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Battle of Agincourt: Triumph of English longbow over French knights

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In 1415 at Agincourt, King Henry V’s outnumbered forces used the longbow to decimate the heavily armored French knights, marking a pivotal shift in medieval warfare

Desk Report

Publisted at 10:30 AM, Fri Oct 25th, 2024

On 25 October 1415, the muddy fields near Azincourt, France, bore witness to one of medieval warfare’s most astonishing reversals of fortune: the Battle of Agincourt.

King Henry V of England, leading a weary and vastly outnumbered army, faced off against a formidable French force, heavily armoured and determined to crush the English invasion. 

Against daunting odds, the English longbowmen, skilled in their craft and strategically positioned by Henry, unleashed waves of arrow fire that tore through the ranks of French knights.

Caught in the mire, the cumbersome French troops became easy targets for the nimble English bowmen, who transformed the battlefield into a scene of devastation.

This unlikely English victory not only solidified Henry’s military reputation but also shifted the nature of warfare, showcasing the potency of the longbow over the traditional dominance of mounted knights.

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