Andrew Knighton

Andrew Knighton is one of the authors writing for WAR HISTORY ONLINE

Articles by Andrew Knighton:

It Took A Huge Effort To Keep Armies Supplied During The Hundred Years War

Far from home and at constant threat of attack, the armies of the Hundred Years War between England and France were reliant on supply lines…

Who Led The Knights And How: Military Leadership In The Hundred Years War

The Hundred Years War was one of the most protracted wars of the Middle Ages. For over a century, the French and English monarchies battled…

When Allies Fight: Operation Torch and the Taking of North Africa

North Africa was one of the great battlegrounds of the Second World War. From early on, British and Commonwealth forces faced German and Italian troops…

Why the Allies did not see Hitler’s Ardennes Offensive Coming

On December 16, 1944, Allied troops were caught by surprise. A massive offensive by German forces struck west out of the Ardennes region, smashing into…

Massive Towers, Unbreakable Walls, Terrifying Siege Engines – This Was The Hundred Years War

As the sun rises over the battlefield, a column of knights gallops towards the assembled infantry. Banners flutter and arrows hurtle through the air as…

Ten Facts: The Race To Berlin – The Dramatic Closing Stages Of World War Two

The advance on Berlin in early 1945 didn’t only mark the final stage of World War Two in Europe. It also saw the first open…

The Battle of Pharsalus: How Caesar Won a Civil War While Outnumbered Two to One

The Battle of Pharsalus was one of the most important in Julius Caesar’s career. Fought on the 9th of August 48 BC, it was the…

Land Forces of the Hundred Years War – A War That Seemed To Have No End

Fought from 1337 to 1453, the Hundred Years War was one of the most significant conflicts of the late Middle Ages. As the Plantagenet kings of…

The Charge Of The Light Brigade: Britain’s Most Famous Military Disaster

Storm’d at with shot and shell, Boldly they rode and well, Into the jaws of Death, Into the mouth of Hell Rode the six hundred…

The Brutal Reality of Naval Warfare in the Hundred Years War

War at sea in the Middle Ages could be a terrible business. Rather than a firefight between ships, it consisted of fierce boarding actions with…

The Four Big Reasons Why The Romans Went to War

Ruthless conquerors and efficient warriors, we remember the Roman legions as a force that swept across Europe and the Mediterranean, crushing everything in their path.…

The Assault On Messines Ridge – Flanders, 1917

During the First World War, Flanders became some of the most hotly contested ground in military history. Thousands upon thousands of men died in trench…