Page:Royalnavyhistory01clow.djvu/286

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252
MILITARY HISTORY, 1154-1399.
[1340.

maturing their plans. In the meantime the French weighed and dropped down towards the mouth of the estuary on which Sluis then lay. Knighton says, as far as Grogne; and one of the continuators of De Nangis says, in the direction of Catat; but no places bearing these names can he identified. How far, in the subsequent action, the English were assisted, either on land or afloat, by the Flamands is a matter of doubt. Edward's account of the subject is obscure. English writers deny that any assistance was rendered; and although some French and Flamand writers[1] assert that help was given, their versions of what occurred are vague and unsatisfactory.


The Lower Netherlands
(From a map by Thomas Kitchin, ex. 1750)

Nor have some other details, which would be of assistance to

  1. Cont. of De Nangis, iii. 102; Froissart, i. 107; 'Ann. Rer. Fland.' (Meyer), 141.