The Hundred Years' War rattled through the bastides when the region was frontier territory between English and French. |
|
The figures are the ghostly shapes of bowmen who fell during the battles of the Hundred Years' War. |
|
This battle, which was fought at the beginning of the so-called Hundred Years' War, ended in a major victory for the English. |
|
When the Hundred Years' War finally came to an end, the long-awaited peace did not put an end to the suffering of the people of Burgundy. |
|
As a result, Peter now pursued a complicatedly neutral approach to the Hundred Years' War, with some bias in favour of the English. |
|
Back in the days when England was embroiled in the Hundred Years' War against France, a family of notables was fashioning its own chapel in the valley of the River Kent. |
|
Compared with the Hundred Years' War that spanned the 14th and 15th centuries, it lasted barely four years. |
|
English kings in the 14th and 15th centuries laid claim to the French throne, resulting in the Hundred Years' War. |
|
Bayeux was besieged and taken on several occasions during the Hundred Years' War and the 16th-century Wars of Religion. |
|
The Hundred Years' War, the Black Death, and other 14th-century catastrophes further fueled the desire for final divine intervention. |
|
It was in Valois France, under the heavy demands of the Hundred Years' War, that the armed forces gradually assumed a permanent nature. |
|
Destroyed during The Hundred Years' War, a dovecote has been built during the XVIIth century, taking place then of the ancient tower. That so notorious dovecote appears on the third wine label of the Chateau. |
|
The French sculptor's design was inspired by an episode in the Hundred Years' War in 1347, when the heroism of six burghers saved Calais from total destruction and ended the English siege to city. |
|
Duke Amédée VII of Savoy was well known for his activities as a mediator during the Hundred Years' War in France, as well as the struggles for power in Italy. |
|
According to the legend, the origin of this regional dish goes back to the Hundred Years' War, between 1337 and 1453, when the English army besieged Castelnaudary. |
|
The financial demands of the Hundred Years' War were enormous, and the king and his ministers tried different methods of covering the expenses. |
|
The Hundred Years' War could be considered a lengthy war of succession between the houses of Valois and Plantagenet. |
|
The treaty formally ended the Hundred Years' War with Edward renouncing his claim to the throne of France. |
|
The reforms of the 1440s, eventually led to the French victory at Castillon in 1453, and the conclusion of the Hundred Years' War. |
|
This defeat set the scene for the Saintonge War and the Hundred Years' War. |
|
|
This triggered the Hundred Years' War, in which both the Plantagenets and the House of Valois claimed the supremacy over Aquitaine. |
|
With the end of the Hundred Years' War, Aquitaine returned under direct rule of the king of France and remained in the possession of the king. |
|
The operation was the greatest English venture of the Hundred Years' War, involving an army of 35,000 men. |
|
The chronicler Jean Froissart observed the English invoking Saint George as a battle cry on several occasions during the Hundred Years' War. |
|
Chaucer himself had fought in the Hundred Years' War under Edward III, who heavily emphasised chivalry during his reign. |
|
In 1451 the city was taken by the Crown of France after the Hundred Years' War. |
|
From 1337, England's attention was largely directed towards France in the Hundred Years' War. |
|
Once properly managed, this weapon gave them a great advantage over the French in the Hundred Years' War. |
|
The most immediate consequence was a halt to the campaigns of the Hundred Years' War. |
|
This development occurred during the reign of Edward III because he was involved in the Hundred Years' War and needed finances. |
|
Edward III claimed the French Crown, setting off the Hundred Years' War between England and France. |
|
Less warlike than either his father or grandfather, he sought to bring an end to the Hundred Years' War that Edward III had started. |
|
He ignored truces with England and was determined to stand by his ally Philip VI during the early years of the Hundred Years' War. |
|
Edward III lost interest in the fate of his protege after the outbreak of the Hundred Years' War with France. |
|
In the midst of the Hundred Years' War, Charles VII inherited the throne of France under desperate circumstances. |
|
Verneuil was one of the bloodiest battles of the Hundred Years' War, described by the English as a second Agincourt. |
|
Stevenson translated a French study into the noble families which suffered so much in the Hundred Years' War, and is oft quoted. |
|
The final victory in the Hundred Years' War marked an important stage in the evolution of French architecture. |
|
According to professor Malcolm Vale, the treaty of Paris was one of the indirect causes of the Hundred Years' War. |
|
First recorded as a small fishing settlement in 1030, Dieppe was an important prize fought over during the Hundred Years' War. |
|
|
Carentan is close to the sites of the medieval Battle of Formigny of the Hundred Years' War. |
|
During the Hundred Years' War, King John II of France gave the duchy to his youngest son, Philip the Bold. |
|
The Hundred Years' War end with a decisive French victory over the English in the Battle of Castillon. |
|
Moreover, with the Hundred Years' War and the growing spirit of English nationalism, the status of French diminished. |
|
This period of conflicting interests and feelings of resentment was later termed the Hundred Years' War. |
|
In the 15th century, the Plantagenets were defeated in the Hundred Years' War and beset with social, political and economic problems. |
|
Stuff more suited to the Declaration of Arbroath or the Hundred Years' War than 80 minutes of mud wrestling at Murrayfield. |
|
For example, the vows that Richard II said beside Anne of Bohemia in 1382 forged an alliance against enemy France in the Hundred Years' War. |
|
The Battle of Agincourt, regarded as one of the greatest-ever military victories, was a pivotal moment in the Hundred Years' War between the kingdoms of France and England. |
|
Despite the devastation on its soil, the Hundred Years' War accelerated the process of transforming France from a feudal monarchy to a centralised state. |
|
France lost half its population during the Hundred Years' War. |
|
The Hundred Years' War was a time of rapid military evolution. |
|
This started what would become known as the Hundred Years' War. |
|
At the end of the Hundred Years' War large numbers of unemployed soldiery returned to England seeking employment in the growing armies of local nobility. |
|
This cyclic conflict is known as the Second Hundred Years' War. |
|
During the Hundred Years' War, the Kingdom of England made repeated assaults on the island but were unable to seize it due to the abbey's improved fortifications. |
|
England was one of the most centralized states in the Middle Ages, and the armies that fought in the Hundred Years' War were, predominantly, composed of paid professionals. |
|
Henry V's own reign, which began in 1413, was largely free from domestic strife, leaving the king free to pursue the Hundred Years' War in France. |
|
The name RAISE TWO comes from a gesture of defiance dating back to the Hundred Years' War when French soldiers cut off the bow fingers of English archers. |
|
In addition to initiating the Hundred Years' War, Edward III expressed his claim in heraldic form by quartering the royal arms of England with the Arms of France. |
|
|
Beaumont made use of the same tactics that the English would make famous during the Hundred Years' War, with dismounted knights in the centre and archers on the flanks. |
|
The Hundred Years' War almost resumed in 1474, when the duke Charles of Burgundy, counting on English support, took up arms against Louis XI of France. |
|
During the next century, France was to be militarily shattered by the Hundred Years' War, which prevented for a time any further tendencies in this direction. |
|
Kings Edward I and Edward III used the park for jousts and tournaments and the latter had his Royal stud there to supply horses for the Hundred Years' War. |
|
The Hundred Years' War had begun in 1337 as an inheritance dispute over the French throne, interspersed with occasional periods of relative peace. |
|
In 1419 Stewart's father sent him to France with an army of 6,000 men to fight in the Hundred Years' War, sailing to La Rochelle in a Spanish fleet. |
|
The Battle of Verneuil was a strategically important battle of the Hundred Years' War, fought on 17 August 1424 near Verneuil in Normandy and a significant English victory. |
|
The Army of Scotland as a distinct unit ceased to play a significant part in the Hundred Years' War, although many Scots continued to serve in France. |
|
The Battle of Agincourt, regarded as one of the greatest ever military victories, was a pivotal moment in the Hundred Years' War between the kingdoms of France and England. |
|