Keen On America

Are We Still Fighting the Hundred Years War? Why Joan of Arc, Agincourt, and the Black Death Aren't Quite Dead

Oct 22, 2025
Michael Livingston, a historian from The Citadel and author of Bloody Crowns, dives into the complex legacy of the Hundred Years' War. He argues this pivotal conflict didn’t just end in 1453 but evolved into a 200-year struggle that shaped modern colonial rivalries. He explores how this war forged national identities for France and England, the brutal realities of medieval warfare, and the enduring impact of figures like Joan of Arc. Livingston's insights reveal that understanding this conflict is essential for grasping contemporary geopolitical tensions.
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INSIGHT

The War That Became Global

  • The Hundred Years' War extended beyond 1337–1453 into a longer conflict shaping imperial rivalry.
  • Michael Livingston argues the rivalry moved global after continental fighting ended and seeded later colonial wars.
INSIGHT

Periodization Is A Later Invention

  • The 100 Years label is a later invention and conceals the period's complexity.
  • Livingston broadens the timeline to capture causes and outcomes across Europe and time.
INSIGHT

The War That Made Modern War

  • The war drove transformations like gunpowder, regular armies, taxation, and administration.
  • These institutional changes helped birth features of the modern state and warfare.
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