One of the greatest English military victories, the Anglo-French Battle of Agincourt, could have turned out differently if the French had worn lighter armor, a new study suggests.
Fought on Oct. 25, 1415, during the Hundred Years' War, the battle was a sort of medieval equivalent of David and Goliath, with the French knights significantly outnumbering (possibly as much as six to one) Henry V's soldiers.
Historians have attributed the unexpected English victory to a number of causes, including the English's army use of the longbow.
But according a study which investigated the limitations of wearing a medieval armor, the French lost the battle before the fight had even started.
"The heavily armored French knights advanced towards the English men-at-arms across terrain made extremely muddy from recent ploughing, over night rain and an earlier French cavarly charge," a team of researchers from the Universities of Leeds, Milan and Auckland wrote in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B journal.
Simply put, the French army was knocked out by fatigue.
"By the time they got to the enemy they would have been exhausted and easily killed," said lead researcher Graham Askew from the University of Leeds Faculty of Biological Sciences.
this is how they lost in a nutshell.
Answer = stupidity and horrible commander.