Battle of Lunalonge

Battle of Lunalonge
Part of Hundred Years' War
DateLate May or early June 1349
Location
Limalonges, Deux-Sèvres
46°07′51″N 0°10′11″E / 46.1308°N 0.1697°E / 46.1308; 0.1697
Result Anglo-Gascon victory
Belligerents
France Anglo-Gascons
Commanders and leaders
Jean de Lille, Seneschal of Poitou (POW) Thomas Coke, Seneschal of Gascony
Strength
Approx 1,500 Approx 500
Casualties and losses
300 killed plus others captured Light, but all horses lost and baggage looted

The Battle of Lunalonge was fought in the summer of 1349 between a French force numbering approximately 1,500 men and an Anglo-Gascon force of some 500 men, during the first phase of the Hundred Years' War. The location of the battle is thought to have been modern Limalonges in Deux-Sèvres. The outnumbered Anglo-Gascons, commanded by Thomas Coke, gained the upper hand during the day, but had to withdraw on foot during the night because the French, under Jean de Lille, had captured their horses. The French lost approximately 300 killed and an unknown but large number captured, including their leader.


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