"The Hundred Years' War," lasting much longer than one hundred years, was repeatedly interrupted by long periods of "absence of war." The primary cause of the hostilities was the need for the English to preserve their rights to Guyenne rather than the much-touted dynastic pretensions in France. All seemed lost for the Kingdom of France on the evening of Saint Crispin's Day, 1415. The rain had been heavy for long hours and in the muddy fields of Agincourt...
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