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  1. The Battle of Poitiers was fought on 19 September 1356 between a French army commanded by King John II and an Anglo-Gascon force under Edward, the Black Prince, during the Hundred Years' War. It took place in western France, 5 miles (8 km) south of Poitiers , when approximately 14,000 to 16,000 French attacked a strong defensive ...

    • 19 September 1356
    • English victory
  2. 27. Feb. 2020 · published on 27 February 2020. Available in other languages: French. The Battle of Poitiers on 19 September 1356 CE was the second great battle of the Hundred Years' War (1337-1453 CE) after Crécy (1346 CE) and, once again, it was the English who won.

    • Mark Cartwright
  3. 26. Feb. 2020 · A map showing the initial battle lines at the Battle of Poitiers in France on 19 September 1356 CE between England and France. The English, led by Edward the Black Prince (1330-1376 CE), were victorious in the second major battle of the Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453 CE).

  4. 12. Jan. 2019 · The Battle of Poitiers, 1356. Marilyn Livingstone and Morgen Witzel reassess the famous victory of the Prince of Wales over the French during the Hundred Years War. By 1356, the conflict that historians would later call ‘the Hundred Years War’ was already nearly two decades old.

    • Military History
  5. 27. März 2017 · Battle of Poitiers, (Sept. 19, 1356), the catastrophic defeat sustained by the French king John II at the end of the first phase of the Hundred Years’ War between France and England. Many of the French nobility were killed, and King Jean was left a prisoner of the English.

  6. Year 8. The dramatic Battle of Poitiers: Where the Black Prince captured the King of France. © History Skills. The Battle of Poitiers was one of the most pivotal confrontations in the Hundred Years' War, a protracted struggle between England and France that spanned over a century.

  7. By John E. Spindler. Denis de Morbecque, an exiled French knight in the service of the English crown, thought the fighting in the hawthorn hedgerows near Poitiers would never end.