Footnote 445
The 15th century sources on this subject include:
Guillaume Gruel: "two thousand two hundred died there, as was said by the heralds and poursuivants." (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. IV, p. 319)
Jean de Wavrin: "... on the English side two thousand men died and two hundred were taken prisoner." (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. IV, p. 423)
Perceval de Cagny: "In this battle were killed from two to three thousand Englishmen; and Lord Talbot, Lord Scales, the son of the Earl of [Warwick] and from four to five hundred other Englishmen were captured." (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. IV, pp. 15 - 16)
Jean Chartier: "...and there were from two to three thousand dead and many prisoners." (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. IV, p. 68)
"Journal of the Siege of Orleans": "... around two thousand two hundred were left dead at that place, both Englishmen and 'false Frenchmen' [i.e., Burgundians and other English supporters], and the others put to flight..." (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. IV, p. 177)
"La Chronique de la Pucelle": "the death toll was estimated on the field by the English heralds at more than two thousand two hundred Englishmen." (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. IV, p. 243)
Enguerrand de Monstrelet puts the toll at: "around 1800 Englishmen, and there were from a hundred to 120 prisoners" (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. IV, pp. 373 - 374)
Lord Dunois testified that the English dead and captured were "more than four thousand". (For the original language, see Quicherat's "Procès...", Vol. III, p. 11)