The author has retraced on foot the routes taken by the Black Prince
during the French campaigns of 1355-1356, enabling him to provide an
entirely new dimension to the events.
In 1355 the Black Prince took an army to Bordeaux and embarked on two
chevauchées (mounted military expeditions, generally characterised by
the devastation of the surrounding towns and countryside), which
culminated in hisdecisive victory over King Jean II of France at
Poitiers the following year. Using the recorded itineraries as his
starting point, the author of this book walked more than 1,300 miles
across France, retracing the routes of the armies in search of a greater
understanding of the Black Prince's expedition. He followed the 1355
chevauchée from Bordeaux to the Mediterranean and back, and that for
1356 from Aquitaine to the Loire, to the battlefield at Poitiers, and
back again to Bordeaux. Drawing on his findings on the ground, a wide
range of documentary sources, and the work of local historians, many of
whom the author met on his travels, the book provides a unique
perspective on the Black Prince's chevauchées of 1355 and 1356 and the
battle of Poitiers, one of the greatest English triumphs of the Hundred
Years War, demonstrating in particular the impact of the landscape on
the campaigns.
Peter Hoskins is a former Royal Air Force pilot, now living in France.
He combines his interest in exploration of his adopted country with his
research into the Hundred Years War.