The Battle of Ardres was fought on 6 June 1351 between French and English forces near the town of Ardres, Pas de Calais during the Hundred Years War. The French won.

Battle of Ardres
Part of Hundred Years' War

Brignais ( 1362 ).The French army is defeated by the Great Companies , bands of ravaging mercenaries to France during the war of Hundred Years
Date6 June 1351
Location
Ardres, Pas-de-Calais, France
50°51′20″N 1°58′42″E / 50.8556°N 1.9783°E / 50.8556; 1.9783
Result French Victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of France Kingdom of England
Commanders and leaders
Lord of Beaujeu  Baron Beauchamp
Strength
Unknown 600 men
Casualties and losses
Unknown, but much lighter 600 killed or captured

Prelude

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The new English commander of Calais John de Beauchamp had been leading a raid around the region surrounding Saint-Omer with a force of some 300 men-at-arms and 300 mounted archers, when he was discovered by a French force led by Édouard I de Beaujeu, Lord of Beaujeu, the French commander on the march of Calais, near Ardres. The French moved to surround the English, trapping them upon a bend on the river. Beaujeu made all of his men dismount before they attacked, after lessons were learned from the 1349 Battle of Lunalonge under similar conditions when they kept too many of their men mounted, dividing their forces too quickly, which caused the French to lose the battle.

The battle

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In the fighting, Édouard I de Beaujeu was killed, but with the help of reinforcements from the garrison of Saint-Omer, the French defeated the English. John Beauchamp was one of many English captured.[1]

References

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  1. ^ "Timeline of the Hundred Years War 1351-55". Archived from the original on 19 April 2011. Retrieved 27 March 2017.