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Castillon (Hardback)

The Last Battle of the Hundred Years War

Military P&S History > By Century > 15th Century

By Dr Stuart Ellis-Gorman
Imprint: Pen & Sword Military
Pages: 232
Illustrations: 12 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781399068727
Published: 15th July 2025

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The Battle of Castillon, fought outside the French city of the same name on 17 July 1453, was the final battle in the Hundred Years War. It was also a disastrous defeat for the English monarchy. It saw the death of one of England’s most famous medieval commanders and the complete collapse of the last vestiges of English rule in Gascony, which had been a possession of the English monarchy for nearly three centuries. The French King Charles VII completed his unification of his kingdom, once riven by a civil war that had forced him to flee Paris, and left England with only Calais as a toe-hold in France.

Castillon drew together a wide cast of characters who had defined the end of the Hundred Years War. John Talbot and the Gascon nobility represented the English but against them were men who had fought alongside Jeanne d’Arc, mercenary captains, and soldiers from across France. The French were also supported by the cannons and defences of the Bureau brothers, who had risen from relatively modest backgrounds to become some of the defining military men of their era. It has sometimes even been seen as a transformative battle – the last medieval battle which ushered in a more modern form of warfare.

Despite its importance, and Castillon is easily a rival to Crécy and Agincourt in terms of significant battles of the Hundred Years War, Castillon has been largely neglected in English language scholarship. This book is the most substantial study of the battle to date and aims to correct this oversight by examining not just the battle but how the war reached the point of being decided in Gascony in 1453 and its aftermath and legacy.

Castillon: The Last Battle of the Hundred Years War covers the origins of the Hundred Years War, the Edwardian and Lancastrian phases of the war, the Military Revolution of the fourteenth century and Charles VII’s radical restructuring of the French military in the fifteenth century, as well as a detailed study of the battle and how we can know what happened on that day in Gascony. It is far reaching and comprehensive in how it analyses this key battle and will give readers a substantial understanding in not just Castillon but in late medieval Anglo-French warfare in general.

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Disclaimer: I did beta-read the book and provide some feedback, but I also wouldn't be posting a review if I didn't mean what I say.

You know Crecy, Poiters and Agincourt? Spoiler Alert! Those aren't the whole of the Hundred Years' War. In fact, the French end up victorious, despite early English victories. Everyone knows about Joan of Arc, and the French revival that started under her, but very little has been written in English about the end of the Hundred Years War.

This is entirely natural, given that we don't like to think much on French victories over the English, but it does mean that Castillon and the events leading up to and proceeding from it have been overlooked, in spite of the political importance that the loss of Gascony had to Henry VI.

Stuart Ellis-Gorman provides an excellent introduction to the last gasp of English dominion in France. About half of the book is dedicated to the lead up to the events which led to the final explusion of the English, with the second half dedicated to the campaigns leading up to Castillon, the battle itself and the historical and modern reception and interpretation of the battle. The book ends with short biographies of the major players of the campaign and battle, which is very useful for understanding their careers.

With regards to the reconstruction of the battle itself, Ellis-Gorman has re-examined the primary sources - he provides translation of several short pieces that were previously untranslated - and convincingly argues that the Breton contingent didn't perform a charge on the English flank, as standard historiography has it. Instead, he proposes that there was *no* flank attack, and that the Bretons were used as a reserve.

All in all, "Castillon: The Last Battle of the Hundred Years War" is a brief but well written book that plugs a hole in the scholarship, expanding our knowledge of warfare in that period and thoughtfully considering the impact on the battle both in the Middle Ages and the modern era.

I thoroughly recommend it.

Jonathan Dean

About Dr Stuart Ellis-Gorman

Dr Stuart Ellis-Gorman has a passion for the Middle Ages and medieval archery born of a childhood fascination with Robin Hood and Lord of the Rings. He made a special study of the history of the longbow and the crossbow for his PhD at Trinity College Dublin and has presented on the medieval crossbow at multiple academic conferences. He is an active and award-winning contributor to the internet’s largest public history forum, /r/AskHistorians, and reviews history books for a range of academic publications. He lives in Ireland with his wife and daughter..

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