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The 'Battle of Formigny' (
April 15,
1450) was a clash of the
Hundred Years' War. It was a decisive victory for the French.
The French, under
Charles VII, had taken the time offered by the
Truce of Tours in
1444 to reorganize and reinvigorate their armies. The English, without clear leadership from the weak
Henry VI, were scattered and dangerously weak. When the French broke the truce in June 1449 they were in a much improved position.
Pont-Audemer,
Pont-L'Evêque and
Lisieux fell in August and much of
Normandy was retaken by October. Cutting north and east the Bureau brothers oversaw the capture of
Rouen (October 1449),
Harfleur (December 1449),
Honfleur and
Fresnoy (January 1450), before moving on to invest
Caen.
The English had gathered a small army during the winter of 1449. Numbering around 3,000 men, it was dispatched from
Portsmouth to
Cherbourg under the command of Sir
Thomas Kyriell. Landing on
March 15,
1450, the army was reinforced with a further 2,000 men under Sir
Matthew Gough in late March. Kyreill advanced south and captured Valognes in a bloody clash, as further south two French armies joined (around 5,000 men under
Comte de Clermont) and marched north for
Carentan.
The English army circled Carentan on April 12, the French declined to sally although there were a number of smaller skirmishes. Kyriell turned east towards
Bayeux, reaching the village of
Formigny on April 14. At the same time a third French force, under the Condéstable de Richmont, had reached
St. Lô from the south.
On April 15 Clermont's forces were sighted by the English. The armies faced each other on the Carentan-
Bayeux road, near a small tributary of the
Aure, the English with their backs to the stream. The English formation numbered around 4,000 — with a three-to-one preponderance in archers — and gathered in a long line behind a thicket of stakes and low earthworks.
Clermont opened the engagement with attacks against the flanks and small charges; these had little chance of success and were easily turned away. He then advanced two
cannons. After a period of fire that caused a few casualties the English charged and captured the guns.
These initial skirmishes took some three hours. At this time
the Breton army under
Arthur de Richemont arrived from the south, having crossed the Aure and now approaching the English force from the flank. They numbered almost 1,200 Bretons - almost all mounted judging from the pace of their march.
Kyriell drew back from Clermont and shifted his force into an "L", straddling the steam. With the prepared position abandoned and split by the enemy's firepower the English force was soon overwhelmed in a series of charges. Kyriell was captured and his army shattered.
The
English had been dealt a major blow, 2,500 killed or seriously wounded and 900 taken prisoner while
French and
Breton casualties were no more than 1000 dead and wounded. With no other significant English forces in Normandy the whole region quickly fell to the victorious French. The advance continued elsewhere, quickly sweeping up all English possessions except
Calais.
Some chroniclers spoke about 500
Welsh, driven archers, asking
to go, and massacred despite everything until the last by Norman peasants, reminding the massacre of French prisoners slaughtered at
Agincourt.
The battle is often cited as the first in which cannons played a pivotal role (the first ''decisive'' use of cannon is generally considered to have been the following battle, at
Castillon). This is rather difficult to judge, contemporary accounts are dubious and it can be seen that the arrival of
the Breton army of
Arthur de Richemont, future duke of
Brittany,
Arthur III, with his powerful force of cavalry on the flank of the English, forcing them to leave their prepared defensive position, was more significant, although it should be noted that the early artillery fire from the two French guns played a role in that as well.
The cannon may have been decisive, not so much for the effect they had themselves, but in that they alerted Richemont to the fact that there was a battle going on, and so caused his appearance on the field. It was fortunate for Clermont that this was so because one of his captains wrote shortly afterwards that if the Constable (Richemont) had not come when he did, Clermont's army would have suffered "irreparable damage".
Images
References
★ http://www.xenophongroup.com/montjoie/formigny.htm