
From Shakespeare to The Beatles, the battle of Agincourt has dominated the cultural landscape as one of the most famous battles in British history. Anne Curry seeks to find out how and why the legacy of Agincourt has captured the popular imagination. Agincourt (1415) is an exceptionally famous battle, one that has generated a huge and enduring cultural legacy in the six hundred years since it was fought. Everybody thinks they know what the battle was about. Even John Lennon, aged 12, wrote a poem and drew a picture headed 'Agincourt'. But why and how has Agincourt come to mean so much, to so many? Why do so many people claim their ancestors served at the battle? Is the Agincourt of popular image the real Agincourt, or is our idea of the battle simply taken from Shakespeare's famous depiction of it? Written by the world's leading expert on the battle, this book shows just why it has occupied such a key place in English identity and history in the six centuries since it was fought, exploring a cultural legacy that stretches from bowmen to Beatles, via Shakespeare, Dickens, and the First World War. Anne Curry first sets the scene, illuminating how and why the battle was fought, as well as its significance in the wider history of the Hundred Years War. She then takes the Agincourt story through the centuries from 1415 to now, from the immediate, and sometimes surprising, responses to it on both sides of the Channel, through its reinvention by Shakespeare in King Henry V (1599), and the enduring influence of both the play and the film versions of it, especially the patriotic Laurence Olivier version of 1944, at the time of the D-Day landings in Normandy. But the legacy of Agincourt does not begin and end with Shakespeare's play: from the eighteenth century onwards, on both sides of the Channel and in both the English and French speaking worlds the battle was used as an explanation of national identity, giving rise to jingoistic works in print and music. It was at this ti
This book investigates how and why the Battle of Agincourt evolved from a 15th-century military engagement into a central pillar of British national identity and cultural memory. Professor Anne Curry, a leading authority on the Hundred Years War, utilizes historical records, literary analysis, and cultural artifacts to deconstruct the gap between the historical reality of the 1415 battle and its enduring, often mythologized, popular image.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a definitive study on the historiography and cultural impact of the Battle of Agincourt. Readers frequently note that the prose is accessible to a general audience while maintaining the rigorous standards of academic historical research.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191502782
ISBN-13:
9780191502781
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