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Overview:
In June of 1340, the English decided to attack the French fleet at Sluys in order to pre-empt a French invasion. After a nine hour battle, that featured both archer attacks and hand-to-hand combat, the English fleet of 200 ships destroyed the French forces; close to 16,000 men died mostly French. The major outcome of the battle was that it permantly stopped all ideas of a French invasion of England and determined that the majority of the warfare would be conducted in France.
Edward sailed from the Orwell, embarked in the cog Thomas, and was in sight of the roadstead at Sluys by the afternoon of the following day. What he saw gave him considerable satisfaction, because although the allied Franco-Spanish-Genoese fleets mustered over 400 sail, the ships has been crammed and anchored tightly at the entrance to the Zwin channel, and had therefore sacrificed their advantages of superior seamanship and manoeuvre.
That night, the king sent ashore two rising knights of his household, Sir Reginald Cobham and Sir John Chandos who, having made contact with the Flemings, reported that the enemy vessels were ranged in three compact lines and included the great cog Christopher, which the English were extremely eager to recapture.
The battle began soon after dawn on the following day, Saturday 24th June 1340.
Edward sent his ships against the enemy line in units of three, two ships crammed with archers and one full of men-of-arms. This gave the English immediate local superiority and the French ships began to fall into their hands with ever-increasing rapidity.
The two ships with archers would come alongside, and from the towering castle hose the enemy decks with arrows until the decimated crews could be overwhelmed by a boarding party of men-at-arms, which swarmed on board from the third vessel.
The line of French ships disintegrated, floating about in little knots of ships full of struggling men, the mailed French and Castilian knights being jostled or jumping into the sea as the arrows flayed the decks piled with dead. The battle had been decided within the first two hours, but the ships-to-ship fighting went on all day and well in to the night. The Chirstopher was retaken, renamed and sent back into fight, along with many other vessels. Those of the French or Castilian crews who swam ashore were clubbed to death in the shallows by the waiting Flemings. The fighting finally died down about midnight, with just thirty of the Genoese ships retreating out to sea and escaping the general slaughter.
Battle of Sluys. (2)
The Battle of Sluys was a naval battle fought on Saturday, 24 June 1340. It was one of the two sea-fights in which King Edward III of England commanded in person, the other being that called Espagnols-sur-Mer.
The encounter took place in front of the town of Sluys or Sluis, (French Ecluse), on the inlet between West Flanders and Zeeland. In the middle of the 14th century this was an open roadstead capable of holding large fleets; it later was silted up by the river Eede. A French fleet, which the king, in a letter to his son Edward, the Black Prince, puts at 190 sail, had been collected in preparation for an invasion of England. It was under the command of Hue Quiéret, admiral for the king of France, and of Nicholas Béhuchet, who had been one of the king’s treasurers, and was probably a lawyer.
Part of the fleet consisted of Genoese galleys serving as mercenaries under the command of Egidio Bocanegra (Barbavera). Although many English historians speak of King Edward’s fleet as inferior in number to the French, it is certain that he sailed from Orwell on June 22 with 200 sail, and that he was joined on the coast of Flanders by his admiral for the North Sea, Sir Robert Morley, with 50 others. Some of this swarm of vessels were no doubt mere transports, for the king brought with him the household of his queen, Philippa of Hainault, who was then at Bruges. As, however, one of the queen’s ladies was killed in the battle, it would appear that all the English vessels were employed.
Edward anchored at Blankenberge on the afternoon of the 23rd and sent three squires to reconnoitre the position of the French. The Genoese Barbavera advised his colleagues to go to sea, but Béhuchet, who as constable exercised the general command, refused to leave the anchorage. He probably wished to occupy it in order to bar the king’s road to Bruges.
The disposition of the French was made in accordance with the usual medieval tactics of a fleet fighting on the defensive. Quiéret and Béhuchet formed their force into three or four lines, with the ships tied to one another, and with a few of the largest stationed in front as outposts.
King Edward entered the road-stead on the morning of the 24th, and after manoeuvering to place his ships to windward, and to bring the sun behind him, attacked. In his letter to his son he says that the enemy made a noble defence "all that day and the night after." His ships were arranged in two lines, and it may be presumed that the first attacked in front, while the second would be able to turn the flanks of the opponent.
The battle was a long succession of hand-to-hand conflicts to board or to repel boarders. King Edward makes no mention of any actual help given him by his Flemish allies, though he says they were willing, but the French say that they joined after dark. They also assert that the king was wounded by Béhuchet, but this is not certain, and there is no testimony save a legendary one for a personal encounter between him and the French commander, though it would not be improbable.
The battle ended with the almost total destruction of the French. Quiéret was slain, and Béhuchet is said to have been hanged by King Edward’s orders. Barbavera escaped to sea with his squadron on the morning of the 25th, carrying off two English prizes.
English chroniclers claim that the victory was won with small cost of life, and that the loss of the French was 30,000 men. But no reliance can be placed on medieval estimates of numbers. After the battle King Edward remained at anchor several days, and it is probable that his fleet had suffered heavily.
The story of the battle of Sluys is told from the English side by Sir Harris Nicolas, in his History of the Royal Navy, vol. ii. (London, 1847); and from the French side by M. C. de la Roncière, Histoire de la marine francaise, vol. i. (Paris, 1899). Both make copious references to original sources.
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Date: 24 Jun 1340
Location: Sluys, France
Outcome: English victory
Principal Combatants.
English Leadership: Edward III
English Strength: 200 ships
English Casualties: -
French Leadership: Admiral Hugues Quierat
French Strength:
French Casualties: -




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