As the first of the great raids, that of Crécy, had been designed to
draw off the pressure from Edward III.'s troops in the South of France,
and to bring the French levies northward away from them, so the second
great raid ten years later, which may be called by courtesy the
“Campaign” of Poitiers, was designed to call pressure off the English
troops in the north and to bring the French levies down southward away
from them. As Edward's march through Normandy had been a daring ride
for booty, so was the Black Prince's ride northward from Aquitaine; and
as Edward from the neighbourhood of Paris turned and retreated at top
speed from before the French host, so did the Black Prince turn from
the neighbourhood of the Loire and retreat at speed from before the
pursuit of the bodies which the King of France had gathered. And as the
one great raid ended in the signal victory of Crécy, so did the other
end in the signal victory of Poitiers.
But these parallel and typical actions, lying ten years apart, have,
of course, one main point of resemblance more important than all the
rest: each includes the complete overthrow of a large body of feudal
cavalry by the trained forces of the Plantagenets; Crécy wholly,
Poitiers partly, by the excellence of a missile weapon—the long-bow.
Each shows also a striking disproportion of numbers: the little force
on the defensive completely defeating the much larger body of the
attack.
Those of my readers, therefore, who have made themselves acquainted
with the details of Crécy must expect a repetition of much the same
sort of incidents in the details of Poitiers. The two battles are twin,
and stand out conspicuously in their sharpness of result from the mass
of contemporary mediæval warfare.
In this opening section I will describe the great ride of Edward the
Black Prince from the Dordogne to the Loire, and show by what a march
the raid proceeded to its unexpected crisis in the final battle.
I have said that the Black Prince's object (apart from booty, which
was a main business in all these rapid darts of the time) was to draw
the pressure from the English troops in the north.
As a fact, the effort was wasted for any such purpose. Lancaster,
who commanded in the north, was already in retreat before the Black
Prince had started, but that commander in the south could not, under
the conditions of the time, learn the fact until he had set off.
Further, the Black Prince hoped, by this diversion of a raid up from
the south through the centre of France, to make it easier for King
Edward, his father, to cross over and prosecute the war in Normandy. As
a fact, the King of England never started upon that expedition, but his
son thought he was about to do so, and said as much in a letter to the
Mayor of London.
The point of departure which the Black Prince chose for this dash to
the north was Bergerac upon the Dordogne, and the date upon which he
broke camp was Thursday, the 4th August 1356.
His force was an extremely small and a very mobile one; 3500
men-at-arms—that is, fully armoured gentlemen—were the nucleus of it;
2500 archers accompanied them, and it is remarkable that these archers
he mounted. Besides these 6000 riding men, he took with him 1000
lightly armed foot-soldiers, and thus, with a little band of no more
than 7000 combatants all told, he began the adventure. He had no
intention of risking action. It was his desire to take booty, to harry,
to compel the French king to come south in his pursuit, and when that
enemy should be close upon him, at whatever stage this might be in his
own northern progress, to turn and ride back south as rapidly as he had
ridden north. Thus he would draw the French feudal levies after him,
and render what he had been told was the forthcoming English expedition
to Normandy an easy matter, free from opposition. As things turned out,
he was able to ride north as far as the Loire before his enemy was upon
him, and it gives one an idea of the scale on which this great raid was
planned, that from the point on the Dordogne whence he started, to the
point on the Loire where he turned southward, was in a straight line no
less than a hundred and fifty miles. As a fact, his raid northward came
to much more, for he went round to the east in a great bend before he
came to the neighbourhood of the French forces, and his total advance
covered more than two hundred miles of road.
Of the 7000 who marched with him, perhaps the greater part, and
certainly half, were Gascon gentlemen from the south who were in
sympathy with the English occupation of Aquitaine, or, having no
sentiment one way or the other, joined in the expedition for the sake
of wealth and of adventure. Of these were much the most of the
men-at-arms. But the archers were for the most part English.
Raid though it was, the Black Prince's advance was not hurried. He
proposed no more than to summon southward the French king by his
efforts, and it was a matter of some indifference to him how far
northward he might have proceeded before he would be compelled by the
neighbourhood of the enemy's forces to return. His high proportion of
mounted men and the lightness of his few foot-soldiers were for local
mobility rather than for perpetual speed; nor did the Black Prince
intend to make a race of it until the pursuit should begin. Whenever
that might be, he felt secure (though in the event his judgment proved
to be wrong) in his power to outmarch any body the King of France might
bring against him. He must further have thought that his chance of a
rapid and successful retreat, and his power to outmarch any possible
pursuers, would increase in proportion to the size of the force that
might be sent after him.
The raid into the north began and was continued in a fashion not
exactly leisurely, but methodically slow. It made at first through
Périgueux to Brantôme. Thence up through the country of the watershed
to Bellac. It turned off north-westward as far as Lussac, and thence
broke back, but a little north of east, to Argenton.
It will be evident from the trace of such a route that it had no
definite strategic purpose. It was a mere raid: a harrying of the land
with the object of relieving the pressure upon the north. It vaguely
held, perhaps, a further object of impressing the towns of Aquitaine
with the presence of a Plantagenet force. But this last feature we must
not exaggerate. The Black Prince did not treat the towns he visited as
territory ultimately to be governed by himself or his father. He
treated them as objects for plunder.
The pace and method with which all this early part of the business
was conducted in the first three weeks of August may be judged by the
fact that, measured along the roads the Black Prince followed, he
covered between Bergerac and Argenton just on a hundred and eighty
miles, and he did it in just under eighteen marching days. In other
words, he kept to a fairly regular ten miles a day, and slowly rolled
up an increasing loot without fatiguing his horses or his men.
From Argenton, which he thus reached quite unweakened on the 21st of
August, he made Châteauroux (rather more than eighteen miles off, but
not nineteen by the great road) in two days, reaching it on the 23rd.
Thence he turned still more to the eastward, and passed by Issoudun
towards Bourges. This last excursion or “elbow” in the road was less
strategically motiveless than most of the march; for the Prince had had
news that some French force under the son of the French king was lying
at Bourges, and to draw off such a force southward was part of the very
vague plan which he was following. Unlike that string of open towns
which the mounted band had sacked upon their way, Bourges was
impregnable to them, for it was walled and properly defended. They
turned back from it, therefore, down the River Yevre towards the Cher
Valley again, and upon the 28th of August reached Vierzon, having
marched in the five days from Châteauroux the regulation ten miles a
day; for they covered fifty miles or a little more.
This point, Vierzon, is an important one to note in the march. The
town lies just to the south of a curious district very little known to
English travellers, or, for that matter, to the French themselves. It
is a district called the “Sologne,” that is, the “Solitarium” or
“Desert.” For a space of something like forty miles by sixty a great
isolated area of wild, almost uncultivatable, land intervenes between
the valley of the Cher and that of the Loire. Only one road of
importance traverses it, that coming from Paris and Orleans, and making
across the waste for Vierzon to the south. No town of any size is
discoverable in this desolate region of stagnant pools, scrub, low
forest, and hunters.
It was such a situation on the outer edge of the Sologne which made
Vierzon the outpost of Aquitaine, and having reached Vierzon, the
Prince, in so far as he was concerned with emphasising the Plantagenet
claim over Aquitaine, had reached his northern term. But his raid had,
as we know, another object: that of drawing the French forces
southward. And, with the characteristic indecision of feudal strategic
aims, it occurred to the Black Prince at this stage to immix with that
object an alternative, and to see whether he could not get across the
Loire to join Lancaster's force, which was campaigning in the West of
France on the other side of that river.
At Vierzon Edward's men came across the first resistance. A handful
of John's forces, irregulars hired by the French king under a leader
most charmingly named “Grey Mutton,” skirmished to their disadvantage
against the Anglo-Gascon force.
The Black Prince made back westward after “Grey Mutton,” thinking,
perhaps, to cross the Loire at Blois, and two days out from Vierzon
(rather over twenty miles) he made the only assault upon fortifications
which he permitted his men in the whole campaign. This was an attack
upon the Castle of Romorantin, in which “Grey Mutton” had taken refuge.
It was not the moment for delay. Edward knew that the French army
must now be somewhere in the neighbourhood; he had already touched
lance with one small French force; but he had his teeth into the
business and would not let go his hold. The outworks were taken early
in the affair. The keep held out for four days more, surrendering at
last to fire upon the 3rd of September.
The season was now full late if the Black Prince intended a return
to the south. But, as we have seen, he no longer entirely intended such
a retreat. He had already begun to consider the alternative of crossing
the Loire and joining his brother's force beyond it. He had
information, however, that the bridges directly in front of him were
cut. It is not easy to reconcile this with the passage immediately
afterwards of the French army. But the most vivid, and perhaps the most
accurate, account we have of this march not only tells us that the
bridges were cut, but particularly alludes to the high water in the
Loire at that moment. It is a significant piece of information, because
no river in Europe north of the Pyrenees differs so much in its volume
from day to day as does the Loire, which is sometimes a trickle of
water in the midst of sandbanks, and at other times a great flood a
quarter of a mile across, and twenty feet deep, like the Thames at
London.
At any rate, from Romorantin, Prince Edward made for Tours, a
distance of fifty miles as the crow flies, and a march of precisely
five days. It will be observed that his plotted rate of marching at ten
miles a day was most accurately maintained.
Now from his camp in front of Tours, Edward behaved in a fashion
singular even for the unbusinesslike warfare of that somewhat
theatrical generation. He sat down, apparently undecided which way to
turn, and remained in that posture during the remainder of September
the 8th, all the next day, September 9th, and all the next day again,
the 10th. There could be no question of attacking Tours. It was a
strong, large, and well-defended town, and quite beyond the power of
the Black Prince's force, which was by this time encumbered with a very
heavy train of waggons carrying his booty. But while he was waiting
there (and he could see, says one account, the fires of his brother's
army by night beyond the Loire), his enemy, with such forces as he had
been able to collect, was marching down upon him.
The King of France had begun to get men together at Chartres upon
the same day that his rival had reached Vierzon, the 28th of August.
Five days later, just when Romorantin Castle was surrendering, he had
broken up and was marching to the Loire. And upon the same 8th of
September which saw the Black Prince pitch his tents under the walls of
Tours, the first bodies of the French command were beginning to cross
the Loire at the two upper points of Meung and Blois, while some of
them were preparing to cross at Tours itself.
Yet so defective was Edward's information that it was not until
Sunday, September 11th, that news reached him of King John's movements.
He heard upon that day that the French king himself had crossed at
Blois, thirty miles up river behind him. Edward at once broke camp and
started on his retreat to the south. After him as he went followed the
French host, which had combined its forces after its separate passages
of the river.
It is important, if we are to understand what follows, to appreciate
both the quality and the numbers of those whom the King of France had
been able to gather. He had with him, by the still necessary and fatal
military weakness of French society, only those loose feudal levies
whose lack of cohesion had accounted ten years before for the disaster
of Crécy. But John commanded no such host as Philip had nominally led
in the Picardy Campaign against Edward III. At the most, and counting
all his command, it was little if at all superior in numbers to that of
the Black Prince. He hoped, indeed, to increase it somewhat with
further levies as his progress southward advanced, and we shall see
that his ultimate entry into the town of Poitiers did considerably
reinforce him. But at no time before the battle which decided this
campaign was John in any important numerical superiority over his
enemy, and even in that battle the superiority had nothing of the
dramatic disproportion which has rendered the field of Crécy famous.
John marched down the Loire straight on Tours. He reached Amboise,
twenty miles off, in two days, coming under that town and castle upon
Monday the 12th of September, twenty-four hours after the Black Prince
had broken up his camp in front of Tours. As it was now useless to go
on to Tours, John turned and marched due south, reaching Loches,
another twenty miles away, not in two days but in one. It was a fine
forced march; and if the Black Prince had appreciated the mobility of
the foe, he would not have committed the blunder which will be
described in the next section. He himself was marching well, but,
encumbered as he was by his heavy baggage train, he covered on the 12th
and 13th just less than thirty miles, and reached the town of La Haye
des Cartes upon Tuesday the 13th, just as John, with his mixed force of
Frenchmen, Germans, and Spaniards, was marching into Loches, twenty
miles away.
On the next day, Wednesday the 14th, John made yet another of those
astonishing marches which merited a better fate than the disaster that
was to conclude them, covered the twenty miles between Loches and La
Haye, and entered the latter town just as the Black Prince was bringing
his men into Châtellerault, only fifteen miles in front of him. Both
the commanders, pursuing and pursued, had been getting remarkable work
out of their men; for even the Black Prince, though the slower of the
two, had covered forty-five miles in three days. But John in that
determined advance after him had covered forty miles in two days.
With John's entry into La Haye des Cartes and Edward's leaving that
town twenty-four hours ahead of him, we enter the curious bit of
cross-marching and conflicting purposes which may properly be called
“The Preliminaries” of the Battle of Poitiers, and it is under this
title that I shall deal with them in the next section.
[Illustration: SKETCH MAP OF OPERATIONS PRECEDING THE BATTLE]