White Company

The White Company (Italian: Compagnia Bianca del Falco) was a 14th-century English mercenary Company of Adventure (Italian: Compagnia di ventura), led from its arrival in Italy in 1361 to 1363 by the German Albert Sterz and later by the Englishman John Hawkwood. Although the White Company is the name by which it is popularly known, it was initially called the Great Company of English and Germans[1] and would later often be referred to as the English Company (It: Compagnia degli Inglesi, L: Societas Angliciis).

Funerary Monument to Sir John Hawkwood, fresco on canvas by Paolo Uccello (1436).

Origins of the name

No medieval source explains the company's name.[2] The traditional view is that it is a reference to the brightly polished armour of the men-at-arms.[3] However, William Caferro has suggested that it was because the Company originally wore white surcoats.[4] This view might be supported by the fact that mercenaries led by Arnaud de Cervole in France at this time were known as bandes blanches.[5]

Makeup of the company

Despite it being commonly referred to as the English Company, personnel were drawn from a wide range of nationalities, reflecting the international nature of Italian mercenary warfare in the 14th century, including at various times Germans, Italians and Hungarians but mostly English and French veterans of the Hundred year's war.[6] The numbers of men in the Company varied over the years. In 1361, it is recorded as having 3,500 cavalry and 2,000 infantry. At its lowest ebb in 1388, it had a mere 250 men.[7] The company was organised in lances of three men; a man-at-arms, a squire and a page. Of these, only the man-at-arms and squire were armed.[8] These lances were organised into contingents, each under a corporal, who was often an independent sub-contractor.[6] This structure gave the Company a certain democratic element and it is thought that John Hawkwood first gained command of the Company in 1365 by election.[9] The company contained numbers of infantry, particularly English longbowmen.[10] These could be mounted on horses as were the 600 involved in the Battle of Castagnaro in 1387. In addition to its military structure, the Company had an administrative staff, usually Italian, of chancellors and notaries who managed the legal and contractual aspects of the Company's relationship with its employers, and a treasurer to handle its financial affairs. The White Company's treasurer was an Englishman, William Thornton.[11]

Tactics

The White Company is credited with introducing to Italy the practice of dismounting men-at-arms in battle,[12] a practice already commonplace in the battles of the Hundred Years' War in France. Contemporary witnesses record that the Company fought dismounted and in close order, advancing with two men-at-arms holding the same lance at a slow pace while shouting loud battle cries. The longbowmen apparently drew up behind.[13][14] This is not to suggest that they abandoned mounted combat altogether. The Battle of Castagnaro was won by a cavalry charge.[15]

Battles

The White Company was involved in the following battles[16]

The Company was also involved in a large number of skirmishes, sieges and attacks on towns. Less honourable was their participation in the Massacre at Cesena in 1377, when several thousand civilians were killed.[17]

The White Company is the title of a novel by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle which is very loosely based on the historical company. Unlike the historical company, the main focus of the action is in Spain and the White Company led by Bertrand de Guesclin to Spain in 1366 was also an inspiration.[18] The book was popular as an adventure novel, its well-chosen title raising the profile of the historical company among a lay readership.[19]

See also

References

  1. Caferro, William. John Hawkwood: An English Mercenary in Fourteenth-century Italy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0-8018-8323-1 p.46
  2. Caferro (2006), p.47
  3. Mallet, Michael: Mercenaries and their Masters, Bodley Head, London, 1974 ISBN 0-370-10502-8 p. 37
  4. Caferro (2006) p.47
  5. Cooper, Stephen. Sir John Hawkwood: Chivalry and the Art of War. Barnsley: Pen and Sword, 2008. ISBN 978-1-84415-752-5 p.79
  6. Caferro (2006), p.66
  7. Cooper (2008), pp.76-7
  8. Caferro (2006), p.88
  9. Mallett (1974), p.39
  10. Caferro (2006) p.75
  11. Caferro (2006) p.67
  12. Mallett (1974), p.37
  13. Caferro (2006), pp48-9
  14. Cooper (2008), pp.76-7
  15. Cooper (2008), pp.137-140
  16. Cooper (2008)
  17. Caferro (2006), pp188-190
  18. Urban, William Medieval Mercenaries, Greenhill Books, 2006, ISBN 978-1-85367-697-0 pp141-3
  19. Urban (2006), pp.138 - 142
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