Agincourt
My Family, the Battle and the Fight for France
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Narrated by:
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Ranulph Fiennes
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By:
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Ranulph Fiennes
Ran reveals the truth behind the myths and legends of the battle. He tells how after the battle Henry V entertained his senior commanders to dinner, where they were waited on by captured French knights. There is the story of Sir Piers Legge of Lyme Hall, who lay wounded in the mud while his mastiff dog fought off the French men-at-arms. Then there is the legend that the French intended to cut off the first and second right hand fingers of every captured archer, to prevent him from using his bow. The archers raised those two fingers to the advancing French as a gesture of defiance.
In this gripping new study Sir Ranulph Fiennes brings back to life these stories and more, including those of his own ancestors, in a celebration of a historical event integral to English identity.
(P)2014 Hodder & Stoughton©2014 Ranulph Fiennes
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My other complaint is that, for a book claiming to be primarily based on the battle of Agincourt, he spends an enormous amount of time distorting history leading up to the rule of Henry V, beginning his narrative before the Norman conquest, spending some time reciting dubious facts about Magna Carta, and going on about the suppression of the Anglo Saxons, which is largely a historic myth. I particularly had to roll my eyes at the recounting of the "facts" surrounding the murder of Edward II.
In summary, don't try to base any understanding of actual French/English history on this work, and listen to it only if you can tune out the author puffing himself up through his ancestry. The narrator is actually decent; although he does tend to make the "my kinsman" issue even worse by putting undue influence on "my" making it "MY kinsman."
Not Exactly Historically Accurate
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