The Anglo-Norman chronicler Florence of Worcester comments …
Years: 1066 - 1066
October
The Anglo-Norman chronicler Florence of Worcester comments that although the king [Harold] was aware that some of the bravest men in England had fallen in two recent battles and that half of his troops were not assembled, he did not hesitate to meet the enemy in Sussex.
It is likely that the engagements at Fulford Gate and at the Battle of Stamford Bridge, fought within a week of each other, seriously affect Harold's strength at the Battle of Hastings some three weeks later.
There is no doubt that if Harold had not been diverted by the battles in the north, then he would have been better prepared to fight William at Hastings and the result might have been somewhat different.
Harold camps at Caldbec Hill on the night of October 13, near what is described as a "hoar-apple tree".
This location is about eight miles (thirteen kilometers) from William's castle at Hastings.
Some of the early contemporary French accounts mention an emissary or emissaries sent by Harold to William, which is likely.
Nothing comes of these efforts.
Although Harold has attempted to surprise the Normans, William's scouts report the English arrival to the duke.
The exact events preceding the battle are obscure, with contradictory accounts in the sources, but all agree that William leads his army from his castle and advances towards the enemy.
Harold takes a defensive position at the top of Senlac Hill (present-day Battle, East Sussex), about six miles (9.7 kilometers) from William's castle at Hastings.
The exact number of soldiers in Harold's army is unknown.
The contemporary records do not give reliable figures; some Norman sources give four hundred thousand to one million two hundred thousand men on Harold's side.
The English sources generally give very low figures for Harold's army, perhaps to make the English defeat seem less devastating.
Recent historians have suggested figures of between five thousand and thirteen thousand for Harold's army at Hastings, and most modern historians argue for a figure of seven thousand to eight thousand English troops.
These men would have been a mix of the fyrd and housecarls.
Few individual Englishmen are known to have been at Hastings; about twenty named individuals can reasonably be assumed to have fought with Harold at Hastings, including Harold's brothers Gyrth and Leofwine and two other relatives.
The English army consists entirely of infantry.
It is possible that some of the higher class members of the army rode to battle, but when battle was joined they dismounted to fight on foot.
The core of the army is made up of housecarls, full-time professional soldiers.
Their armor consists of a conical helmet, a mail hauberk, and a shield, which might be either kite-shaped or round.
Most housecarls fight with the two-handed Danish battleaxe, but they can also carry a sword.
The rest of the army is made up of levies from the fyrd, also infantry but more lightly armored and not professionals.
Most of the infantry will form art of the shield wall, in which all the men in the front ranks lock their shields together.
Behind them will be axemen and men with javelins as well as archers.
Locations
People
- Edith of Wessex
- Edward the Confessor
- Harald Hardrada
- Harold Godwinson
- Pope Alexander II
- Tostig Godwinson
- William the Conqueror
Groups
- Anglo-Saxons
- Welsh people
- Danes (Scandinavians)
- Normandy, Duchy of
- Normans
- Norway, independent Kingdom of
- England, (Anglo-Saxon) Kingdom of
- England, (Norman) Kingdom of
