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Anglo-French War (1746–1763) – also known as the Carnatic Wars; Anglo-French War (1756–1763) – part of the Seven Years' War and its peripheral conflicts; Anglo-French War (1778–1783) – part of the American Revolutionary War and its peripheral conflicts; Anglo-French War (1793–1802) – part of the French Revolutionary Wars and ...
This category contains historical battles fought as part of the Anglo-French Wars (1109–1815). Please see the category guidelines for more information. Subcategories
Anglo-French War (1557–1559) Location: Pale of Calais. Siege of Calais (1558) Kingdom of France Kingdom of England: French Victory French Wars of Religion (1562–1628) First War (1562–1563) Second War (1567–1568) Third War (1568–1570) Fourth War (1572–1573) Fifth War (1574–1576) Sixth War (1576–1577) Seventh War (1579–1580)
The Anglo-French War was a major medieval conflict that pitted the Kingdom of France against the Kingdom of England and various other states. It was fought in an attempt to curb the rising power of King Philip II of France and regain the Angevin continental possessions King John of England lost to him a decade earlier.
Vergennes, foreign minister of France, worried that a war over the Bavarian succession would upset his plans against Britain. Ever since the Seven Years' War, France's Foreign Ministers, beginning with Choiseul, had followed the general idea that the independence of Britain's North American colonies would be good for France and bad for Britain, and furthermore that French attempts to recover ...
1722–1723 Russo-Persian War; 1727–1729 Anglo-Spanish War – 15,000 killed in action [1] 1733–1738 War of the Polish Succession – 88,000 killed in action [1] 1735–1739 Russo-Ottoman War; 1740–1748 War of the Austrian Succession – 359,000 killed in action [1] 1740–1763 Silesian Wars; 1741–1743 Russo-Swedish War; 1745–1746 ...
The Gascon War, also known as the 1294–1303 Anglo-French War or the Guyenne War [1] (French: Guerre de Guyenne), was a conflict between the kingdoms of France and England, the ruling family of England, the House of Plantagenet, held Gascony as a fief of the King of France following the Treaty of Paris (1259).
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