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'...
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Dagworth may refer to: Dagworth, Suffolk, a hamlet in Old Newton with Dagworth civil parish in Suffolk, England Dagworth Station, a cattle station in Queensland...
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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...
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Saint-Sardos) and took Angoulême, while the forces in Brittany under Sir Thomas Dagworth also made gains. The French responded in the spring of 1346 with a...
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alleged cruelty is explained by his desire to avenge the death of Thomas Dagworth.[citation needed] Whatever the cause, the fight was arranged in the...
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(2018-02-06). "Death, Treachery, & a Victory Against the Odds: Sir Thomas Dagworth & the Battle of la Roche Derrien". The Postgrad Chronicles. Retrieved...
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recalled and Thomas Dagworth was appointed as deputy lieutenant. It was during a tour through the English strongholds on 9 June that Dagworth and his escort...
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firstly, James Butler, 1st Earl of Ormonde, and, secondly, Thomas Dagworth, 1st Baron Dagworth. John de Bohun, 5th Earl of Hereford (About 1307 – 1336)...
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husband Charles of Blois was taken prisoner by the English in 1347. Thomas Dagworth was the official captor of her husband. He was released nine years...
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John of Montfort. The commander of the Anglo-Breton faction was Sir Thomas Dagworth, a veteran professional soldier who had served with his overlord King...
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