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5 - Carcassonne – Montgiscard to Canet, 29 October to 7 November 1355

from Part II - The Chevauchée in the Languedoc, October to December 1355

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Peter Hoskins
Affiliation:
Royal Air Force
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Summary

If the enemy country is rather loosely knit, if its people are soft and have forgotten what war is like, a triumphant invader will have no great difficulty in leaving a wide swathe of country safely in his rear.

Carl von Clausewitz

Having crossed the Garonne and Ariège rivers and passed to the south of Toulouse, the army now had an open route to Narbonne and beyond to the Mediterranean, or the Greek Sea as it was known to the English at the time. The route would be along the axis of the Roman Via Aquitania, called the King's Highway by Baker, built in 118 bc to link the Via Domitia at Narbonne with Toulouse and Bordeaux. For the prince and his army the march to Carcassonne would be generally easy, along a flat valley with gentle hills rising on both sides. In one place the valley narrows to little more than half a mile but in other places it is several miles wide. The route of the Roman road is still in use today as the N113 and D33 roads.

The villages and small towns in the area were poorly defended, soft targets in today's parlance. It was a wealthy trading area and the most productive grain-producing area in France. In addition, some land was used for raising cattle and sheep, and near Castelnaudary a start had been made to the cultivation of woad which would one day bring wealth through the production of dyes.

Type
Chapter
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In the Steps of the Black Prince
The Road to Poitiers, 1355–1356
, pp. 54 - 68
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2011

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