Complete chronology
Full overview and deeper context for every journey step.
1386
Born to uncertainty
Henry V was not born expecting to become king. His father, Henry Bolingbroke, was a great nobleman and cousin to Richard II, but the politics of Richard's later reign made even the highest birth dangerous. The younger Henry's childhood was shaped by royal favour, exile, inheritance crisis, and then sudden dynastic revolution when his father returned in 1399 and became Henry IV. That background mattered. Henry inherited not a serene royal tradition, but a crown acquired by deposition and defended through rebellion. Later legends imagined him as the reckless prince transformed into a perfect king. The historical Henry was more disciplined and more serious: a ruler formed by instability, war, and the need to make Lancastrian kingship look legitimate.
He learned early that status could attract danger as easily as it brought power.
1390s
A prince in training
Henry's education was unusually practical. He received the training expected of a royal heir, but his real formation came through the problems his father's reign could not avoid: Welsh rebellion, financial pressure, noble mistrust, and the constant need to prove Lancastrian authority. He joined councils, negotiated with powerful men, and learned that kingship was performance backed by force. His piety, discipline, and concern for public order were not decorative qualities. They were political tools. He understood that the son of a usurper had to look more lawful, more purposeful, and more divinely favoured than kings whose title no one questioned.
Preparation for power mattered because he was raised in a world where power was never guaranteed.
1400s
Wales and hard lessons
The Welsh war was Henry's apprenticeship in the unglamorous realities of power. Owain Glyndwr's revolt was mobile, locally rooted, and difficult to crush. It demanded garrisons, supply, negotiation, punishment, and patience rather than one clean heroic victory. Henry was wounded in the face by an arrow at Shrewsbury in 1403 while fighting the Percy rebellion, a reminder that his later image as a warrior king was earned in real danger. Wales taught him how rebellion survived through terrain, loyalty, and time. It also taught him that conquest required administration after the battle. Those lessons would shape the methodical campaigns he later launched in France.
Before he won famous victories abroad, he learned persistence in a war that offered little romance.
1413
From heir to king
Henry's accession allowed the Lancastrian monarchy to reset itself. He reburied Richard II at Westminster, a gesture that acknowledged the wound of 1399 while claiming to heal it. He acted firmly against disorder, cultivated a reputation for religious seriousness, and presented himself as a king of law rather than faction. His early reign also dealt with threats, including the Southampton Plot of 1415, which revealed that dynastic doubts had not vanished. Henry's response was controlled and severe. Before he crossed to France, he worked to make England look politically aligned behind him. War abroad would only strengthen his crown if the realm believed the king's cause was legitimate.
He understood that before a king could conquer abroad, he had to look unshakeable at home.
1413–1415
A kingdom aligned
Henry's French campaign was not a youthful adventure. It was built through claims, negotiation, taxation, shipping, recruitment, and religious justification. The French kingdom was divided by civil conflict between Armagnac and Burgundian factions, while King Charles VI's mental illness weakened central authority. Henry saw opportunity in that disorder. He demanded territory and recognition of rights that reached back into the Hundred Years' War, then prepared for invasion when diplomacy failed to produce what he wanted. Parliament supported him, and the campaign was framed as lawful recovery rather than naked aggression. This framing mattered because Henry wanted victory to look like justice.
Military success begins not on the battlefield, but in the patient construction of support.
1415
Agincourt
Agincourt was born from danger. Henry had captured Harfleur, but disease weakened his army and the march toward Calais left his men hungry, tired, and exposed. The French blocked his route with a far larger force of nobles and men-at-arms. The English victory depended on terrain, mud, disciplined defensive positioning, and the devastating effect of longbowmen against crowded French attacks. It was not magic, and it was not inevitable. Henry's command mattered, but so did French overconfidence and battlefield conditions. The killing of prisoners remains one of the battle's grim controversies, rooted in fear that renewed fighting could overwhelm the English. Agincourt made Henry legendary, but the legend should not sand away the brutality.
A single victory can alter not only a war’s direction, but the scale of a ruler’s authority.
1416–1419
War without pause
Henry's greatness as a commander lies as much after Agincourt as at Agincourt. He did not settle for a celebrated raid. From 1417 he launched a sustained conquest of Normandy, taking Caen, Falaise, Rouen, and other strongholds through siege warfare and pressure. This phase was slow, expensive, and administratively demanding. Garrisons had to be supplied, towns governed, taxes collected, and loyalty managed. Henry combined severity with order, presenting himself as a rightful lord while using the hard tools of occupation. By converting battlefield prestige into territorial control, he forced French politics to reckon with him not as a raider but as a ruler.
His real strength was not just in dramatic battle, but in the grim patience that followed it.
1420
Heir to France
The Treaty of Troyes was the peak of Henry's achievement and the boldest expression of his ambition. Backed by Burgundian alliance after the murder of John the Fearless, the treaty disinherited the Dauphin Charles, married Henry to Catherine of Valois, and named him heir to the French throne after Charles VI. It did not mean all France accepted him. Large areas still supported the Dauphin, and the settlement rested on military occupation, factional division, and the continuing illness of the French king. Even so, Troyes transformed Henry's claim. He was no longer merely demanding lands; he was positioned as future king of France. The dream of dual monarchy seemed suddenly possible.
He turned victory into legitimacy by forcing war, marriage, and succession into the same political design.
1422 and beyond
A triumph cut short
Henry died at Vincennes in August 1422, probably from dysentery contracted on campaign, only weeks before Charles VI of France. He was thirty-five or thirty-six. His son Henry VI inherited the English crown as an infant and, under the terms of Troyes, the claim to France as well. But the entire structure depended on momentum, military pressure, Burgundian cooperation, and the authority of a king who was no longer alive. Henry V's reputation became immense: disciplined, pious, eloquent in later memory, and devastating in war. Yet his achievement was also fragile. He had nearly remade western European monarchy, but he died before conquest could become durable government. His legacy is therefore both triumph and warning: glory can outrun what institutions can hold.
His greatness is inseparable from the fact that his grandest success depended on a life that ended too soon.