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To: yankeedame
Good morning.
"William of Normandy, v. Odo of Bayeux Harold Godwinson"

Actually, Bishop Odo was William's brother, not his enemy, and Odo rode into battle against the Saxons wearing a white cleric's robes and swinging a club rather than a sword. Clerics weren't supposed to shed blood.

I believe this battle is one of the most important in Western European history.

Michael Frazier
10 posted on 10/14/2006 8:01:26 AM PDT by brazzaville (no surrender no retreat, well, maybe retreat's ok)
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To: brazzaville

It was a battle and outcome that shaped the political face of Europe for all subsequent history. It was to the ultimate social construct of England as what the The Hundred Years War and the Battle of Crecy were to the concept of nation-statehood and sovereignty across the European continent. Having been posted to Europe for eight of my 30 years and being a military history buff, I walked the Hastings battlefield and noted the valley bowl that denied maneuver to the ragtag group of Brits. Given the venue of the battle, it wouldn't have made any difference in the outcome if the English fighters still enroute at the outset of the battle had made it to the dance on time. William had the English in the same type of narrow, non-maneuver space that keep the Persians in check for four days at Cannae in 416 B.C. when the Greeks keep the Persians bottled-up until force of Persian numbers (1,200,000 v. barely 3,000) simply overwhelmed the defenders.


14 posted on 10/14/2006 8:54:40 AM PDT by middie
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