On 26 January 1340, Edward III entered the Flemish city of Ghent, with his entire household accompanying him, including his heavily pregnant queen, who was carrying the couple’s sixth child in ten years. (The boy who would be born during the royal visit, on 6 March 1340, was John of Gaunt – his name deriving from the English name for the town.) A huge ceremony had been prepared for the king’s arrival, and the large open square of the Friday market was being lavishly decorated in expectation of a large crowd.
A platform was set up in the middle of the square, and all around it hung banners displaying Edward’s royal coat of arms – the symbol that adorned almost everything that was given the royal mark of approval. But these were not the arms with which bystanders would have been familiar.
For 142 years, since the penultimate year of Richard the Lionheart’s reign, Plantagenet kings had depicted their English sovereignty through three lions passant guardant – commonly known in heraldry as leopards – against a bright red field. Now, there was something radically different about the royal arms. Rather than striding proudly across the whole coat of arms, the leopards had been quartered with the ancient arms of the French Crown: golden fleurs-de-lis against a blue field. Moreover, the French fleurs-de-lis took pride of place, displayed in the upper left and lower right corners of the coat of arms.
It was a stunning alteration to a generations-old heraldic device. And it left in no doubt the message Edward was about to deliver to the crowd that assembled in the market square.
Edward walked out onto the stage and stood before the crowd, flanked by the great men of his court and the magistrates of the three most important towns of Flanders. Raising his voice to shout over the hubbub of voices, he called on the townspeople of Ghent to recognize him as the king not only of England, but also of France. He demanded their obedience, and took homage from various Flemings, including Guy of Flanders, half-brother of the count. Edward reassured all those before him that he would respect their liberties and protect their mercantile rights. Then he gave the day over to typically Edwardian celebrations: a jousting contest.
This event, held in the packed marketplace of Ghent, marked the most profound reimagining of the Plantagenet Crown since Edward I had determined to make himself a modern-day Arthur. Edward’s formal assumption of the royal titles and style of the king of France fundamentally changed relations between the two kingdoms in a way that had not been achieved even under Henry II. And it would spark an exhausting, seemingly endless period of hostility between the two realms, that would become known as the Hundred Years War.
The roots of the war can be found deep and tangled in the fabric of Plantagenet history and the politics of the Channel in the fourteenth century. The traditional focus of disagreement between the French and English kings was the running dispute over the status of the latter as dukes of Aquitaine. This had been a cause of friction since 1259, when Henry III did homage to Louis IX for the duchy and abandoned the family claims to Normandy, Anjou and the rest of the empire.
As the fourteenth century matured, English and French interests clashed repeatedly all across north-west Europe. The French Crown was entering a new stage of aggressive expansion. French kings were determined to establish their rights, expand their borders and spread the reach of French political power in a way that had not been attempted since the days of Philip Augustus at the dawn of the thirteenth century. This brought France into direct competition with English interests in trade battles in the Low Countries; in the matter of Scotland, which had been allied with France since 1295; and over control of shipping routes and trade in the Channel, where the English sent wool (and later, cloth) across the sea passages to Flanders, and brought wines back in another direction, from Bordeaux. But beneath all these sources of mutual aggravation lay a more fundamental alteration in the status of the two crowns.
In France, the death of Charles IV in 1328, followed by Philip VI’s accession, had brought to an end the direct Capetian line that had reigned since the accession of Hugh Capet in 987, throwing open a new age of dynastic uncertainty in the kingdom. Under the rule of Isabella and Mortimer, the young Edward’s visit to Amiens to do homage for his continental possessions had suggested acceptance of Philip’s claim. Thanks to the violent politics that blighted the beginning of Edward’s reign, his claim to the dual inheritance of the houses of Plantagenet and Capet – which would have made him indisputably the greatest figure in either family’s history, as well as in the history of medieval Europe – had been passed over with barely a whimper.
By the time Mortimer and Isabella had been removed from power, Philip was established as king. It seemed beyond the power of the young King Edward to start demanding a revision to the French succession, not least because every campaigning season between 1333 and 1337 was taken up by expeditions to Scotland. Instead of hostilities, there had been cautious diplomacy between the two crowns. Exploratory talks were held over a new crusade in 1332, but Philip’s supportive policy towards David Bruce since 1334 was unacceptably provocative.
Yet this was no one-way provocation: the goading of an English king into a war he did not seek. Indeed, Edward was easily framed by French propagandists as the main protagonist of the drift to war. Since 1334 he had harboured in England Robert of Artois, an ageing but valiant fugitive from French justice, luckless enough to have slipped from being Philip VI’s closest adviser and greatest friend to being his bitterest enemy.
Robert was offered generous sanctuary by Edward, who valued his knightly bumptiousness and military prowess. But in doing so, he roused the infernal ire of the French king and nobility. A Flemish propaganda poem of the mid-1340s known as The Vows of the Heron blamed Robert for starting the war when he accused Edward of cowardice for failing to claim his rightful inheritance, and it was received by willing ears.
In The Vows of the Heron it is alleged that at a decadent, amorous banquet, Robert approached the king and presented him with a roasted heron, caught that day by his falcon. ‘I believe I have caught the most cowardly bird,’ the poet has Robert tell the king and his courtiers. ‘When it sees its shadow it is terrified. It cries out and screams as if being put to death … It is my intention to give the heron to the most cowardly one who lives or has ever lived: that is Edward Louis [i.e. Edward III], disinherited of the noble land of France of which he was the rightful heir; but his heart fails him and because of his cowardice he will die without it.’
Edward’s immediate response in the poem is to swear oaths to ‘cross the sea, my subjects with me … set the country ablaze and … await my mortal enemy, Philip of Valois, who wears the fleur-de-lis … I renounce him, you can be sure of that, for I will make war on him by word and deed.’
The Vows of the Heron is pure propaganda intended to paint Robert of Artois as a devious provocateur and Edward as a blustering, licentious aggressor. But it graphically evokes the willing belief among its audience that these things were so. And indeed, it was Edward’s harbouring of Robert of Artois that provided Philip with his casus belli. In December 1336 Philip had sent envoys to Gascony to demand Robert’s extradition. The request was refused, and within a year Edward had sent envoys to Paris to ‘Philip of Valois who calls himself king of France’. The diplomats renounced the English king’s homage; Philip’s predictable and immediate response was formally to confiscate Ponthieu and Gascony. War had begun.
Thus, when Edward stood on the stage in Ghent in 1340, England and France had already theoretically been at war for three years. Much of this had been a phony conflict, as both sides manoeuvred for allies and position. Edward had concentrated his war efforts on the Low Countries, where he paid the count of Hainault, the duke of Brabant and other allies tens of thousands of pounds in bribes to form a grand alliance against the French king. This was a conventional, expensive tactic that Edward bolstered by purchasing the title of Imperial Vicar-General from the Emperor Ludwig IV of Germany – a title that gave him full imperial rights over the lords of the Low Countries. The only significant fighting that had interrupted this costly diplomacy was in autumn 1339, when Edward brought an army to northern France to fight a vicious campaign in the border territories of the Cambrésis and the Vermandois. Philip, meanwhile, had sent troops deep into Gascony, advancing as far south as Bordeaux.
But these were preliminary skirmishes. The war escalated from 1340, when Edward made his formal claim to the French throne – and it was a war that would continue for more than a century, as the implications of that speech in Ghent played themselves out.
This was to be something over and above the traditional Anglo–French war. Granted, the struggle was still in essence that between a French king insistent on his rights and a Plantagenet lord of Aquitaine jockeying to offer as little deference as possible. English tactics followed a familiar pattern: bribing lords and princes in Flanders and on the eastern French border to create a military alliance in the north, while preparing an invasion force to campaign in the south. But by activating his dynastic claim to the French throne Edward was about to change the whole terms of engagement between the French and English royal houses.
By October 1337 he had begun styling himself King of France and England in letters – three years later he made his claim explicit and public in the ceremony at Ghent. This was no longer just a war between lord and vassal. It was to be framed as a war of succession.