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  1. Sir Thomas Dagworth (1276 – 20 July 1350) was an English knight and soldier, who led the joint English-Breton armies in Brittany during the Hundred Years' War.

  2. The savage fight between the English force of Sir Thomas Dagworth and the Breton/French army of Charles of Blois outside the besieged Breton town of La Roche-Derrien on 20th June 1347 in the Hundred Years War.

  3. In Brittany, English forces under Sir Thomas Dagworth won two extraordinary victories over the army of Charles of Blois, the Valois-supported claimant to the Breton ducal coronet.

    • Clifford Rogers
    • 2005
  4. Approximately 4,000–5,000 French, Breton and Genoese mercenaries (the largest field army ever assembled by Charles of Blois) laid siege to the town of La Roche-Derrien in the hope of luring Sir Thomas Dagworth, the commander of the only standing English field army in Brittany at the time, into an open pitched battle.

  5. 27 de oct. de 2020 · Sir Thomas Dagworth of Dagworth, Suffolk (d. Jul/Aug 1350). Biography. Thomas was the son of Sir John Dagworth (b. 25 Apr 1276 Suffolk - d. 27 Jul 1332) of Dagworth, Old Newton and Thrandeston, Suffolk, and Alice FitzWarin.. He was an English knight and soldier, who led English armies in Brittany during the Hundred Years' War.

    • Male
    • Eleanor (Bohun) Dagworth
  6. 6 de feb. de 2018 · One of these men was Sir Thomas Dagworth, who was responsible for controlling the entirety of the peninsula region of Brittany – with a force of approximately 500 men. A practical, cunning, and perceptive soldier; Dagworth had been involved in the governing of the duchy for the better part of the decade.

  7. Within a week of their landing in June, the English had their first victory when Sir Thomas Dagworth, one of Northampton's lieutenants, raided central Brittany and defeated Charles of Blois at Cadoret near Josselin.