Battle of Mauron

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The Battle of Mauron was fought in 1352 between an Anglo-Breton force and France. The Anglo-Bretons were victorious.

The battle took place in the context of the Hundred Years War. With the Franco-Breton claimant, Charles de Blois, a prisoner, and the Anglo-Breton claimant (Jean de Montfort) a minor, the English were attempting to rule Brittany in the name of their protege.

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[edit] Prelude

In 1352 a French army, commanded by Marshal Guy II de Nesle, invaded Brittany, and after recapturing Rennes and territories to the south was advancing northwest, towards the town of Brest. Under orders from the French King Jean II of France to retake the castle of Ploërmel from the Anglo-Breton garrison who occupied it, de Nesle made his way towards Ploërmel. Faced with this threat, the English captain Sir William Bentley and the Breton captain Tanguy du Chastel assembled troops to ride out and meet the Franco-Breton forces on August 14th, 1352. The two armies met at a place called Brambily (currently the town of Saint-Léry) near Mauron castle.

[edit] Involved forces

[edit] Anglo-Breton army:

2,000 men commanded by the Englishman Sir William Bentley and the Breton captain Tanguy du Chastel. (Sir William had succeeded Sir Thomas Dagworth, the former keeper of Brittany who had been killed in a French ambush.)

[edit] Franco-Breton army:

5,000 men commanded by the French marshal Guy II de Nesle and the infamous Breton captain Jehan de Beaumanoir.

[edit] The battle

With only a minute force, Sir William took up one of those strong defensive positions favoured by the English of the time, with men-at-arms, on foot, in a line with archers in the customary "wedge" (one interpretation of Froissart's enigmatic word 'herce' which more probably means in a 'zig-zag' rather than wedge-shaped deployment) formation on the wings.

The Franco-Breton forces attacked late in the afternoon and the English longbowmen inflicted mass carnage on the French horses, their dismounted riders being dispatched by the men-at-arms as they struggled to get to their feet under the weight of their armour. Although pushed back on their right, the Anglo-Bretons, under the command of Sir Robert Knollys (later to be a notorious commander of "Routiers"), stood with their back to a belt of trees and put up such a fight that the French were routed.

The French leader, Guy II de Nesle, was amongst the slain, and at least six hundred French knights and nobles were taken prisoner, vastly enriching the victors. The battle gave the English further control of Brittany, and was another example of the power of the English longbow in the warfare of the period.

[edit] Aftermath

The battle was very violent and severe losses occurred on both sides: 800 of the Franco-Breton side and 600 on the Anglo-Breton. It was especially serious for the Breton aristocracy supporting the party of Charles de Blois. According to sources between 50 and 140 elite Franco-Breton knights, among them Marshal Guy II de Nesle and the hero of the Battle of the Thirty Alain de Tinténiac, were slain.

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