Battle of Hastings
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Transcript Battle of Hastings
Background of England
The Romans
Julius Caesar invades Britannia 55-54 BC
The Saxons
Departure of Romans in A.D. 410
Saxons, Angles, and Jutes
Britain became England
The Vikings
Invasion begins in the
9th Century
Background of Normandy
The Romans
The Franks
The Vikings
The Duchy of Normandy
Why the battle happened?
King Ethelred the Unready(978)
Married Emma (1007)
Alfred, Edward, and
Goodwife
King Canute (1016)
Also King of Denmark
King Hardecante (1035)
Alfred murdered (1036)
Edward became Heir
King Hardecante died (1042)
The Godwins
Godwin
Edith married Edward (1045)
Eustace involved in a fracas
(1051)
Edward ordered the town be
burned
Godwin refused
William the Duke of Normandy
Godwin returned
Harold Godwinson became
King Harold II (1066)
Significance
William the Conqueror was the first to completely
take over Britain
Dramatically altered the history of Europe
Demonstrates a successful Amphibious Operation
Leaders
King Harold II
Defeated the Wales in a
series of campaigns
(1062-63)
William I
Began fighting battles
at the age of 19
Secured Normandy in
1047 after The Battle of
Val-ès-Dunes
Comparing Forces
English
6000 Fyrd
40 day militea
Farming tools
Kite shields
1200 Housecarls
Bill and Spears
Kite Shields
Possibly a few archers
No Cavalry
Normans
700 ships
7500 Infantry
Battleaxe or Lance
Kite Shield
3600 Knights
Battleaxe, Spear, and Sword
Kite Shield
1000 Archers
100 yard range
Norwegian Invasion
September 1066
Harald Hardrada
Tostig Godwinson
Ended 25 September
Norman Invasion
28 September – Landed near Pevensey
Harold rushed south
William set up camp
overlooking Hasting
13 October Harold lead
his troop to Senlac Hill
7 miles NW of Hastings
William went on the defense
14 October 1066
The Aftermath
No statistics
Reinforcement arrived
Marched to London
Saxon delegation surrender to William in
Berkhamstead
William was crowned King of England on Christmas
Day, 1066
Later defeated the Scots and Welsh
Levels of War
King Harold II
Policy
Protect England
Strategic
Destroy Enemy
Operational
Senlac Hill
Tactical
Ambush
William the Conqueror
Policy
Conquer England
Strategic
Take London
Operational
Land forces at Pevensey
Tactical
Offensive/Defense
Themes of Amphibious Operations
The Landing Itself Is Rarely the Key Problem
The Amphibious Invasion Is a Means to an End, Not
an End in Itself
The Influence of Terrain and Geography
Offensive Fundamentals
Good
Orient on the enemy
Gain and maintain contact
Develop the situation
Concentrate superior firepower at the
decisive time and place
Exploit known enemy weaknesses
Gain and retain the initiative
Neutralize the enemy’s ability to react
Advance by fire and maneuver
Maintain momentum.
Act quickly
Exploit success
Be flexible
Be aggressive
Provide for the security of the force
Bad
Achieve surprise
Seize or control key
terrain