Battle of Shrewsbury

Battle of Shrewsbury
Part of the Glyndŵr Rising

Death of Henry "Harry Hotspur" Percy, from a 1910 illustration by Richard Caton Woodville Jr.
Date21 July 1403
Location
Result English royalist victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of England House of Percy
Principality of Wales
Kingdom of Scotland
Commanders and leaders
Henry IV
Prince Henry (WIA)
Earl of Stafford 
Henry "Hotspur" Percy 
Earl of Worcester 
Earl of Douglas (POW)
Strength
14,000 14,000
Casualties and losses
Heavy Heavy, all surviving rebel leaders captured

The Battle of Shrewsbury was fought on 21 July 1403, waged between an army led by the Lancastrian King Henry IV and a rebel army led by Henry "Harry Hotspur" Percy from Northumberland. The battle, the first in which English archers fought each other on English soil, reaffirmed the effectiveness of the longbow and ended the Percy challenge to King Henry IV of England.

Part of the fighting is believed to have taken place at what is now Battlefield, Shropshire, England, three miles (5 km) north of the centre of Shrewsbury. It is marked today by Battlefield Church and Battlefield Heritage Park.