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To: RonDog
It takes a lot of guts to go into a virulent commie strong-hold like Satin Monica or Satin Monica College, when you are overwhelmingly out numbered by rabid, hatemongers from the far liberal left.

"God's will! I pray thee, wish not one more person than shows up" "...he or she who hath no stomach to this rally, let them depart; their passport shall be made..." "The fewer, the greater the share of honour." "He or she that outlives this day, and comes safe home, Will stand a tip-toe when the day is named," "And gentle folks who miss this event shall think themselves accursed they were not present; and hold their courage cheap..." Henry V - slightly paraphrased for clarity and timelyness

31 posted on 06/07/2005 12:46:43 AM PDT by MensRightsActivist
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To: MensRightsActivist
From historymedren.about.com:

The Miracle of Agincourt

Was Henry V's great battlefield victory a miracle or the inevitable result of circumstance?

by Christopher Hamme

"We few, we happy few, we band
of brothers.

For he today that sheds his blood
with me

Shall be my brother; be he ne'er
so vile,

This day shall gentle his condition.

And gentlemen in England now abed

Shall think themselves accursed they
were not here,

And hold their manhoods cheap
whiles any speaks

That fought with us upon Saint
Crispin's day."


These words, spoken by Henry V in Shakespeare's play of the same name, reflected the pride the English took in the memory of a glorious victory and, by connecting the Battle of Agincourt with a holy day, helped reinforce the popular belief that Providence played a role in England's fortunes during that historic battle. The ensuing bloody and chaotic clash seemed proof enough of divine intervention, because Henry's troops rose up to defeat a French army almost four times as large.

This rousing truimph during the Hundred Years War ranks alongside the rout of the Spanish Armada and the Battle of Britain as one of England's "Finest Hours..."

...The most prominent and decisive of Henry's battles occurred at Agincourt, where the French army attempted to halt Henry's advance. After a hard rain the previous night, the morning of 25th October, 1415, dawned wet and cold. Both the English and French took up positions in a clearing between the woods of Tremecourt and Agincourt--a gap that spanned about three-quarters of a mile at its widest point. Both armies were in a miserable state. Henry's small force had marched 270 miles since arriving in France, averaging about 20 miles a day, and had already nearly exhausted itself in attacking and capturing the town of Harfleur. Food was running low and a number of men were sick with dysentery. It had rained almost continuously throughout their march.

As for the French, they were trying to cope, none too successfully, with the soggy fields between the two woods. Mud covered everything, and most of the soldiers had gotten little sleep the night before as they laboured to keep their armour clean and dry. Military discipline began to break down even before the battle had begun, and by 11.00 the army was completely disorganized.

The French had come to Agincourt with an overdose of confidence, sure of their ability to crush the small English army. Poor leadership, however, completely negated their advantage in numbers and morale. When things began to go bad, French leaders were more concerned with avoiding responsibility than with restoring order.

Henry noticed the confusion in the French ranks and decided to make the first move. English archers fired once, provoking a chaotic, spontaneous charge from the French, in complete disregard for their leaders' commands. When this happened, the size of the French army actually worked against them. The woods of Tremecourt and Agincourt hemmed them into such a narrow front that the majority of the French troops bunched up in the rear, unable to get into the fight. In their eagerness to engage the English, foot soldiers fell and trampled each other. Cavalry horses became mired in the soggy ground, and knights in their heavy armour sank into the mud and suffocated.

By contrast, Henry's small army could easily deploy, allowing it to fight at full strength. And Henry had the perfect weapon to use against thickly massed enemy soldiers--one that more than made up for his numerical disadvantage. Agincourt became famous as the greatest victory of British archers.

The Welsh had introduced the longbow roughly 600 years before the Battle of Agincourt, but the weapon had been neglected and often misused in battle. Prior to Agincourt, most archers held their bows horizontally while drawing the arrows back to the waist. This method greatly reduced the bow's range and effectiveness. At Agincourt, Henry's archers employed the superior technique of holding their bows vertically and drawing the arrows back to their ears. The English bowmen could shoot nine arrows per minute and hit targets at 400 yards. Their proficiency took the French completely by surprise.

While the archers decimated the French ranks, Henry's army completely neutralized the enemy's most dangerous weapon--its powerful cavalry. In anticipation of the battle, the English prepared sharpened wooden stakes, which they planted into the ground at an angle, facing the French. Many charging French soldiers and horses impaled themselves on these obstacles, behind which Henry's bowmen could do their work unhindered.

By noon, the battle was over, with the remnant of the French army standing in defeat. Henry's army suffered only about 500 casualties, while the French had lost nearly half their forces in a single hour. The English won the day through a combination of advantages, both strategic and natural. Against these, the French superiority in numbers mattered little...


34 posted on 06/07/2005 5:10:33 AM PDT by RonDog
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