From the very earliest days of
English history, whether on the battlefield at Hastings or as a Tommy
in the British Army, the English soldier has fought almost constantly
for the past 1500 years. He has been involved in every major conflict
and fought on every continent.
The martial spirit of our people
is something of which to be proud, but it is sometimes hard to reconcile
that a country that prides itself on its common sense and the value that
it places on restraint and tolerance is, even in modern times, so predisposed
to drunken violence and mass thuggery. By reading through the list of
quotations that we've put together on this site it is clear that, far
from being a recent phenomenon, it is actually one of our more enduring
traits. Whether you like it or not, it is the flip side of the same coin
that makes up the English character. As recognisable today as it has been
for the last 1500 years.
Without trying to excuse it (and
it's certainly no comfort to the many who have been totally innocent victims
of it), it may be that some of the same character traits that appear
when we see English football hooligans battling with opposing fans or
foreign riot police, are the same character traits that have brought us
so many victories on the battlefield over the last millennium.
Following football violence in
Turin, Jeremy Paxman in his book "The English" quotes the writer
Bill Burford as he watched a mob of English football hooligans being chased
by fully armed Italian riot police. "The chase continued until
someone shouted that they were all English, and that the English don't
run. The hooligans came abruptly to a halt, turned around and charged
back into the Italian police". From Crecy and Agincourt through
to the D-Day landings and Goosegreen, how many times has this type of
mentality saved the day? These were not places for shrinking violets and,
in the long run, each battle helped assure our independence and our very
way of life.
Following the violence Mr. Burford
was asked by an Italian, "Why do you English behave like this?
Is it because you are an island race? Is it because you don't feel European?
Is it because you lost the Empire?".
Paxman goes on to say that, "The
only honest answer he could have given is that it's how part of the English
population has always been. Far from being ashamed of their behaviour,
they see fighting and drunkenness as part of their birthright. It is the
way they proclaim their identity".
Whether we like it or not, it
is a fact that fighting is something we have always done. For better or
for worse, it is an undeniable part of what we are.
King Athelstan came to the throne
in 924 and, continuing the work of his father Edward the
Elder (son of Alfred the Great), conquered the remaining
Danish strongholds in England. He also successfully campaigned
in Scotland and Wales and received the homage of the respective
Kings... [click
for more]
King Harold was crowned king
in 1066 and during his short reign fought two huge battles,
within twenty days of each other, against possibly the two
most powerful armies in Europe. He came within an ace of
defeating both of them and assuring his place in history
as one of the greatest mediaeval generals... [click
for more]
Thirteen years prior to the Battle
of Crecy Edward III, King of England, was besieging Berwick,
Scotland in support of Edward Balliol's claim to the Scottish
throne. The Scottish army of 1,155 cavalry and 13,500 infantry,
totalling 14,655 men, moved forward in an attempt to relieve
the siege... [click
for more]
The English army once again found
itself in France, under the leadership of Edward III. The
English were retreating northwards towards Flanders, closely
followed by a large French army under the command Philip
IV. Ten miles north of Abberville, the vastly outnumbered
English turned to give battle to the pursuing French army...[click
for more]
In response to a request from
the French king, Phillip VI, who had recently been defeated
by the English at Crecy, our lovable neighbours under their
king, David II of Scotland launched a pre-emptive raid into
England. The northern shires quickly raised an army of around
15,000 men and intercepted the Scots army, 20,000 strong,
at Durham...[click
for more]
The English had besieged and
captured Harfleur and were retreating to Calais, where they
intended spending the winter. During the march they were
cut off by a massive French army led by Charles d'Albret,
Constable of France. The battle was to be fought just east
of a small village called Agincourt. The name was to go
down in history...[click
for more]