THE CLOSE OF THE MIDDLE AGES
CHAPTER XXI.
THE ART OF WAR IN THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY
The
ancient supremacy of heavy cavalry, as has been shown in an earlier chapter, had
been destroyed in the fourteenth century. In different parts of Europe
different tactics had proved fatal to the ascendancy of the feudal knight. The
burghers of Flanders at Courtrai (1302) and the Scots of Robert Bruce at
Bannockburn (1314) had shown that the pike-phalanx on favourable ground and
with its flanks covered might prove invulnerable to the fiercest charge of
horse. The Switzers at Morgarten (1315) had demonstrated the helplessness of cavalry in an Alpine defile; and at
the less remembered—but more tactically important—battle of Laupen(1339) they had repeated
the lesson of Courtrai, and beaten off the chivalry of Lesser Burgundy on an
open hillside. These were victories of the pike and halberd over the horseman’s
lance; but far more important for the history of the future was the other group
of battles in which it had been proved that “combined training” of the bowman
and the dismounted knight might produce a form of tactics fatal alike to the
column of pikes and to the charging squadron. This group starts with the
obscure fight of Dupplin Moor (1332), where for the
first time an Anglo-Scottish army formed itself in the combination which was to
rule for more than a century—a central and steady mass of fully armoured
men-at-arms, and long wings of archery. The much more numerous Scottish army was shot to pieces on its flanks, while held at bay in
front by the spears of the dismounted chivalry. The same lesson was repeated against
the same army at the better-known battle of Halidon Hill in the following year
(1333). It remained for Edward III, the victor of Halidon, to make the great
experiment of trying the new tactical combination which had beaten the Scottish
infantry upon the French cavalry. Crécy (1346) showed
that it was fully as effective against the onset of successive waves of
charging horsemen as against the slow-moving column of pikes. This decisive
battle had an immense moral effect all over the continent, far greater than that
of Laupen or Courtrai. It set the feudal lords—in France
at first, but soon after in Germany and other countries also—searching for new
methods of tactics by which the power of the bow might be discounted. But the
first experiments were not—as might have been expected—in the direction of
raising a numerous infantry armed with missile weapons, who might suffice to
oppose and ‘contain’ the archery.
The
first experiments for use against the English combination of bow and spear were
in the line of dismounting the greater part of the men-at-arms and throwing them
in column against the English centre, while a small proportion of the cavalry
kept their horses and tried to turn the English flanks by a rapid encircling
movement. This perhaps may have been inspired by a knowledge of the effective
use of Sir Robert Keith’s squadron against the archery of Edward II at
Bannockburn, for there were always Scots adventurers in the French hosts. But
at the first two occasions on which it was tried, the combat of Saintes (1351)
and the battle of Mauron (1352), it failed—in one case
the encircling did not come off, in the other it broke one of the two English
archer-wings, but did not succeed in cutting in on the
flank of the main body. At Poitiers (1356) John of France varied the device:
while dismounting the mass of his cavalry, he sent 300 chosen knights to ride
in ahead of the columns of attack, and to endeavour to distract the archers by
a very rapid charge pushed home with desperation, under cover of which he hoped
that his front line might come up unmolested. The plan was hopeless: the whole
of the forlorn hope were shot down, and never
succeeded in closing with the archers. The main column had to fight its own
battle without cavalry aid.
After
Poitiers the French seem to have despaired of the event of all experiments on
the English “combined tactics,” and allowed the whole of the rest of the first
period of the Hundred Years’ War to pass by without attacking a fully equipped
English army. Cocherel and Auray (1364) were cases in
which their enemies were mainly of their own race, and had with them only a few hundred auxiliary archers from overseas. Even so it is
to be noticed that the French regularly dismounted all or almost all their knights
and fought on foot at both battles. So did the French contingent at Navarete (Nájera) (1367), though
their Spanish allies operated against the English wings with clouds of light
horse. Both alike failed lamentably against the Black Prince’s combination of
bow and lance. In the end the ‘counsel of despair’ of Bertrand du Guesclin—the
avoidance of all pitched battles—was destined to bring relief to France. He
proved that a war might be won by harassing an enemy superior in
battle-tactics, while denying him the chance of employing them. The English
raiding armies found the French either elusive, or else so protected by stone
walls or entrenchments (as at St Malo in 1378) that they could not be got at.
But when the invading army had passed by, its enemies overran outlying English
provinces of Aquitaine, and captured isolated towns and castles before another
great force could be scraped together to retrieve them.
The
first half of the Hundred Years’ War ended with a truce in 1388, by which
Richard II gave up the idea of reconquering the lost regions,
and secured for himself only the narrow coast-strip from Bordeaux to
Bayonne. Hostilities ceased, but the definitive treaty of peace, ratifying the
status quo.) was not signed till 1396.
Meanwhile
the conclusion drawn by all continental captains after Poitiers and Navarete, that cavalry charges were useless, was working
all over Europe. It was shown equally at Sempach (1386), where Leopold of Austria dismounted his knights to attack the Swiss
phalanx, and at the large-scale battle of Castagnaro in Italy (1387), where the Paduan leader dismounted all his men-at-arms, under
the advice of the English condottiere John Hawkwood,
and received at a stand and behind an obstacle—a broad water ditch in a marshy
meadow—the attack of the much heavier force of the Veronese tyrant Antonio della Scala. But the Veronese also, it is to be noted, sent
their horses to the rear, and attacked on foot, only to be soundly beaten.
There is but one notable victory to be recorded for the column of dismounted men-at-arms
in these years, that of Roosebeke (1382), at which Charles
VI and his chivalry trampled down the less heavily armed pikemen of Philip van
Artevelde, the leader of Flemish revolt. But here it was the tactics of Mauron and Navarete—mailed men in
the centre, encircling movements by detached bodies of horse on the flanks that
turned the day against an enemy unprovided with any proper proportion of missile-bearing
infantry. Had van Artevelde owned 5000 competent archers, the battle would
undoubtedly have gone otherwise.
The
only part of Europe in which during the last years of the fourteenth century
the noblesse still fought on horseback was the East, where against Turk and
Tartar the Hungarians, Poles, and Yugo-Slavs kept to the old methods. In each of
these nations the strength of the State consisted in masses of light cavalry,
and their enemies were also essentially fighters on horseback. When the French
and Burgundian crusaders of 1396 went to the aid of Sigismund of Hungary
against the Ottoman Sultan, they fell in with the system of their allies, kept
their mounts, and charged the Turkish light horse, whose leading squadrons they
rode down, but whose system of reserves, rallies, and successive attacks was
too much for them in the end. Tired to death after several desperate melees,
they finally succumbed when their horses could no longer be spurred to a trot,
and their sword-arms were too weary to strike. Against an enemy composed mainly
of light horse heavy cavalry is as useless for the offensive as is the phalanx
of pikemen for the defensive. The only proper counter is the combination of
large masses of missile-bearing infantry with a proper proportion of cavalry
fit for the shock, or of heavy infantry able to protect the archers or bowmen
from outflanking and encirclement. The first method was that employed by Richard
I at Arsuf (1191) against the Saracen, the second that used by the Black Prince
at Navarete against the Spanish genetours and their oriental tactics. Each was effective.
Probably
the cavalry-battle fought on the largest scale in this epoch was that of Tannenberg
(1410), where the united hosts of the Poles and Lithuanians beat and almost
exterminated that of the Teutonic Order, the conquerors of Prussia and Livonia.
The Knights of the Order, always engaged with the Polish enemy, and out of
touch with new military developments in the West, had kept to the old system of
war, and fought with squadrons of light horse supported by reserves of fully
mailed men-at-arms. They had with them a certain number of cross-bowmen,
but these apparently were used only for preliminary skirmishing; we hear of them
at the commencement of the battle but not in its main clash. The Poles and
Lithuanians were all mounted, the former with a certain proportion of heavily
armed knights, but the latter mainly as semi-Oriental light horse. Hence the
battle was along and desperate cavalry scuffle, in which the larger army finally
overcame the less, though at the left end of the line the Germans at the beginning
of the engagement drove off the ground a large part of the Lithuanian light
horse. It is rather odd to find that both sides had brought a few cannon to the field; but, as in so many engagements of this
age, they only got off two or three rounds and had no influence on the day. Artillery,
as has been mentioned in a previous chapter, goes back to the first quarter of
the fourteenth century, about seventy years after the mention of gunpowder by
Roger Bacon. There are indisputable references to guns shooting missiles in
1324-26, and the first contemporary picture of a cannon may be seen in an Oxford
manuscript of 1327. A few years later they were quite common,
but remained for a long time very ineffective except for siege work and
the defence of places, the idea of mounting them on wheels having come much later.
In their early days they were fitted upon “gun stocks”, or large beams, and
taken about on waggons. They could be set down and trained on a given spot, e.g. the gate of a town, or some weak spot in its enceinte,
but change of position or of aim was a lengthy matter. The smaller ones were so
ineffective, and the larger ones so cumbrous, that it was long before they could
be used to any effect in the shifts of battle. At the most they could be set in
fixed places in an entrenched position, if an army was resolved to accept a
purely defensive action, and was certain of being
attacked frontally.
In
the middle years of the fourteenth century an attempt was made to secure
volley-firing by a number of very small gun-barrels clamped together, and with
their touch-holes so arranged that one sweep of the
linstock would discharge them simultaneously. These primitive mitrailleuses were
clamped to abeam with a mantlet to shelter the
gunners, and sometimes mounted on wheels, so that they are called occasionally
‘carts of war’. But generally they are named ribaulds or ribauldequins. Their fatal defect
was the impossibility of quick reloading: after giving one blasting discharge,
they would take an intolerable time to be got ready for a second. Hence, after
enjoying some vogue for two generations, they dropped out of use early in the
fifteenth century.
Their
disuse was mainly due to the discovery of the fact that a
number of single tubes of very small dimensions, carried on a wooden
stock and each managed by a single man, were a more effective battle-weapon than
a clumsy ribauld. The original “hand-gun” was nothing but a toy cannon strapped to a staff, and fired by
the application of a match to a touchhole. It was some time before men learnt
to shorten the staff into a butt-end, and to fire the weapon from the shoulder.
We begin to hear of “portative bombards” only a foot long and fired from the
hand, as early as 1365; but it does not seem to have been before the fifteenth
century had begun that they grew quite common, assumed somewhat the shape of
the later arquebus, and were used by organised units of soldiery. The first
army that made them well-known were the Bohemian bands of the Hussite general Zizka and his successors (1421-34). The invention gradually
killed the ribauld, because the latter could
only be fired in one direction and was intolerably slow to load, while the hand-gun could be rapidly changed from one mark to another
as its bearer chose, and could be loaded with much greater rapidity. It was never
popular in England in the fifteenth century, because the national long-bow
retained for many generations the advantage of very rapid discharge, and its
arrow was, when shot by a competent archer, almost as penetrative as the pellet
of the hand-gun. In fact the
advantages which the long-bow held over the cross-bow in the fourteenth century
it still retained over the primitive fire-arms of the fifteenth—it was both
quicker in shooting and more certain of aim. But in the greater part of Europe archers
trained to the English level of competence could not be found. Hence the cross-bow survived till it was finally superseded by the
improved hand-gun during the great Italian wars of the Renaissance. There were cross-bowmen in the Spanish ranks as late as the battle of
Pavia (1525), though bands of hand-gunners had been familiar to most armies
ever since the days of the Hussite Wars.
The
perfection of the cannon was as slow as that of smaller firearms. “Bombards”
had been known, and regularly used, first in siege-work and then tentatively in
the field, since the second quarter of the fourteenth century. But they had been
so slow in technical development that armies well provided with siege guns did
not triumph over the defensive so rapidly as might have been expected. This is
well shewn by the length of early fifteenth-century sieges, in which towns
attacked by the best artillery of the day could hold out for six months or
more, like Rouen in 1418-19 or Meaux in 1421-22. The first case in which a very
heavy train of artillery made unexpectedly rapid havoc of a formidable ancient
system of fortification was at the capture of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks
in 1453. Sultan Mahomet II had got together the largest accumulation of big
guns yet known—62 pieces throwing balls of 200 lbs weight or even more. These
in six weeks completely broke down several points of the ancient triple wall of
the imperial city, and made the storming of the
breaches easy.
From
the peace of 1396 down to the invasion of France by Henry V in 1415 there was
no conflict on a large scale between the English and their continental
neighbours. Though small bands of French auxiliaries came to the help of Owen
Glyn Dwr’s rebellion in Wales, and though Henry IV
lent a modest contingent to the Burgundian faction in their strife with the
Armagnacs in 1411, no serious collisions took place, and the two countries went
on each in its own line of military usage. There was, however, one battle on
English soil which deserves a word of notice—that of Hately field by Shrewsbury (1403). This was the first fight in which two armies both
trained in the school of Dupplin and Halidon, each
operating with a central mass of dismounted men-at-arms and wings of bowmen,
met each other in action. The good archery on both sides made the fight very
deadly, and, tactics being equal, it was finally numbers
which settled the day, the army of Henry IV being decidedly larger than that of
the rebel Percies.
Henry
V was already by 1415 a veteran soldier, but his experience had been all in the
mountain wars of Wales; the protracted sieges of the castles of Owen Glyn Dwr, and the long hunting down of his irregular and elusive
bands, were a very different matter from the tackling of the forces of the
great French kingdom. The experiment of his invasion of Normandy was therefore
a very interesting one. Unlike those great raiders, Edward III, the Black Prince,
and John of Gaunt, he was a strategist with limited and definite objectives,
carrying out a plan for the slow subjection of Normandy by a series of sieges,
each dealing with the key-town of a region. There is only one exception to this
line of strategy in all his campaigns—the battle of Agincourt (1415). There is
no doubt that he was convinced of the tactical superiority of the old English
“combined training” of bow and lance, and he was anxious to court a pitched
battle at all hazards. The French had made no attempt to disturb his siege of Harfleur; so he resolved to force
them to action by marching at large through Picardy and challenging them to a
fight. Only this intent can explain the apparent rashness of his Agincourt campaign,
in which he ran many risks, not so much from the enemy as from the abominable
weather, which left his army in danger of ruin from autumn cold and starvation.
He finally obtained the battle which he wanted; the enemy got across his line
of march to Calais, and after some hesitation attacked him. The tactics on both
sides were precisely those of Poitiers repeated: the French sent in front of
their great column of dismounted men-at-arms a vanguard of picked horsemen, who
were to ride down the English archery, and cover the advance of the main body.
Henry arrayed his army in the normal national formation—three bodies of dismounted
knights, each provided with wings of archers thrown somewhat forward, covered
with stakes planted in their front, and with orchards and villages covering the
flanks. As at Poitiers the French advanced squadrons were shot down helplessly.
But Agincourt saw a new modification of tactics: finding the enemy’s main body
slow in coming on—the recent heavy rain had made the fields into a slough, and
the French could only shuffle forward at a snail’s pace in their heavy
armour—Henry took the offensive. He advanced against the enemy, halted long enough
to let his archers riddle the front line with arrows, and then ordered a
general charge, in which the lightly equipped bowmen joined in with their
hand-weapons.
The
chroniclers express their surprise that an onset of troops, many of whom wore
little armour, should have rolled over in helpless confusion masses of dismounted
knights. The explanation apparently is that the French line had been well shot
about with arrows, was embogged from a weary trudge in the mud, and was tired out
by long waiting in impracticably heavy armour. But of the result there was no
doubt, and the rear lines presently shared the fate of the vaward division.
Henry
could never get the French to oblige him with another pitched battle, and the
rest of his series of campaigns is a record of sieges, the deliberate conquest
town by town of Normandy, followed by encroachment farther inland after he had
been taken into alliance by the Burgundian faction, and saluted as heir to the
crown of France. His enemies of the dauphin’s party refused to meet him in the
field, the superiority of the English national system of tactics being taken
for granted, as it had been after Poitiers seventy years back. If anything was
required to prove this admission, it was the one English disaster of the period—the
combat of Bauge (1421)—in which the Duke of Clarence,
having outridden his archers, was surprised, overwhelmed, and slain, because he
had given battle with his men-at-arms alone.
After
the death of Henry V the French obviously considered that the change of
commanders might bring them luck, and twice ventured to face the Duke of
Bedford at Cravant (1423) and Verneuil(1424).
But it was the system that was beating them, not the general; at each of these
battles the English fought with the normal array of lances flanked with
archery, their enemies with masses of dismounted men-at-arms and detachments of
mounted men told off for sudden strokes. The event was the same as at
Agincourt, and once more the French gave up in despair all hope of beating an
English army in the field, and fell back on the defence
of their innumerable towns and castles.
This
was a reversion to the policy by which Bertrand du Guesclin had saved France
fifty years before; but it was not by mere passive resistance and the avoidance
of general actions that the second and more dangerous English scheme of conquest
was to be foiled. On this occasion the change of fortune was caused by a moral
and psychological factor—the appearance of Joan of Arc to rally French national
and religious sentiment to the side of Charles VII. We are not here concerned
with spiritual things, and must only point out that
the military side of Joan’s activity was appreciable. She not only put a new
energy into the French generals, but showed them that
the English force was too small for the great task that it had taken in hand,
that detachments might easily be cut up, and—this was most important—that the
way to tackle an English army was to surprise it before it could get into array
and throw out its archer wings. For the credit of the battle of Patay (1429)
was hers; coming on with headlong speed she caught Talbot’s force before the line
was formed, or the archers had time to fix their stakes, and scattered it.
Whether her coup was inspired by a true military instinct or by a mere
eagerness to get to handstrokes, we cannot be sure.
Joan
stopped the progress of the English invasion, and dissipated the prestige of English invincibility. But, owing to the grudging
and pusillanimous policy of her king’s ministers, she did not finish her task,
and perished unrevenged. The war lingered on for another twenty-three years,
spent in the slow recovery of the fortresses which Henry V had mastered in
1415-22. It was essentially a war of sieges, but ended
with two pitched battles of high tactical interest, whose details shew that we
have arrived at a new epoch in the art of war, for in both field-artillery
played a notable part. At Formigny (1450) the English
army in Normandy had taken up one of its usual defensive positions, and seemed
likely to hold it with success, when the French brought up two culverins to their front, and placed them on a spot from which they
enfiladed the hostile line. They were outside archery range,
and did so much damage that at last the English charged out from behind their
line of stakes to capture the guns. This led to a hand to
hand fight, which was undecided when a newly arrived French detachment
rode in from the flank and rolled up the English line. Almost the whole force
was exterminated. In consequence the few remaining English strongholds in
Normandy surrendered with small delay.
In
the final battle of the war, which lost Guienne as
surely as Formigny lost Normandy, artillery was also
prominent. Lord Talbot led the last levy of the English in the south to raise the
siege of the loyal town of Castillon. The French
faced him not in the open field, but behind a line of entrenchments, part of
the contravallation which they had drawn around the besieged place. Talbot saw
no way of reaching Castillon save by a frontal attack
on the lines; the enemy, being completely “dug in” and under cover, could not
be effectively reached by archery. All along the entrenchments their numerous artillery had been placed. Talbot formed his men, both
lances and bows, in a column, and dashed at the weakest point of the lines. The
guns opened upon him with a concentric fire, the head of the storming party was
blown to pieces, and he himself was mortally wounded by a ball which shattered
both his legs. A few of the English got inside the lines, but were soon
expelled, and the French then sallied out and made an end of the shattered
column (1453).
It
is worth noting that this intelligent use of artillery by the French distinguished
all the later years of the war; the two master-gunners of Charles VII, the
brothers Bureau, established a great reputation by their siege-craft—it is said
that in the years 1449-50 they reduced as many as sixty castles and towns,
small and great, in Normandy, after sieges of no great length, which contrasted
strongly with the six months or more of leaguer by which Henry V had won many
of these same places thirty years before. Obviously artillery was now a growing power, and could even be used effectively in the
field, though as yet only under certain limited conditions.
All
through the last years of the Hundred Years’ War the English were still
fighting wherever possible with the old tactics of the bows flanking the
dismounted lances. The French shewed a growing tendency towards the use of
cavalry for its proper purpose, but the merits of the two systems were hotly
debated. When the Burgundians fought René of Bar at Boulgneville in 1431 there was long debate whether their knights should dismount or no; they
chose the English system, and were victorious. At Montlhéry thirty years later, Commynes tells us of a precisely
similar discussion, which ended in Charles the Bold bidding nearly all his
men-at-arms take to their horses, only a few being left to stiffen his infantry.
His French enemies all fought mounted, and succeeded in
getting in some effective charges upon the Burgundian foot. This was in 1465;
ten years later at Grandson Charles is found using all his men-at-arms as
cavalry against the Swiss phalanx, which beat them off with ease. Nevertheless,
except in England, where every battle of the Wars of the Roses was fought on
foot, the knighthood was tending to resume its old methods of action over the
rest of Europe. The fact was that the English system depended in essence on the
possession of a very large force of trained archers of high efficiency, and no
country save England could produce them. The continental infantry were still inferior in the field, with the exception of the
Swiss, whose pike-phalanx was immune against cavalry, and could only have been
dealt with in this age by the use of masses of missile-bearing infantry
properly supported by cavalry. But the Italian, Burgundian, and German enemies
of Switzerland had not as yet any such infantry. And
when the Swiss in the next century met their first checks, it was not from the
bow or the hand-gun, but from the German Lanzknechts—pikemen trained in their own style—or from the
combination of cavalry with field artillery, as at Marignano (1515).
In
parts of Europe where the English archer had not penetrated, the fifteenth
century shewed some curious tactical developments. The most interesting was
that of the Hussite armies in the long Bohemian War (1420-34). This was the
result of an improvisation by a general of talent, who had to face the feudal forces
of Germany at the head of a raw but fanatical national levy, inspired at once
by religious enthusiasm and by hatred for the Teutonic invader. Zizka’s device was the tactics of the Wagenburg or moveable laager of waggons combined with
the use of masses of hand-gun men. It was as essentially defensive as the original
English combination of archery and dismounted men-at-arms, but was less easy to
handle, because its strength lay in the array of war-carts which sheltered the
missile-bearing infantry. If there was leisure, not only were the carts chained
together, but a ditch was dug in front of them, and the earth from it thrown up
round the wheels. There was always a broad exit for sallies left in front of
the Wagenburg, and another in the rear. But till the
moment of counter-attack arrived these were closed
with posts and chains. The hand-gunners mounted upon the carts, men irregularly
armed with pikes, halberds, war-flails etc. were stationed in the narrow gaps between
them. As the war went on the Hussites acquired cannon, which they mounted on
specially built carts placed at intervals along each side of the fortification.
In
the first years of the war the Germans repeatedly attempted to storm the Wagenburg, sometimes by cavalry charges, more often
by columns of dismounted men-at-arms, but they were invariably repulsed. When
the attack had been shattered by the effect of the fire-arms,
the Hussites habitually charged out, the counter-attack being led by the small
proportion of cavalry which they possessed. Hence came many victories against
an enemy who seemed unable to learn anything from his defeats. At last the Germans refused to attack a Wagenburg,
and the Hussites took to invading Bavaria, Meissen, and Thuringia, where they
wrought great havoc. Obviously the tactics that should
have been used against them were those of refusing to assault a prepared
position, and of only attacking when the Hussites were on the march, and the Wagenburg not yet formed. Or when it had been formed, artillery
placed at a safe distance should have been used against it en masse, so as to force the defenders either to suffer
unrequited slaughter, or else to sally out and lose the advantage of their
defences. As a matter of fact the defeat (Lipany, 1434) which ended the Hussite wars was inflicted by
their own countrymen of the Calixtine or moderate
party on the “Taborites” of Prokop. After the failure of a real or simulated assault
on their Wagenburg, the Taborites sallied out against
an enemy who was not really beaten, but waited till
they had come far forward in pursuit, and then faced them in the open and
charged their flank with cavalry. The pursuing horde was cut up, and the victors
then stormed the inadequately manned Wagenburg. The main
legacy which the Hussites left behind was the multiplication of small fire-arms: during the next generation bands of hand-gun
men—Bohemian, or trained in the Bohemian wars—were to be found in most of the
armies of Eastern and Central Europe.
The
military history of fifteenth-century Italy shows no such interesting experiment
as that of the Hussites. While Sir John Hawkwood and
other condottieri trained in the wars of Edward III, who had many bowmen in
their ranks, were the most noted figures in Italy, the English system was for a
time employed—eg. we have already noted it at the
important battle of Castagnaro. But as the influence
of the Transalpine bands and generals faded away, and was replaced by that of native captains of fortune, the decisive use of infantry
was forgotten, and cavalry tactics once more became predominant. Machiavelli
and Guicciardini ascribe this to the decaying military
efficiency of the civic infantry militia of the great towns; when mercenaries
had been hired on a great scale, they forgot the valour of their ancestors, who
had fought sturdily enough in the wars of the thirteenth century. When tyrants,
the inevitable result of faction, grew common in Italy, they habitually discouraged
the native levé en masse, preferring to rely on mercenaries. But the cities which never fell
into the hands of a tyrant, such as Venice, were no less given to the employment
of foreign bands than were the lords of Milan, Verona, or Padua. These
mercenaries, hired out by their condottieri, or contractor captains, were from
the early days of the fifteenth century onward nearly all heavy cavalry. Machiavelli remarks, with perfect truth, that in an
army of 20,000 men there were often only 2000 or 3000 properly equipped infantry.
A horseman naturally wishes to get the advantage of his horse, unless some
overruling condition of war forces him to dismount, and the Italian battles of
the fifteenth century were essentially cavalry fights.
But
mercenaries fighting for profit, and hired one year by
one prince and the next year by his rival, had neither patriotism nor
fanaticism to excite them. To them war was a matter of business, and they were
much more set on making and ransoming prisoners, or on extorting contributions
from captured towns, than on killing their employer’s enemies. Why should a thrifty
captain slay the men-at-arms of the opposite party, who were
capable of paying good ransoms, and perhaps
were old comrades who had been serving along with him in the last campaign? And
since war was his trade, was it wise to put an end to war by a crushing and
conclusive victory over the enemy of the moment? And so, as Guicciardini says, “they would spend the whole of a summer on the siege of one fortified place,
so that wars were interminable, and campaigns ended with little or no loss of
life.” When in 1428 the great condottiere Carmagnola captured nearly the whole
army of the lord of Milan, at the battle of Maclodio,
he disgusted his Venetian employers by ransoming all the chiefs and officers
next day for his private profit.
The
consequence of leaving the conduct of war in the hands of the great mercenary
captains was that it came often to be waged as a mere tactical exercise or a game
of chess, the aim being to manoeuvre the enemy into an impossible situation,
and then capture him, rather than to exhaust him by a series of costly battles.
It was even suspected that condottieri, like dishonest pugilists, sometimes settled
beforehand that they would draw the game. Battles when they did occur were often
very bloodless affairs, ransoms rather than killing being the object of the
players. Machiavelli cites cases of general actions in which there were only
two or throe men-at-arms slain, though the prisoners
were to be numbered by hundreds.
This
insincere and absurd form of war—long cavalry manoeuvres ending sometimes in an
almost bloodless tilting-match—continued in Italy down to the moment when the
French came over the Alps to conquer the kingdom of Naples in 1494. These Transalpines, and the Swiss hired to fight in the Milanese
quarrels, shocked Italian military opinion by winning unscientific battles after
they had been out-manoeuvred, and by slaying the routed enemy wholesale—cosa nuona e di spavento grandissimo a Italia, già lungo tempo assuefatta a vedere guerre più presto belle di pompa e di apparati, e quasi smili a spettacoli, as Guicciardini cynically remarks. The history of Italian fifteenth-century strategy and
tactics ends with the coming of the bloodthirsty hordes of Charles VIII, and
the introduction of the new forms of war which marked the period that was to
endure for the next two generations.
The
complicated and interesting battles of the great Italian wars between 1494 and
1558 only concern us here because it is necessary to shew that the elements of
their tactics were already to be found existing as separate phenomena, not yet
correlated, in the wars of the later fifteenth century. We have already noted
the commencement of the practical use of field-artillery, and the
multiplication of the smaller fire-arms which dated
from the Hussite Wars. The cavalry charge, a thing almost extinct in Western
Europe about the year 1400, had already been seen again at Montlhéry and in the wars of Charles the Bold with the Swiss. It was to emerge on a larger
scale at Fornovo, Marignano,
and many another bloody Italian field. Above all, the use of the heavy column of
pikemen, as a thing immune against the cavalry charge, had been seen in all the
earlier Swiss victories, and had reached its culminating point ot victory at Grandson and Morat.
The simultaneous employment on one field of fire-arms great
and small, of the column of pikes, and of the onset of the heavy
gendarmerie, was to be the characteristic of the sixteenth century wars. But
into these struggles we have not here to enter.
It
was, in the end, to be the development of small fire-arms,
capable of rapid discharge, which was to drive armour from the battle-field.
But the hand-guns of the fifteenth century were still
very imperfect weapons, not yet able to hold their own against good archery.
Plate-armour had developed mainly as a defence against the long-bow, and defensive
armour was at its prime during this period, for workmanship and for complicated
ingenuity—we may add also for picturesque and artistic appearance; and the scalloped
and fluted panoplies that are generally named after the Emperor Maximilian are
certainly the most graceful armour ever known. But the man-at-arms paid dearly
for the complicated defences which the smith forged for him. All through the
century we hear complaints of the drawbacks of a complete harness. During the
period when fighting on foot still prevailed, rapid advance was difficult, and
retreat generally fatal. At Agincourt the French chivalry were wearied out, and
finally almost embogged, by a mere march of a mile over newly-ploughed and rain-sodden fields. By the time that they got into collision with their enemy
they were wellnigh exhausted. And the dreadful proportion of casualties among the
higher ranks to be found in the Wars of the Roses was undoubtedly due to the fact that in a routed army the bowmen and billmen
could make off rapidly, but the knights and nobles were doomed, unless they
possessed exceptionally trusty pages to bring up their horses from the rear. In
normal fights on the continent the slowly moving vanquished were captured and
held to ransom. But when a party blood-feud was prevalent, as during the latter
part of this great English series of campaigns, we find commanders like Edward
IV giving orders to spare the commons, but to cut down every man wearing golden
spurs. In such a struggle complete armour was a death-trap. When horse-fighting
came back into favour the drawback was not quite so evident, since the wearer
of a heavy panoply might escape, if his horse were not disabled. Masses of fully-armed horse were still seen during the great Italian
wars which covered the period where the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries join.
But when cavalry once more became the dominating arm, as the sixteenth century
wore on, it was a much lighter cavalry, which had begun to discard great part
of its armour, and to aim at rapid movement rather than at mere massive impact.
Only
one more point of importance remains to be dealt with before we have done with
the fifteenth century and its art of war. This is the beginning of the national
standing army, as opposed to mere royal guards or small permanent garrisons of
castles, with which the world was already familiar. Of royal guards the largest
and most formidable existing in 1450 had been the Janissaries, the
slave-soldiery of the Ottoman Sultan, a force of disciplined infantry armed
with the bow, which by the time of Mahomet II had reached a total of some 10,000
of 120,000 men. No Western power could show any equivalent for it in numbers or
efficiency; the personal retainers of Christian sovereigns never exceeded some
few hundreds of men in permanent pay. And the existence of the Janissaries as a
formidable unit of infantry had, all through the fifteenth century, given the
Turks a great advantage over the irregular hosts of their Yugo-Slav, Polish,
and Hungarian enemies—as witness Varna (1444) and the second Kossovo (1449).
But
a permanent standing army had appeared in Western Europe, on a modest scale, in
the year 1445, and was to be the first symptom of a general movement toward the
creation of modern military organisations. This force was the Compagnies d’Ordonnnance of Charles VII, a body of 20 units of horse
and foot combined, which the King of France kept under arms when he disbanded
after the truce of 1444 the greater part of the heterogeneous troops whom he had
been employing in the English war. Charles’s old levies had been Ecorcheurs for the most part, ill paid bands often
hard to distinguish by their conduct from robber-gangs, working for the benefit
of themselves and their captains. At the great disbanding in 1444-45 the king
selected from the mass of his officers a score of professional soldiers, some
of them great nobles, others condottieri mainly of
French blood, only a very few foreigners being chosen. To each of them was given
the task of selecting and organising into a “company” a limited number of
trustworthy and efficient troopers and archers.
Each
of the twenty companies—fifteen for Langue d’oil and five for Languedoc—consisted of a hundred lances fournies or lances garnies as they were sometimes called.
The “lance” was composed of one fully equipped man-at-arms, a courtlier who
acted as his squire, a page, two archers, and a valet de guerre. All were
provided with horses for transport, but the two archers and the valet were
intended to act as infantry, and it is doubtful if the page was a combatant. Thus the companies ran up to six hundred men apiece; they
were each officered by a captain, a lieutenant, an ensign, and a “guidon.” The
total made up a standing army of 12,000 men, quite a considerable force for the
fifteenth century. The man-at-arms received ten livres tournois a month, out of which he had to provide for his horses and the page. The other members
of the lance had four or five livres apiece. That they were royal troops, and
not mercenary bands hired from their respective captains, was shewn by the fact
that the king nominated all officers, paid the men individually, and had a
staff of inspectors, who reviewed the companies at reasonable intervals. They
were not kept about the king's person, but garrisoned at strategic points all
over France, and in their earliest years one of their chief duties was to keep
the roads clear of highway-robbers, the legacy of thirty years of war.
It
will be noted that the proportion of men trained to serve as infantry in the compagnies
was small. To provide greater numbers, if of less valuable material, Charles
tried the experiment of establishing a sort of local infantry militia, the Francs-Archers.
In each parish or similar unit an able-bodied man was designated, who, in return
for receiving immunities from taxation, was always to be ready to turn out with
a bow or cross-bow, a steel-cap, and a “jack” or brigandine,
when summoned to the field by the king. The archers of each district were to be
assembled for inspection by royal officers four times a year,
and were ordered to keep themselves efficient by regular practice at
targets. The experiment was a failure, no arrangements for keeping the men organised
in regular units, or accustomed to discipline, having been provided. Only long
periods of embodiment could have made them a useful force. They turned out,
when mobilised, to be little better than a peasant-levy, and though assembled
in considerable numbers by Charles VII and by Louis XI in his earlier years,
were gradually allowed to drop into obsolescence. The real origin of the
infantry corps of the French standing army was to be found in the bodies of
Swiss, whom Louis XI first hired, and who became under his successor a permanent
part of the French military organisation. Regular infantry of native origin were not raised and kept on foot till the great Italian wars
had begun, after our period has come to an end.
But
from 1445 Europe had before its eyes the type of the modern standing army—the
tool of Renaissance monarchs—as embodied in the Compagnies d’Ordonnance.
Feudal armies are beginning to disappear, mercenary bands under condottieri or
contractors are destined to follow them into oblivion, and in short the military organisation of the Middle Ages is about
to give place to that of the modern world, though the hired adventurer, and the
feudal man-at-arms doing his stipulated turn of service for his fief, were yet
to be found for many a year on the rolls of the armies of the West
MAGIC, WITCHCRAFT, ASTROLOGY, AND ALCHEMY
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