giaconda's avatarGiaconda's Blog

‘O for pity!–we shall much disgrace
With four or five most vile and ragged foils,
Right ill-disposed in brawl ridiculous,
The name of Agincourt. Yet sit and see,
Minding true things by what their mockeries be.’

I have always been fascinated by the battle of Azincourt since I first watched the grainy images of Laurence Olivier’s 1944 film version on a wet afternoon off school sick as a child. What I found so compelling about the film was the layer on layer interpretation of Shakespeare’s play. Olivier set the action in The Globe theatre of 1600 with his actors wearing Elizabethan dress and contemporary hair styles but then as the camera moved through a gauzy curtain as he took the action to Southampton the viewer was transported back to August 1415 and the costumes changed to elaborate and very beautiful copies of C15th dress as he left the confines of the little ‘wooden…

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  1. […] actual battle scenes of Agincourt were conducted in mud, which maybe the clash really was (I’m not an expert on Agincourt), and the […]

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  2. […] the Black Prince.  It then passed to Henry V who was said to have worn it on his helmet at Agincourt.  It was later said that it was worn by King Richard III in the crown that was lost at Bosworth […]

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  3. […] the Black Prince.  It then passed to Henry V who was said to have worn it on his helmet at Agincourt.  It was later said that it was worn by King Richard III in the crown that was lost at Bosworth […]

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  4. […] influential”. It must be a heck of a crush at the top of that particular list. But yes, Agincourt was indeed of huge importance, but let’s face it, Henry V bequeathed us Henry VI… Need […]

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  5. […] we knew that! But for all its associations with the Black Prince, Henry V and Richard III (to say nothing of later monarchs) it seems our present queen “….often […]

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  6. […] I watched the movie The King about Henry V of England, I was bemused by the mud bath that was Agincourt. It seems this one aspect of the movie’s depiction was accurate, even if liberties had been taken […]

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  7. […] is not clear. As it was, they had to wait for the death of Edward, Duke of York at the battle of Agincourt to secure most of the Despenser inheritance as he had been allowed to sit on it. Late the following […]

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  8. […] detail that I felt I was looking at it under a microscope. We were told that Henry V wore it at the Battle of Agincourt, and that he had a hole drilled in it in which to place a feather!  He had a HOLE drilled in […]

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  9. […] very firm grip on the Despenser teat only ended with the death of the second Duke of York at Agincourt and that of his sister, late in the following year. Hanley now passed to Isabelle Despenser, […]

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  10. […] 1422) as thanks for the generous financial aid the City gave towards the funding of the Battle of Agincourt fought on the 25 October 1415.  It had dawned on Henry in November 1414 – after announcing his […]

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  11. […] but you say, he won the glorious Battle of Agincourt. He conquered a large chunk of northern France. Above all he made those French devils submit to the […]

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  12. […] They did not have any children together and in 1418 Edward was killed in a fight at sea while acting as an admiral for Henry V. (He had been briefly suspected of involvement in the Southampton Plot, so it may be that military service was a good plan. Or so it may have seemed at the time.) He was one of those who had fought at, and survived, Agincourt. […]

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  13. […] in 1415 at Agincourt, things finally turned into a nightmare for Marguerite when her husband, “his brother […]

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