The Starvation of Rouen During the Siege …
Years: 1418 - 1418
December
The Starvation of Rouen During the Siege (December 1418)
By December 1418, after months under English blockade, the people of Rouen were reduced to eating cats, dogs, horseflesh, and even mice as famine ravaged the city. The streets were filled with starving citizens, their bodies weakened by hunger and disease, as the relentless siege took its toll.
I. The Expulsion of the Poor and Henry V’s Ruthless Strategy
- As food supplies dwindled, the city’s authorities made the grim decision to expel more than twelve thousand of the poor, hoping to preserve scarce resources for the defenders.
- However, King Henry V refused to allow the expelled civilians to leave the siege lines, ensuring that they could not find relief elsewhere.
- Trapped between the walls of Rouen and the English lines, the starving people were forced to live in a protective ditch dug around the city, where they slowly perished from hunger and exposure.
II. Christmas Day 1418: A Brief Moment of Mercy
- Even the English troops, witnessing the suffering, began to pity the starving people.
- On Christmas Day 1418, King Henry V granted a brief act of clemency, allowing two priests to distribute food to the famished populace.
- However, the charity lasted only for the day, and once Christmas ended, the people returned to their suffering, dying in the ditch outside Rouen’s walls.
III. The Siege Tightens: A City on the Brink of Collapse
- By the end of 1418, Rouen’s defenders and civilians alike were at the breaking point, facing one of the most brutal sieges of the Hundred Years’ War.
- Henry’s deliberate starvation tactics demonstrated his ruthless determination to break the city’s resistance, forcing Rouen to surrender in January 1419.
The starvation and suffering of Rouen’s civilians in December 1418 remains one of the most harrowing episodes of medieval siege warfare, showcasing both the brutality of war and the limits of human endurance.
Locations
People
- Bernard VII
- Charles VI of France
- Charles VII of France
- Charles of Orléans
- Henry V of England
- John the Fearless
Groups
Topics
- Hundred Years' War
- Armagnac-Burgundian Civil War
- Hundred Years' War: Resumption of the war under Henry V
