The battle lasted around 4 hours and each side had about 15,000 fighting men. 1,500 men were killed and both sides claimed victory in this indecisive battle, the first of many encounters over the next 4 years.
Although there is not much evidence of the battle on the ground today we were able to walk over the Royalist positions on the southern part of the battleground.
Dragoons and musketeers from both sides hid in the hedges on the flanks of the battlefield
The trees on the slope at Edgehill were planted 100 years after the battle
Royalist Pikemen, Musketeers, Cavalry and canon ...
had to make their way down this slope to the battle line
Looking from the battlefield towards Avon Dassett
Ridge and furrow, as seen here, covered the battlefield
Effigy of Captain Henry
Kingsmill in St Peters, Radway, a Royalist officer killed during the battle
Princes Charles and James (our future kings) stayed here in Arlescote
on the night before the battle
The memorial to the Battle of Edgehill
on the B4086, south of Kineton, Warwickshire
A good walk on a cool sunny day.
Best
Anne
Walk The Landscape