By mid August 1549,
Humphrey Arundell, the leader of the rebel troops, regrouped his forces at
Sampford Courtenay,
Devon, when he received a promise that 1,000 men from
Winchester would join his force. This would be the site of the fifth and final battle of the
Prayer Book Rebellion. Unknown to Arundell, there was an informer in his camp – his own secretary John Kessell, who had been supplying intelligence of Arundell’s movements and plans to President of the
Council of the West,
John Russell, 1st Earl of Bedford, from the start. Russell moved his forces out on 16 August, camping overnight at
Crediton. On the next morning, scouts from both sides bumped into each other, resulting in a
skirmish and the capture of a Cornish captain named Maunder. With the 1,000 men from Winchester failing to materialise, the main force of the rebel army had dug in on high ground just outside Sampford Courtenay, while a detachment led by Humphrey Arundell waited in the village itself. They knew that this was to be their last stand and the rebels were on their own against Russell’s army, which outnumbered them greatly. ==Events of the battle and its aftermath==