The 'Battle of the Golden Spurs' (Dutch: ''Guldensporenslag'', French: ''Bataille des éperons d'or'') was fought on
July 11,
1302, near
Kortrijk in
Flanders. The battle is also called the 'Battle of Courtrai' after the French name for Kortrijk.
Background
The reason for the battle was a
French attempt to subdue the county of
Flanders, which was formally part of the French kingdom and added to the
crown lands in 1297, but resisted centralist French policies. In
1300, the French king
Philip IV appointed
Jacques de Châtillon as governor of Flanders and took the Count of Flanders,
Gwijde van Dampierre, hostage. This instigated considerable unrest among the influential Flemish urban
guilds.
After being exiled from their homes by French troops, the citizens of
Bruges went back to their own city and
murdered every Frenchman they could find there on
May 18, 1302, known as the ''
Brugse Metten''. According to legend, they identified the French by asking them to pronounce a Dutch phrase, ''schild ende vriend'' (shield and friend), and everyone who had a problem pronouncing this
shibboleth was killed. Although a website
[ Born on the 11th of July ] says that the [sx] sound in ''schild'' that makes it difficult for French-speakers to pronounce had not yet developed in the
14th century, the phrase "scilt en vrient" is referenced in primary sources such as the Chronique of
Gilles Li Muisis as distinguishing French from Flemish. It is also suggested that "scilt en vrient" (shield and friend) are wrong interpretations/translations of "Des gildens vrient (?)" meaning "(are you a) friend of the guilds (?)" (Compare to the use of "cicero" to identify
French in
Sicily during the
Sicilian Vespers in
1282.)
The French king could not let this go unpunished, so he sent a powerful force, led by Count
Robert II of Artois. The Flemish response consisted of two groups; one group which consisted of 3,000 men from the city militia of
Bruges, was led by
Willem van Gulik, grandson of Count Gwijde, and
Pieter de Coninc, one of the leaders of the uprising in Bruges. The other group, which consisted of about 2,500 men from the suburbs of Bruges and the coastal areas, was headed by
Gwijde van Namen, son of Count Gwijde, with the two sons of Gwijde van Dampierre; the two groups met near Kortrijk. From the East came another 2,500 men, led by
Jan Borluut, and yet another 1,000 men from
Ieper, led by
Jan van Renesse from
Zeeland.
Forces
The Flemish were primarily town militia who were well equipped, such as with the
Goedendag, and organized; the urban militias of the time prided themselves on their regular training and preparation. They numbered about 9,000, including 400 nobles. The biggest difference from the French and other feudal armies was that the Flemish force consisted solely of
infantry.
The French were by contrast a classic feudal army made up of a core of 2,500 nobles
cavalry, including knights and squires. They were supported by 1,000
crossbowmen, 1,000
pikemen and up to 3,500 other light infantry, totaling around 8,000.
[Rogers, Clifford J. "The Age of the Hundred Years War." Maurice Keen, ed. ''Medieval Warfare: A History'' 136–160. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.] Contemporary military theory valued each knight as equal to roughly ten infantry.
[TeBrake, William H. ''A Plague of Insurrection: Popular Politics and Peasant Revolt in Flanders, 1323–1328''. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993.]
The Battle
After the Flemish unsuccessfully tried to take Kortrijk on
July 9 and
July 10, the two forces clashed on
11 July in an open field near the city.
The layout of the field, crossed by numerous ditches and streams, made it difficult for the French
cavalry to charge the Flemish lines. They sent the servants to place some wood in the streams but didn't wait for this to be done. The large French infantry force led the initial attack, which went well, but French commander Count
Robert II of Artois recalled them so that the noble cavalry could claim the victory. Hindered by their own
infantry and the tactically sound position of the Flemish militia, the French
cavalry were an easy target for the heavily-armed infantry. When they realized the battle was lost, the surviving French fled, only to be pursued over 10 km by the Flemish.
Prior to the battle, the Flemish militia had either been ordered to take no prisoners or did not understand (or care for) the military custom of asking for a ransom for captured knights or nobles;
[ Born on the 11th of July. ] modern theory is that there was a clear order that forbade them to take prisoners as long as the battle was as yet undecided (this was to avoid the possibility of their ranks being broken when the Flemish infantry brought their hostages behind the Flemish lines).
[ Battle 1302, exposition of member of Liebaert Association at Kortenberg april 2007. ] Robert of Artois was surrounded and killed on the field.
Aftermath
The large numbers of golden
spurs that were collected from the French knights gave the battle its name
[ Kortrijk: Battle of the Golden Spurs. ]; at least a thousand noble cavaliers were killed, some contemporary accounts placing the total casualties at over ten thousand dead and wounded. The French spurs were hung in the Church of Our Lady in Kortrijk to commemorate the victory, and were taken back by the French two years later after the
Battle of Mons-en-Pévèle.
Some of the notable casualties:
★
Robert II,
Count of Artois, the French commander
★
Raoul II of Clermont, Lord of
Nesle,
Constable of France
★
Guy I of Clermont, Lord of
Breteuil,
Marshal of France
★
Simon de Melun, Lord of La Loupe and Marcheville,
Marshal of France
★
John I of Ponthieu, Count of Aumale
★ John of Trie, Count of
Dammartin
★
John II of Brienne,
Count of Eu
★ John d'Avesnes,
Count of Ostrevant
★ Godfrey of Brabant, Lord of
Aarschot
★
Jacques de Châtillon, Lord of
Leuze
★
Pierre de Flotte, Chief Advisor to
Philip IV the Fair.
Historical consequences
The battle was one in a string during the 14th century that showed that knights could be defeated by disciplined and well-equipped infantry. The Scots then applied this idea of attacking infantry and brought it to the battlefield at
Bannockburn, where the Scottish Schiltron charged English Cavalry and routed them. It is also a landmark in the development of Flemish political independence and the day is remembered every year in Flanders as the
Flemish Community's
official holiday.
The battle was romanticised in
1838 by Flemish writer
Hendrik Conscience in his book ''
The Lion of Flanders'' (Dutch: "''De leeuw van Vlaanderen''").
Another unusual feature of this battle is that it is often cited as one of the few successful uprisings of peasants and townsmen, given that at the time most peasant uprisings in Europe were quelled.
"The uprising originated from the people themselves, without being provoked by a lord (the Flemish count and his most important lords were in French captivity). Only when the uprising became widespread, the count's relatives who still were free rushed in to aid. But in the first place this was a struggle of people against a lord (the French king), not the struggle between two lords.[ The Battle of Courtrai or the Battle of the Golden Spurs — July 11th 1302 ]"
Barbara Tuchman describes this as a peasant uprising in ''
A Distant Mirror''. Though the winning army was well armed, the initial uprising was nonetheless a folk uprising. Eventually, however, the Flemish nobles did take their part in the battle — each of the Flemish leaders were of the nobility or descended from nobility, and some 400 of noble blood did fight on the Flemish side.
References
# Verbruggen, J.F. ''The Battle of the Golden Spurs: Courtrai, 11 July 1302'' ISBN 0851158889
Links
http://www.liebaart.org/gulden_e.htm