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The Battle of Evesham 2025

1 Aug 2025 @ 4 p.m.
battle of evesham 2025.jpg
Ends: 3 Aug 2025

THE BATTLE OF EVESHAM 2025

760th Anniversary Festival - 3 days of medieval mayhem

NEW Tourney Arena for demonstrations and entertainment
NEW c13th Joust-Tourney on Friday
NEW Kenilworth Castle built on the Battle Arena
NEW Siege engine warfare attacking and defending the castle
NEW Presentation pavilion, historic academic and fiction talks
NEW Park and Ride/Stride
NEW Wargamers Barons War Festival in the Town Centre

900+ re-enactors, soldiers, archers & living history performers
20+ Knights on war-horses
Mass archery demonstrations
Authors talks and book signings
55+ medieval crafts traders
55+ modern artisan crafts traders
30+ food and drink stalls
GRAND PARADE Saturday 10am.

THIRTEENTH CENTURY JOUST/TOURNEE ON FRIDAY
Watch close-up in the Tourney Arena the, first style of medieval tourney, which developed into the jousts we see in Hollywood Films.

GRAND PARADE ON SATURDAY
All performers, Knights on their war horses will be march though the streets of Evesham in full armour and medieval costume, joined by musicians, dancers and our regional Mayors. All in a fantastic parade of colour and noise.

BATTLE REENACTMENTS SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
Including all soldiers, archers and mounted Knights, fighting to the death in medieval mayhem.

FREE TO ENTER (suggested donation £2 each)
Come and enjoy a spectacular weekend of medieval action and education in the heart of Evesham and next to the Avon, a riverside Market Town on the edge of the Cotswolds with a big part to play in history.

Including are full-on battle re-enactments, Living History camp displays, trade stalls catering for medieval and modern tastes, beer tent and a Grand Parade through the streets of Evesham.
The festival commemorates the defeat of Simon de Montfort in 1265, but celebrates the survival of his ‘Representative Parliament’ now we call this the House of Commons.

5,000 men died on Greenhill and in the streets of Evesham, either defending the Magna Carta or the restoration of the Monarchy, leading to the greatest shift in land ownership since the Norman Invasion.