Abstract
The prospects of victory looked good to duke René when he chose to attack count Antoine de Vaudemont and his Burgundian supporters near Bulgnéville in Bar, on 2 July 1431.1 Charles VII of France had sent him a force led by the renowned ‘knight without reproach’, Arnauld-Guilhem, lord of Barbazan. René also had detachments formed by his Lorraine vassals and German allies altogether numbering about 7500, but his ordnance was scanty and his soldiers included few skilled bowmen. Vaudemont, who was claiming the duchy of Lorraine, only had an army of about 4000 but it included bowmen from the Flemish towns of his ally the duke of Burgundy and 400 more led by two experienced English captains. He also enjoyed the services of the great Burgundian commander, Antoine de Toulongeon, and formidable artillery: men of all ranks were ordered to fight on foot on pain of death. Against the advice of Barbazan and other older knights René decided to attack the enemy in their good defensive position, protected by a stream and fortified by ditches and palisades. Vaudemont was apparently assisted by an omen: a stag ran between the armies, stopped, beating its hooves three times on the earth, and then dashed amongst René’s forces causing confusion.2 René’s men were subjected to devastating fire from the Burgundian cannons and arrows and Barbazan was soon killed.
Access this chapter
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Purchases are for personal use only
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
Notes
B. Schnerb, Bulgnéville (1431): L’Etat bourguignon prend pied en Lorraine (Paris: 1993) pp. 73–87.
Thomas Basin, Histoire de Charles VII, ed. and trans. C. Samaran, 2 vols (Paris: 1964) 1, pp. 173–9.
La Chronique d’Enguerran de Monstrelet, 1400–1444, ed. L. Doüet-d’Arcq, 6 vols (Paris: 1857–62) 4, pp. 461–5.
For a useful study of the apanagiste princes see A. Leguai, ‘Royauté et principautés en France aux xive et xve siècles: l’evolution de leurs rapports au cours de la guerre de cent ans’, Le Moyen Age, 101 (1995) pp. 121–35.
Chronique de Jean Le Févre, Seigneur de Saint-Remy, ed. F. Morand, 2 vols (Paris: 1876–81) I, pp. 125–37.
G. du Fresne de Beaucourt, Histoire de Charles VII, 6 vols (Paris: 1881–91) 1, p. 236; Vale, Charles VII, pp. 22–31.
J. d’Orliac, Yolande d’Anjou, la reine des quatres royaumes (Paris: 1933).
Vallet de Viriville and M. Deprez, ‘Advis à Isabelle de Bavière: Mémoire Politique Adressé à Cette Reine Vers 1434’, Bibliothèque de l’École des Chartes (1866) 27, pp. 128–57.
E. Sassé, ‘Un “miroir du prince” du xve siècle: l’avis à Yolande d’Aragon’, Bulletin de l’Association des amis du Centre Jeanne d’Arc, 19 (1995) pp. 145–8.
Queens and Queenship in Medieval Europe, ed. A.J. Duggan (Woodbridge: 1997) ‘Introduction’, p. xv.
B. Chevalier, ‘Marie d’Anjou, une reine sans gloire, 1404–63’, in Autour de Marguerite d’Écosse: reines, princesses et dames du xve siècle, ed. G. and P. Contamine (Paris: 1999) pp. 81–98.
J. de Bourdigné, Histoire Agregative des Annales et Chroniques d’Anjou (Angers: 1529) f. cxxviii.
J. Chartier, Chronique de Charles VII, ed. Vallet de Viriville, 3 vols (Paris: 1858) 3, p. 269.
J.H. Albanès, ‘La bibliothèque du Roi René’, Revue des Sociétés Savants des Départements, 5th Series, 8 (1875) pp. 301–11.
J.A. Cherrier, Le Roi René en Lorraine (Marseille: 1895) p. 14.
Dom A. Calmet, Histoire de Lorraine, 6 vols (Nancy: 1748) 3, pp. 536; Le Févre, 2, p. 258.
R. Vaughan, Philip the Good: the Apogee of Burgundy (Woodbridge: 2000) passim.
M.J. Schneider, ‘Lotharingie, Bourgogne ou Provence? L’Idée d’un royaume d’entre-deux aux derniers siècles du Moyen Âge’, Liège et Bourgogne (Paris: 1972) pp. 15–44.
M.R. Reynaud, Le Temps des Princes: Louis II et Louis III d’Anjou-Provence, 1384–1434 (Lyon: 2000) p. 100.
Jean de Waurin, Recueil des croniques et anchiennes istoires de la Grant Bretaigne, ed. W. and E.L.C.P. Hardy, 6 vols (London: 1864–91) 5, pp. 96–7.
P. Contamine, ‘Jeanne d’Arc de Chinon à Paris: l’action militaire, le jeu politique’, in De Jeanne d’Arc aux Guerres d’Italie: figures, images et problèmes du xve siècle (Orleans: 1994) pp. 77–83.
R. Pernoud and M.-V. Clin, Joan of Arc: Her Story, ed. and trans. J. du Quesnoy Adams (London: 2000) pp. 77–8.
Chastellain, G., Oeuvres, ed. Kervyn de Lettenhove, 8 vols (Brussels: 1863–66) ‘Chronique’, 2, p. 44.
Bouvier, p. 149; T. Basin, Histoire de Charles VII, ed. and trans. C. Samaran, 2 vols (Paris: 1964) 1, pp. 175–7.
P. Mechineau, Les Chevaliers de la Victoire: Pierre de Brézé ministre de Charles VII, 1408–1465 (Cholet: 1986) pp. 72–3.
G. Gruel, Chronique d’Arthur de Richemont, 1393–1458, ed. A. Le Vavasseur (Paris: 1890) p. 142.
D.M. Bell, L’Idéal Éthique de la Royauté en France au Moyen Age (Geneva, Paris: 1962) pp. 75–131.
J. Krynen, L’Empire du roi: idées et croyances en France xiiie–xve siècles (Saint-Amand, Cher: 1993) pp. 187–204 and passim.
P. Marchegay, ‘Deux lettres-Patentes du Roi René’, Revue de l’Anjou, 2 (1853) pp. 195–9.
H. Bellugou, Le Roi René et la Réforme Fiscale dans le Duché d’Anjou au milieu du xv siècle (Angers: 1962) p. 14.
The insurgents used triques or cudgels to belabour royal officials. P. Marchegay, ‘Sédition à Angers, dite la Tricotterie’, Revue de l’Anjou, 2 (1853) pp. 268–70.
R. Bousquet, ‘La Provence’, in Histoire des Institutions Françaises au Moyen Âge, ed. F. Lot and R. Fawtier, 3 vols (Paris: 1957) 1, pp. 249–66.
P. Marot, ‘Le Moyen Age, 959 à 1477’, Histoire de Lorraine (Nancy: 1939) pp. 119–20.
A. Bouton, Le Maine: Histoire Economique et Sociale xive, xve et xvie siècles (Le Mans: 1970) p. 64.
E. Ashtor, Levant Trade in the Later Middle Ages (New Jersey: 1983) passim.
N. Valois, Le Conseil du roi aux xiv, XVe et xvie siècles (Paris: 1888) pp. 250–9.
M. Mollat, Jacques Coeur ou l’esprit d’entreprise au xV siècle (Mesnil-sur-Lestrée: 1988) pp. 291–4.
M. Chaillan, Le Roi René à son Château de Gardane: étude sur les conditions d’exploitation agricole en Provence au xve siècle (Paris: 1909) passim, spelt ‘Gardanne’ in recent times. See Chapter 4.
Copyright information
© 2008 Margaret L. Kekewich
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Kekewich, M.L. (2008). Anjou, Bar, Lorraine and Provence. In: The Good King. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230582217_2
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230582217_2
Publisher Name: Palgrave Macmillan, London
Print ISBN: 978-1-349-54201-7
Online ISBN: 978-0-230-58221-7
eBook Packages: Palgrave History CollectionHistory (R0)