kingdom for another 400 years after this.
@clemsi759610 ай бұрын
Hard to do anything when the English tactic is to just sit on a hill and wait on a heavy defensive position.
@johnjones91044 ай бұрын
I've been so lucky to discover that I have many ancestors English and Welsh whom fought at crecy and poitiers , one of whom was Einion ap Ithael , of Rhiwaedog Bala he was the black princes bodyguard , descended from Rhirid Flaidd the wolf 😮
@kingjoe3rd8 ай бұрын
I always cheer on the English side, as I am an Anglo-Saxon American and this is my history, while watching these types of videos, but when the Black Prince is involved I can't seem to make myself do it.
@user-wh8mb7tm2g7 ай бұрын
You shouldn't cheer too much as the French won the war
@bevan23426 ай бұрын
@@user-wh8mb7tm2g the English have all the best highlights though
@Aginor889 ай бұрын
Intersting as per usual.
@bl175410 ай бұрын
Pr Edward: "Poor predictable French, always choose cavalry charge." The French: "Good old cavalry charge, nothing beats that."
@takshashila299510 ай бұрын
Great video, Wish you could make more on India!
@marcinsikocinski466110 ай бұрын
I call the BS on the longbow rate of fire. Useful shooting in combat is nothing like sport Speedshooting. In combat you would need to take into consideration staving of fatigue by keeping steady, not overly taxing pace. Also arrow supplies are not infinite and most likely only part of them are immediately available with the rest needing to be brought to the fighting position from supply carts. Also a big chunk of the why field fortifications and obstacles were built is slowing the enemy advance to allow ranged weapons to strike at exposed and slowed targets. No need to fatigue yourself with speed shooting, when enemy advance is slowed by 20 meters deep field of obstacles and you are behind some nice cozy field fortifications.
@eirikronaldfossheim10 ай бұрын
You are right. Mark Stretton can shoot 11 arrows in 1 min, but that will leave him exhausted. Continuous shooting would be 6 arrow per min, but even that is hard without a break. Longbowmen waited and shot arrows from close range and then took a pause until the next wave of attack came in.
@rayzas488510 ай бұрын
The longbow also had a ridiculous amount of physical effort involved. It seems ridiculous that the longbowmen wouldn't fatigue after a few minutes of firing at such a rate.
@IronWarrior8610 ай бұрын
Yes, pulling a warbow is similar to doing a one arm dumbell row with a very heavy weight while holding a somewhat ligter dumbell out with a straight arm infront of you. Your delts, triceps, and forearms will start shaking due to lactic acid buildup and musclefiber fatigue, so of course your repetition speed is going to slow down after a short while, eventually you will be hard pressed to pull that bowstring all the way back, or likely have to rest for several minutes until enough energy can be re-generated for a couple of more pulls on the bowstring.
@rebeccaorman182310 ай бұрын
@@rayzas4885they were a lot more used to exercise than people are today.
@freefall98325 ай бұрын
They pulled the bow so often that it deformed their bones.
@Tbonedasavage10 ай бұрын
🐐 of KZbin 🔥🔥💯💯
@NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek10 ай бұрын
Brilliant!!!
@MCorpReview10 ай бұрын
John gave new meaning to 😂charging blindly 😂
@tonylam95484 ай бұрын
The English long bows were the machine gun of that era. (The MG 42) The French evidently learned nothing from Crecy for they were to repeat the mistakes at Agincourt.
@Drayran10 ай бұрын
At least for once French knights did not get ambushed but head first jumped into a foreseeable military disaster.
@usptact10 ай бұрын
French never fail to disappoint.
@clemsi759610 ай бұрын
Indeed, they won the war!
@عليياسر-ذ5ب10 ай бұрын
@@clemsi7596They have a large population 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
@@عليياسر-ذ5ب And half of this population side with Edward so he had the numbers with him.
@user-wh8mb7tm2g10 ай бұрын
They won the war didn't they😉
@cjthebeesknees10 ай бұрын
“I’m rich beyond my wildest deams!” *hehe*
@Leo-ud2iz10 ай бұрын
Exelent
@conradnelson52837 ай бұрын
Wasn’t the crossbow a weapon it could be wielded by anyone while the long bow took years of practice. I think that’s what I learned years ago.
@achilles209510 ай бұрын
What’s get me is the English were always heavily outnumbered. Even 6,000 would fight 20,000 French… and sometimes win. The English military tactics were simply unmatched
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
the accurate numbers is 10000-15000 vs 20000-25000
@achilles209510 ай бұрын
@@robert-surcouf look at agincore.
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
@@achilles2095 Azincourt and not Agincourt. The numbers there were approximatively 8000 vs 15000. The "english" had also many defeats where they outnumbered the "french"
@achilles209510 ай бұрын
@@robert-surcouf you sound a little salty sir
@robert-surcouf10 ай бұрын
@@achilles2095 Not at all. You just made a mistake so i fix it.
@valeriangelov55928 ай бұрын
This battle is covered so many times....
@Becurro8810 ай бұрын
Are you planning on making content about the great soth american generals? Like San Martin or Simon Bolivar!
@JC-mx9su10 ай бұрын
Maybe some battles like Boyaca, Chacabuco, Ayacucho, Maipu, Carabobo and many more. I’m curious to wait in the next video.