By the afternoon of 29 August, the English fleet was off
Dungeness. Edward was sitting on the deck of his ship, with his knights and nobles, listening to his minstrels playing German airs, and to the singing of young
John Chandos. At 4:00 pm they sighted de la Cerda's force moving towards them with an easterly wind behind. The Castilians had become scattered and the English targeted their main body of approximately twenty-four vessels. When the
look-outs in the
tops reported the enemy in sight, Edward and his company drank to one another's health, the trumpet was sounded, and the whole line stood out. There being no effective naval artillery at the time, battles at sea consisted of grappling with and boarding enemy vessels. To ensure that the Castilians did not sweep past them on the wind, the English also ran before the wind, but with shortened sails so as to allow themselves to be overtaken. There seems to have been an hour before the fighting commenced. The difficulty of the manoeuvre is attested to by the King's own ship, the
Cog Thomas, striking the Castilian it was attempting to grapple so heavily as to spring the English ship's timbers. At the second attempt, it successfully grappled and archers deterred Castilians attempting to drop large rocks from their higher deck. The Castilian ships towered above the diminutive English ones; "like castles to cottages" as a contemporary wrote. Using scaling ladders the English men-at-arms boarded the Castilian ship and cleared its deck. Edward transferred his flag, as
Cog Thomas was clearly sinking. His son,
Edward Prince of Wales, had a similar experience, his men reportedly barely fighting their way aboard their opponent before their own ship foundered. Their assault was aided by
Henry of Lancaster attacking from the other side. La Cerda's crossbowmen caused many English casualties, firing from their elevated positions as the English closed and then attempted to board. The higher-built and heavier Castilian vessels were able to drop bars of iron or other weights on the lighter English vessels, causing serious damage. The conflict continued until twilight. At the close, the English vessel
La Salle du Roi, carrying the king's household, and commanded by the
Fleming Robert of Namur, was grappled by a larger Castilian and was being dragged off. A Flemish
valet of Robert's, named Hannequin, boarded the enemy and cut the
halliards of her
mainsail with his sword, allowing other English ships to catch the Castilian, and it was taken. The English are said to have captured between 14 and 26 of the enemy ships and it is possible that others were sunk. What their own losses were is not stated but, as Edward's own vessel and the vessel carrying the Black Prince were sunk, and from the near capture of
La Salle du Roi, it seems likely that the English fleet suffered heavily. Few, if any, prisoners were taken, and dead and wounded Castilians and Flemings were thrown overboard. Much of this action was visible from the English shore, and the clifftops near
Winchelsea were lined with spectators, which gave the battle its name. ==Aftermath==