
Welcome to Dave Does History, where the past isn’t distant, it’s alive and muddy. Today we’re going back to October 25, 1415, Saint Crispin’s Day, to a field in northern France that would become one of the most improbable victories in military history. The Battle of Agincourt was more than a clash of swords and arrows. It was a collision of arrogance and endurance, of knights in shining armor sinking into the mud while English longbowmen carved their names into legend.
King Henry V led a starving, sick, and outnumbered army against a force that should have crushed him. What happened next would shatter French pride and reshape warfare for generations. It is a story of faith, fatigue, and the cold, relentless rain that leveled the field between kings and commoners. This is Agincourt, the triumph in the mud, where history bent its knee to the bowstring.