July 17, 2006

The Nearly Forever War

Filed under: Almanac - Ric @ 3:04 pm

It was on this day in 1453 that the longest war in history, known as the Hundred Years’ War, came to an end. The war was fought over an incredibly complicated dispute over the succession to the French crown. When the King of France had died in 1328, the fifteen-year-old King Edward III of England thought he had a right to the throne, since he was the nephew of the king. But a French member of the same family, Philip VI, also claimed the throne.

…reduced the French population by fifty percent…

An English army invaded France and began to lay siege to various cities, but at the time, warfare was still so primitive that sieges could just go on and on. The English won a series of battles, but they still didn’t make much progress in occupying more French land. The war dragged on through the reigns of five English kings and five French kings. It was fought entirely on French soil and is estimated to have reduced the French population by fifty percent.

From the Writer’s Almanac by Garrison Keillor
Available by e-mail daily.

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