Joined Jul 2018
590 Posts | 247+
Hong Kong
Winning battles but not wars means that one might be good at tactics but not at strategy, no? I previously posted an article in another thread about the German way of war and about how the Germans frequently won battles but failed to translate that into actually winning wars in the World Wars.Counting battle victories as proof for overall military success is taking the quantitative approach too far. By that measure Carthage must have won the Second Punic War, since Hannibal won all battles against the Romans except one.
France won the Hundred Years War, although it lost the majority of all engagements, including most major battles. This was even more the case in WW II where the Wehrmacht handed France defeats almost at will.
Here's this article, BTW:Winning battles but not wars means that one might be good at tactics but not at strategy, no? I previously posted an article in another thread about the German way of war and about how the Germans frequently won battles but failed to translate that into actually winning wars in the World Wars.
Oh I don't know... Taking the quantitative approach it seems to come out as 31 English victories to 27 French, and the French won almost every engagement from 1428, the Siege of Orléans, and out, including the major battles of Formigny, Patay and Castillon, after which the war ended since it was clearly hopeless for the English to continue to pursue.France won the Hundred Years War, although it lost the majority of all engagements, including most major battles.
...including the major battles of Formigny, Patay and Castillon...
But one could dismiss this as Wikipedia simply having an Anglosphere bias. So, of course more Wikipedias are going to have articles about battles that portray the English in a favorable light than about battles that portray the "cheese-eating surrender monkey" French in a favorable light:Are these battles anywhere up in terms of historical recognition with the English victories at Crécy, Agincourt or Poitiers? One way is to have a look at the number of Wikipedia language versions:
Major English victories:
Battle of Agincourt - Wikipedia 54
Battle of Crécy - Wikipedia 47
Battle of Poitiers - Wikipedia 46
Your Major French victories:
Battle of Castillon - Wikipedia 28
Battle of Patay - Wikipedia 25
Battle of Formigny - Wikipedia 20
Yes, well, that just illustrates the extent to which the English victories have been talked up, and the French ones relatively ignored. Not least in the English language historiography. And it's also to an extent an artefact of how the internet works, not so much history.Are these battles anywhere up in terms of historical recognition with the English victories at Crécy, Agincourt or Poitiers? One way is to have a look at the number of Wikipedia language versions:
Major English victories:
Battle of Agincourt - Wikipedia 54
Battle of Crécy - Wikipedia 47
Battle of Poitiers - Wikipedia 46
Your Major French victories:
Battle of Castillon - Wikipedia 28
Battle of Patay - Wikipedia 25
Battle of Formigny - Wikipedia 20
It's a thing that modern Frenchmen don't really spend a lot of time regurgitating it's historic beef with the English. The British relatively do. (Viz. Brexit...) Some conservative French politicians have occasionally expressed dismay at this state of affairs, like Sarkozy, expressing a desire the French express a similar preoccupation with military history and imperial glory as the British.
But they don't. And really, it's not a matter of not having the material to construct a similarly self-congratulating narrative for the French (which this thread has gone some way to adress already). They just tend not to, relatively.
Yes, closely followed by the UK
Are these battles anywhere up in terms of historical recognition with the English victories at Crécy, Agincourt or Poitiers? One way is to have a look at the number of Wikipedia language versions:
Major English victories:
Battle of Agincourt - Wikipedia 54
Battle of Crécy - Wikipedia 47
Battle of Poitiers - Wikipedia 46
Your Major French victories:
Battle of Castillon - Wikipedia 28
Battle of Patay - Wikipedia 25
Battle of Formigny - Wikipedia 20
Yes, closely followed by the UK
Well, you know, humour is something very insidious. Just because the English might frame it as a joke doesn't mean it's not important. The French tendency to use it as a sign of erudition makes it a MUCH more marginal and less important phenomenon, I'd say.Eh, I'm not so sure I agree. The English are probably more likely to bring up individual battles, but the French are probably more likely to bring up the 100 years war as a whole. I think the main difference is the English bring up these things either as a joke, or as crash nationalism. In France, it's seen as a sophisticated thing to do - proof that you are cultured enough to know your history.
For the record, I'm equally French as British, depending on how you count background vs upbringing, friends vs family, and birth vs schooling.
Well, you know, humour is something very insidious. Just because the English might frame it as a joke doesn't mean it's not important. The French tendency to use it as a sign of erudition makes it a MUCH more marginal and less important phenomenon, I'd say.![]()
Could be, but the fact is that France and the French and war really is common coinage for jokes, stand-up comedy routines, sit-coms etc. in the UK – which I have never found in the same way in France. It has broad popular appeal.Perhaps. Or it means that while there is more social importance in Britain attached to being funny than erudite, and the opposite is true in France? Or rather, that that is true out of the people I happen to known in Britain vs France.
Could be, but the fact is that France and the French and war really is common coinage for jokes, stand-up comedy routines, sit-coms etc. in the UK – which I have never found in the same way in France. It has broad popular appeal.
I mean, this can be a bestseller in the UK. In France the inverse might be... an academic treatise?
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