<html><head><style type='text/css'>p { margin: 0; }</style></head><body><div style='font-family: Arial; font-size: 12pt; color: #000000'><P>You know you're an archer when *this* [see attached] is your desktop background :)</P>
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<P>Cheers</P>
<P>Fen</P>
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<P>"Atlantian Archery. Nothing exists within 100 yards without our permission"</P><BR><BR>
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<B>From: </B>"Garth Groff" <ggg9y@virginia.edu><BR><B>To: </B>archers@seahorse.atlantia.sca.org, isenfir@virginia.edu, atlantia@atlantia.sca.org<BR><B>Sent: </B>Tuesday, October 25, 2011 7:25:17 AM<BR><B>Subject: </B>[Archers] Agincourt, 25 October 1415<BR><BR>Noble friends,<BR><BR>Today is St. Crispin's Day, 25 October. This is the anniversary of the <BR>Battle of Agincourt in 1415 during the Hundred Years war against France.<BR><BR>On this day, Henry V's small English army turned to face a much larger <BR>French force on ground the English king had carefully selected. The <BR>English army consisted of about 5,000 English and Welsh archers, and <BR>about 1,000 dismounted knights and men-at-arms. The English army was <BR>hungry and wracked by dysentery. The French army was the flower of their <BR>chivalry, with over 1,200 of their finest mounted knights, at least <BR>10,000 heavy men-at-arms afoot, supported by several thousand common <BR>infantry and crossbowmen. The French army may have numbered as many as <BR>36,000 men.<BR><BR>Henry had chosen his battlefield well, a rise at the end of a narrow <BR>freshly plowed field, with thick woods to either side. After being <BR>galled by long distance arrow volleys, the French were finally goaded <BR>into charging into this death trap. The English archers poured clouds of <BR>arrows into the packed men-at-arms who were already struggling through <BR>the thick mud. The press became so severe in front of the English lines <BR>that the French had little room to swing their weapons. When a French <BR>knight or soldier fell, few could rise again from the mud before the <BR>were trampled by their own men pressing forward.<BR><BR>By the end of the day, between 7,000-10,000 Frenchmen lay dead in the <BR>mud, with another 1,500 taken prisoner. The finest army of France had <BR>been crushed. It took several years (and thousands of Scottish <BR>mercenaries) to rebuild the French forces. English losses were put at <BR>just over 100 men.<BR><BR>The Battle of Agincourt is often described as the greatest triumph of <BR>the English longbowman. It was not the first in France during the <BR>Hundred Years War, nor would it be the last (many of those Scots would <BR>later die from English arrows).<BR><BR>If you would care to learn more about this great battle, Wikipedia has a <BR>very good summary with some interesting illustrations: <BR>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Agincourt .<BR><BR>Kind regards,<BR><BR><BR>Lord Mungo Napier, A Scot Who Is Thankful He Wasn't There<BR><BR><BR><BR>_______________________________________________<BR>Archers mailing list<BR>Archers@seahorse.atlantia.sca.org<BR>http://seahorse.atlantia.sca.org/listinfo.cgi/archers-atlantia.sca.org<BR></div></body></html>