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Authors: Hywel Williams

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A
BOVE
The Siege of Orléans in 1428, shown here in a 15th-century illustration from
Les Vigiles de Charles VII,
was a major turning point in France's favor during the Hundred Years' War. The cannon used by the English were ineffective against the walls of Orléans
.

T
HE NEW ARTILLERY

Cannon using gunpowder to launch projectiles were first seen in European warfare during the
reconquista
in the 13th century, and the English used them at the Battle of Crécy in 1346. They initially had a poor rate of fire and were very cumbersome to deploy until one-handed cannon were developed. Nonetheless, the introduction of cannonry heralded the end of the siege as a method of warfare and would also play a decisive role in the development of naval warfare—a phenomenon that contributed in its own way to the displacement of cavalry and the diminution of knighthood. The galley propelled by oarsmen enjoyed a long dominance in medieval naval battles: missile fire would be exchanged and the combatant crews would then board the enemy's ships and fight on deck. Bulkier and sail-powered ships were then introduced, with cannon being mounted on their decks by the 15th century. Although here again the weaponry's bulk initially
counted against it, the subsequent development of anti-personnel, hand-held cannon proved highly effective at sea. But it was the introduction of the gun deck—created by the insertion of an opening in the ship's side and below the main deck—which really transformed naval warfare by
c
.1500.

R
IGHT
At the Battle of Sluys (1340) Philip VI's French fleet was destroyed by Edward III's naval force. England's command of the channel meant that the rest of the Hundred Years' War was fought on French soil. This late-15th-century illustration appeared in Jean de Wavrin's
Chronique d'Angleterre.

Monarchs with extensive revenue-raising powers could afford to buy the new artillery, and the nobility found it more difficult to wage war independently. A strong association with national identity, evident in the case of English and French monarchies from the 14th century onward, underpinned the public role of kings as enforcers of domestic authority and war-leaders. Patriotism's call to the drum therefore meant not just more taxes but also a greater willingness to pay the tax demand, since monarchs now associated their territorial and dynastic objectives with the “national interest.” Governments, especially in France and Spain, were now relying on paid and standing professional armies rather than occasional levies, and the improved weaponry led to more nobles being killed than in the past. During the Hussite wars, waged by the followers of Jan Huss against the nobility of Bohemia in the 1420s, fighting men in the lower ranks displayed great skill in outmaneuvering and slaughtering aristocratic
warriors. Earlier such military insurrections by the lower orders, such as England's Peasant Revolt (1381) and the Parisian
Jacquerie
led by Étienne Marcel in 1358, had been markedly ineffective by comparison.

A
MAZONS

The medieval female warriors who played an important role in military strategy and even as commanders in the field were mostly either aristocrats or of royal blood
.

Matilda of England (1102–67) was her father Henry I's sole legitimate heir to survive to adulthood. Following Stephen of Blois's seizure of the throne in 1135 she led a series of military campaigns in an attempt at securing the English Crown for herself. Matilda of Tuscany (1046–1115), who ruled the region in her own right as its countess, is a major figure in the military and diplomatic history of the Investiture crisis, since she was Pope Gregory VII's chief supporter in Italy. Medieval warfare's most famous female warrior, however, was of peasant stock. Jeanne d'Arc (
c
.1412–31) inspired the military engagements that led to the relief of the town of Orléans in 1429 and the subsequent capture of Rheims—previously held by the Burgundian faction who were English allies during this late stage in the Hundred Years' War.

Gwenllian ap Gruffudd (
c
.1097–1136) was the daughter of Gruffudd ap Cynan (1055–1137), a dominant figure in Welsh politics and military strategy during his 62-year reign as prince of Gwynedd in north Wales. She married Gruffudd ap Rhys, ruler of the kingdom of Deheubarth, which extended across the southwest of Wales, and became the chatelaine at his castle in Dinefwr, near the town of Llandeilo. The royal house of Dinefwr, a cadet branch of the dynasty of Aberffraw that ruled Gwynedd, was already venerable by the time of Gwenllian's arrival at its court. Hywel Dda (“the Good”) (
c
.880–950) had expanded the early medieval kingdom of Dyfed to form Deheubarth in the 920s, and the codification of Welsh law in a single volume was achieved under his patronage in the 940s. By the early 12th century, however, Deheubarth was under sustained attack and Gruffudd ap Rhys, joined by his princess-consort, launched several retaliatory raids against the Norman, English and Flemish colonists who had established themselves within the kingdom. The years of “the Anarchy” during the reign (1135–54) of King Stephen of England were an opportunity to recover Deheubarth's authority. Gruffudd raised the banner of revolt, and in 1136 he traveled to Gwynedd where he debated terms of alliance with his wife's father. Norman raiding in Deheubarth continued in his absence, and Gwenllian raised an army that she then led into battle at a site near Cydweli. Although defeated, captured and then beheaded by the opposing Norman force, Gwenllian's action proved the catalyst for a major Welsh rebellion that spread to the south of Wales. The memory of her exploits inspired Welsh military commanders, and the highly successful campaigns led by her son Rhys ap Gruffudd (1132–97) against Henry II in 1164–70 made Deheubarth the dominant power in late-12th-century Wales.

The combination of social grievance with religious dissent, witnessed during the Hussite wars, recurred to explosive effect during the early 16th-century Protestant reformation. An idealized view of Christendom, and a belief in its unity, had been a defining feature of Europe's medieval civilization. But a world in which Protestants and Catholics killed each other also witnessed the progressive dissolution of the medieval world view, and the grave of “Christendom” is to be found in the battlefields of early modern Europe.

I
NDEX

Page numbers in
bold type
indicate main references to the various topics; those in
italic
refer to illustrations.

A

'Abbasid dynasty
121
,
122
,
177

'Abd Allah
123

'Abd al-Rahman
121
,
122

'Abd al-Rahman III
123

Abelard
90

Peter
203

Aberffraw dynasty
217

Abu al-Kasim
11

Achaea
129
,
131

Acre, siege of
105

Adalberon, archbishop of Rheims
18

Adele of Champagne
21

Adelheid, Queen of Italy
10

Adhemar, Bishop of Le Puy
48
,
52

Aelred
30

Agilulf, king of the Lombards
200

Agincourt, Battle of
144
,
146
,
214

agriculture, medieval
190
,
191

al-Andalus
120
–2,
172
,
174
,
175

Alarcos, Battle of
176

Alaric
118

Albania
130

Albertus Magnus
89

Albigensian Crusade
110
–17

Aleppo
102

Alexander II, pope
21
,
58

Alexander III, pope
69

Alexander III of Scotland
151

Alexius I Commensus, emperor of Greece
48

Alfonso I of Portugal
175

Alfonso II of Aragon
80

Alfonso II of the Asturias
172

Alfonso III of the Asturias
173

Alfonso VI of León
174
–5,
175

Alfonso V of Aragon and Sicily
135

Alfonso Henriques, prince
175

Alfred the Great, king of Wessex
26

Alhambra Decree
176

Alhambra Palace
176
,
177
,
177

al-Idrisi, Muhammad
47

al-Mansur, Abu 'Amir
124
,
125
,
174

Almohads
175
,
176

Almoravids
175
–6

Al-Nasir li-Din Allah
123

Alphonse of Toulouse
128

Amalfi
40
,
43

Amalric I, king
102

Amalric of Lusignan
107

Amazons
217

Anacletus II, pope
45

Anagni
154
,
157
–8

slap of
157

al-Andalus
120
–2,
172
,
174
,
175
,
176

Andalusian life
125

Andrew, prince of Naples
134

Anfortas
73

Angevin dynasty
134
,
136

Angevin empire
20
,
74
–83

Anglo-Saxons
24

Anjou-Naples, house of
134
–5

Anno II, archbishop of Cologne
59

Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury
28
–9,
90

Antioch, siege of
52
,
53

Aquitaine
141

Aquitania
118

Arab influences in science and culture
88
–9

architecture

Florence
165
–6,
166

Gothic French
22
,
22
–3

Arduin, margrave of Ivrea
13

Arianism
120

aristocracy
32
–3,
193
–6,
199

Aristotle
89
,
90
,
206
,
207

Armagnacs
143
,
144
,
145

Arnold of Brescia
38

Arras, Treaty of
146

Arsuf
106

art

Ottonian legacy
14
–15

realism in
169
,
169

Arte dei Mercanti
164

Assisi
183

Assize of Clarendon
76

Assizes of Ariano
46

astrolabe
125

astrology
198

astronomy
125
,
125

Asturias
121
,
123
,
172
,
173
,
174

Atheling, Edgar
26
,
29

Ausculta fili
156

Averroes
90
,
206
,
207

Averroism
206

Avignon and the Schism
152
–61

foreign exchange
159

papacy at
158
,
159
–60

Ayyubid dynasty
71
–2,
100

Azaz, Battle of
100

B

Badby, John
186

Baldwin I of Jerusalem
100

Baldwin II of Jerusalem
108

Baldwin II of Constantinople
129

Baldwin III of Jerusalem
102

Baldwin IV of Jerusalem
102
–3

Baldwin V of Jerusalem
103

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