Led by the young King Henry V, the weary English army – on foot – was attacked by a heavily armed and mounted French Army that outnumbered them five to one. At the end of the battle, more than 9,000 French soldiers and knights were dead. Exactly 112 English had been killed. The battle of Agincourt is well documented by at least 7 contemporary accounts, 3 of them by eyewitnesses. The approximate location of the battle has never been in dispute and the place remains relatively unaltered after 600 years.