Facsimile of the "Agincourt Carol" in the Trinity Carol Roll (Trinity MS O.3.58)Facsimile of the Selden Carol Book version of the "Agincourt Carol" (15th century). Oxford, Bodleian Library, Manuscript Archives
The "Agincourt Carol" (sometimes known as the Agincourt Song, the Agincourt Hymn, or by its chorus and central words, Deo gratias Anglia) is an English folk song written some time in the early 15th century. It recounts the 1415 Battle of Agincourt, in which the English army led by Henry V of England defeated that of the French Charles VI in what is now the Pas-de-Calais region of France.
The carol is featured in Laurence Olivier's 1944 film Henry V.[3] The composer Ernest Farrar created his 1918 Heroic Elegy: For Soldiers on the basis of the Agincourt Carol.[4]
The pattern of a strophe (verse) sung in English followed by a burden (chorus) in Latin followed a structure typical of the religious carols of the period.[6]
^Hayward, Paul. "The Agincourt Carol". Medieval Primary Sources—Genre, Rhetoric and Transmission, Department of History, Lancaster University. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
^Roden, Timothy; Wright, Craig; Simms, Bryan (2010). Anthology for Music in Western Civilization. Vol. 1. Boston, MA: Schirmer. p. 41. ISBN978-0-495-57274-9.
YouTube Interpretation by The Young Tradition (Peter Bellamy. Royston Wood, Heather Wood), with David Munrow on shawm, Roddy and Adam Skeaping on viols, and Christopher Hogwood on percussion.