juliet barker raises an interesting point in her book "agincourt". there are numerous contemporary accounts of the battle and even small number of eyewitness descriptions of the prisoner executions. she says (my bold):
"the decision to kill the prisoners was undeniably ruthless. yet if henry had spared them and they had launched a second front, the outcome of the day would have been very different and henry himself would be accused of destroying his own men though faint-heartedness or misplaced charity. significantly, not even one of his contemporaries, even among the french, criticised his decision"
"the decision to kill the prisoners was undeniably ruthless. yet if henry had spared them and they had launched a second front, the outcome of the day would have been very different and henry himself would be accused of destroying his own men though faint-heartedness or misplaced charity. significantly, not even one of his contemporaries, even among the french, criticised his decision"
Comment