much grieved on hearing the me- lancholy event of the battle of Azincourt, 348; fills up the va- cant places in the government occasioned by the misfortune at Azincourt, 350; a negotiation is opened for a truce between him and the king of England, 354 ; publishes an edict, complaining of the depredations of the Bur- gundians, 356; open war is de- clared between him and the Bur- gundians, 358; his garrison in Peronne carries on a severe war against the countries attached to the duke of Burgundy, 369; attacks Senlis, 390; sends am. bassadors to treat of a peace with the queen and the duke of Bur- gundy, ib.; raises the siege of Senlis, and returns to Paris, ib. ; peace is again attempted to be made between him and the Bur- gundians, 393; is compelled to ride through the streets of Paris with the Burgundians, 395; is conveyed to the Louvre, 397; he and the duke of Burgundy send captains for the defence of Rouen 402; is governed in all things by the duke of Burgundy, 406; sends an embassy to the English at Pont de l'Arche, 407; engages to espouse his youngest daughter Catherine to the king of England, 435; is wholly under the management of Henry V., 446; issues edicts, declaring Henry V. heir and regent of the realm, ib.; is very much degraded and humbled, 478; goes with Henry V. from Paris to Senlis, ib.; dies at his hôtel of St. Pol, 486; is buried at St. Denis, 487; news of his death is carried to the dauphin, 491
Charles VII. is crowned king by the nobles of his party at Poitiers, i, 491; many French lords turn to his party, 509; a maiden, named Joan, waits on him at Chinon, whom he retains in his service, 550; sends ambassadors to Paris to negotiate a peace with the re- gent, 551; sends a large rein- forcement to Orleans, 553; takes the field with a numerous body of chivalry and men-at-arms, 556; many towns and castles submit to him on his march, 557; arrives at Rheims, ib. ; is crowned by the archbishop, 558; his armies meet those of the duke of Bedford at Mont Epiloy, 559; sends ambas- sadors to the duke of Burgundy at Arras, 560; attacks Paris, 562; returns to Touraine and Berry, 563; some of his captains make an attempt on Corbie, 587; his party conquer the city of Chartres, 602; peace is concluded between him and the Burgundians, ii. 8; his queen is brought to bed of a
son, who is named Philip, after the duke of Burgundy, 28; the city of Paris is reduced to obedi- ence to him, 29; orders his cap- tains to reconquer some towns and castles from the English, 52; marches in person against Monte- reau, 53; makes his first entry into Paris, after its reduction, 55; account of the preparations for his entry into Paris, ib.; his dress and equipage, 56, 57; compels Roderigo de Villandras to make war on England, 74; the dauphin and many great lords quit his court in disgust, 90; refuses, or delays, to see the duke of Orleans on his release from England, 105; goes to Troyes in Champagne, 106; several towns and forts sub- mit to his obedience, ib. ; lays siege to Creil, 112; marches to the siege of Pontoise, 113; re- conquers Pontoise, 118; remon- strances are sent to him by the nobles assembled at Nevers, ib.; his answer, 119; marches an army to Tartas, 124; having gained Tartas, conquers St. Se- vere, and others in Gascony, 126; assembles an army to march into Normandy, 128; a truce is concluded between him and the king of England, 136; the truce between him and the king of Eng- land is renewed for eight months, 139; sends an embassy to Eng- land, 142; ditty found on his bed after his return from mass, 143; sends ambassadors to pope Ni- cholas V., 146; sends to England to complain of a breach of the truce by sir Francis de Surienne, in Normandy, 148; being satis- fied that the English had broken the truce, makes war against them, 152; summons Mantes to surrender, 156; makes his entry into Verneuil, 157; enters Evreux, 159; marches against Rouen,165; enters Rouen, 170, 172; leaves Rouen, 174; falls in love with Agnes Sorel, 175; various places in Normandy are taken by him, 181; besieges Caen, 182; makes his entry into that city, 185; the whole duchy of Normandy is re- duced to obedience to him, 187; account of the establishment of his army, 188; resolves to invade Guienne, 189; appoints the count de Dunois his lieutenant-general in Guienne, 191; the whole duchy of Guienne, with the exception of Bayonne, submits to him, 193; Bayonne surrenders, 197; de- clares war against the duke of Savoy, 200; sends ambassadors to the duke of Burgundy respect- ing peace in Flanders, 207; again conquers Bordeaux, 222; goes to his castle of Lusignan, 224; joins his army before Bordeaux, 227;
Bordeaux submits to him, 228; king of France sends an embassy to the king of Spain, 236; builds two castles at Bordeaux, to keep the inhabitants in subjection, ib.; seizes the territories of count d'Armagnac, 238; displeased with his son, takes possession of Dau- phiny, 239; receives an embassy from the king of Hungary at Tours, 247; recovers from a dan- gerous illness, takes under his wardship the lands of the youth of Rodemac, 253, 254; summons the duke of Burgundy to attend the trial of the duke of Alençon, 259; forbids the duke to attend, and orders him to send proxies, 260; his sentence on the duke d'Alençon, 261; summons the twelve peers of his realm to hear the sentence passed-transfers the court of justice from Mont- argis to Vendôme, 262; being in- formed that it was intended to poison him, falls sick and dies, 273; troubles and difficulties at the commencement of his reign- his glorious and great feats of arms, 275; solemn funeral ser- vices performed for him, 276; his courtesy to the English adher- ents of Henry VI., 351 Charles, son of Louis XI., born, ii.
393; married to the countess Margaret of Flanders, 452 Charles VIII. crowned at Rheims, 456; his entry into Paris, ib. ; his successful war in Brittany, 458; generously restores Rous- sillon to king Ferdinand of Arra- gon, 459; marries the duchess Anne of Brittany, 460; concludes a peace with Henry VII. of Eng- land, ib.; makes peace with the archduke of Austria, ib. ; coro- nation of his queen, 461; visits his province of Picardy, ib.; un- dertakes an expedition to recover the kingdom of Naples, ib.; ap- points a regency to govern during his absence, 462; takes leave of the queen at Grenoble, 464; crosses the Alps on his march to Naples, 465; makes his public entry into Turin, ib.; goes to Asti, where he is visited by Ludo- vico Sforza and his lady, 466; makes his entry into the town of Casal, 467; his reception at Pa- via, ib.; his progress from Pia- cenza to Lucca, 468; his reception at Lucca, 469; visits Pisa, and enters Florence with his whole army, ib.; makes his entry into Sienna Viterbo, and other towns, ib.; enters Rome as a conqueror with his army, 470; cures the king's evil by the touch, 471; what passed on his march from Rome to Naples, 472, 473; enters Naples in triumph, 473; attacks and takes the Castel Nuovo and
the Castel del Ovo, 474, 475; makes his public entry into Naples as king of that country and mo- narch of all Italy, 477; begins his return to France, ib.; defeats the confederated princes of Italy at Foronuovo, 479; decamps from Foronuovo to return to France, 480; goes to St. Denis-dies sud- denly at Amboise, 482, 483; funeral services performed for him, 483
Charles III. king of Navarre, ob-
tains the duchy of Nemours, i, 30; surrenders the castle of Cherbourg to the king of France, ib.
Charleton, captain, killed at the
battle of Verneuil, i, 511 Charolois, the count de, is sent by his father against Cambray, i, 335; is not permitted to combat the English, 338; buries the dead left on the plains of Azin- court, 347; takes the oath of allegiance to the queen and his father, 391; succeeds to the title and possessions of his father, John duke of Burgundy, 429. See Philip duke of Burgundy. Charolois, the duke Philip of Bur- gundy's only son, is promised the princess Catherine in marriage, ii, 70; his marriage with lady Isabella de Bourbon, 237; his quarrel and reconciliation with his father the duke of Burgundy, 246; the countess brought to bed of a daughter, 247; attends the coronation of Louis XI. at Rheims, 277; waits on king Louis XI. at Tours, and is mag- nificently entertained, 281; made lieutenant-general of Normandy, ib.; attends his father, the duke of Burgundy, during his illness, 282; imprisons three men and an apothecary at Brussels, 289; refuses his father's summons to pay his respects to the king, 292; makes heavy complaints against the lord de Croy to the deputies of the three estates assembled by his, father, 295; answer of the deputies-peace restored between him and his father, 297; comes to Lille to wait on his father, 300; the bastard de Reubempré attempts to take him in Holland, 301; arrives at Lille and waits on his father, 303; displeasure of the king on his imprisoning the bastard de Reubempré, ib.; answers the ambassadors from France, 305; sends sir James St. Pol, with a company of knights and gentlemen, to England to the marriage of king Edward, 306; a copy of his letters explaining why he had dismissed the lord de Croy and his friends from his father's service, 308, et seq.; scizes the castle of Launoy and gives it to
James de St. Pol, 311; takes leave of the duke of Burgundy and marches his army toward France, 317; besieges Beaulieu and crosses the Oise, 317, 318; advances to St. Denis, and draws up his army before Paris, 318; defeats the king at Montlehery, 321; his conduct after the vic- tory, 322; joined by the dukes of Berry and Brittany and others of the confederation, 323; death of his countess, 330; his treaty with the king at Conflans, 332; takes leave of the king and marches against the Liegeois, 334; enters the country of Liege, grants a truce, 336, 337; returns to his father at Brussels, 337; puts himself on his guard against the king, who makes warlike prepar- ations, 338; humbles the Liegeois, and grauts them peace, 344; or- ders his troops to meet him at St. Quentin, ii, 388 Charlotte of France, a natural daughter of Charles VII., mur- dered by her husband for adultery with his huntsman, ii, 425 Chartier, William, bishop of Paris, exhorts the king to choose wise counsellors, ii, 357
Chartier, John, bishop of Paris, dies, ii, 399
Chartres, siege of, by the dauphin,
i, 460; the city of, is conquered by Charles the VIIth's party, 602 Château-Gaillard, siege of, i, 421; is won by the king's men, 561 Château-Thierry, town of, yields to king Charles, i, 558 Château-Vilain, submits to the duke of Burgundy, i, 629 Chastel, the lord de, attacks the English fleet near Brest harbour, i, 25; undertakes an unsuccessful expedition against England, and is slain, 28
Châtelet, certain serjeants of the,
punished for ill-treating a priest of St. Paul's church, ii, 376 Châtillon, sir James de, negotiates a truce with the English ambas- sadors, i, 186
Châtillon, the lord de, conquers
Château-Thierry, i, 457
Châtillon, the French besiege, ii, 224 Chaunoy-sur-Oise castle is destroyed by the inhabitants, i, 601 Chavensy, siege of, ii, 30 Cherbourg, the town and castle of, surrendered to the English, i, 389; siege of, by the count de Riche- mont, ii, 187
Chimay, the lord de, his bold reply to king Louis XI. respecting the duke of Burgundy, ii, 287 Choisy, the castle of, i, 570 Cholet, Cassin, flogged for falsely alarming the citizens of Paris, ii, 358
Christians, the, war between them and the infidels in Lithuania, i,159
Church, plan for the union of the, i, 48; a meeting of the university and clergy is held on the state of the, 168; a general council of, held under the emperor Maxim- ilian and Louis XII. to the great discontent of the pope, ii, 503 Cisteaux, order of, i, 400 Clarence, the duke of, makes a descent on the French at la Hogue de St. Vos, i, 225; embarks a large army for Harfleur, 358; besieges Gisors and takes it, 420; is killed at the battle of Baguey in Anjou, 458; George, duke of, banished by king Edward, comes to France with the earl of War- wick, ii, 392; confined in the tower and drowned in a butt of malmsey, 437
Clark, Thomas, a Scotsman, hanged for robbing a fisherman of Paris, ii, 413 Classendach, captain, is killed at the siege of Orleans, i, 552 Clement, duke of Bavaria, elected emperor of Germany, i, 13; is conducted, with a numerous reti- nue, to Frankfort, ib. Clerc, John du, abbot of St. Vaast, in Arras, dies, ii, 287 Clermont, the count de, i, 33; is
sent to carry on a war against the English in Gasgony, ib. ; succeeds the duke of Bourbon, 161; de- feats sir Thomas Kiriel in Caen, ii, 179; is made governor of Bordeaux, 196
Clermont castle is besieged by the marshal de Boussac, i, 582; sir Thomas Kiriel is appointed go- vernor, 601; it is delivered up to the lord d'Auffremont, ib. Clery, near Orleans, the church of Notre-Dame, burned to the ground, ii, 399 Cleves, the count de, marries Marie, daughter of the duke of Burgun- dy, i, 46; the princess of, is married to the eldest son of the king of Navarre, ii, 69; duke of, attends the meeting of princes at Mantua, as proxy for his uncle the duke of Burgundy, 269; the duchess of, pleads to the duke of Burgundy for her father the count de Nevers, 326; goes to the duke at Brussels, 327 Clifford, lord de, i, 197 Clisson, Margaret de, i, 145 Clovis, king, i, 112 Clugnet, sir, de Brabant, assaults the town of Rethel, i, 186; he over- runs the country of Burgundy, ib.; treacherously obtains possession of Vervins, 216; the king's edict against him, 248; he and others raise an army and despoil the country of the Gatinois, 256 Cofferer's office, i, 232 Coeur, Jacques, judgment given against him, ii, 231, 232 Cohen, the lord de, i, 462
Colombel, sir William, the divorce of, from his wife, ii, 373 Colonna, the cardinal de, elected pope, i, 318, 371 Colonna, Prospero, sent by Leo X. with a force to join the emperor Maximilian, ii, 517; taken pri- soner, and carried to France, ib.
Combat, terms of, in an Arragonian
esquire's challenge, i, 5; between the seneschal of Hainault and three others, 26, 27; between Bournecte of Hainault and Solsier of Bunaige, of Flanders, 34; be- tween sir W. Battailler and sir John Carmien, 135; between the seneschal of Hainault and sir John Cornwall, 136; between three Portuguese and three French, 325; between Langnon, bastard d'Arly, and sir John le Blanc, 404; between Poton de Sain- trailles and Lionnel de Wandonne, 497; between Maillotin de Bours and sir Hector de Flavy, at Arras, 586; between sir John de Mello and the lord de Chargny at Arras, ii, 4
Comet, a marvellous one in the year 1477, ii, 436 Commerci, siege of, by Réné, duke of Bar, i, 634
Commercy, the heir of, takes the town of Ligny in the Barrois, i, 608
Compiègne, the townsmen of, admit the duke of Burgundy, i, 282; their reasons for this measure, ib.; is besieged by the king's army, 300, 301; the reduction of, to Henry V., 479; is de- livered up to the English, 506; surrenders to the French, 561; siege of, by the duke of Bur- gundy, after the capture of Joan d'Arc, 573; the siege of, raised by the French, 579
Conches, taken by the French, ii, 152
Condé, is won by Charles VII., ii, 166
what the king conceded to the count de Charolois, 332 Conspiracy, a dreadful one in Paris against the king, i, 352; the con- spirators seized and beheaded, 353 Constance, some account of the city of, i, 315; a council is held at, respecting the schism in the church, 318; the earl of Warwick and others from England attend the council of, 319; by authority of the council, the sentence against master Jean Petit is revoked, 351; another council is held at, where pope Martin is elected head of the church, 371 Constance, cardinal de, pleads for the king against the duke d'Alen- çon, ii, 260 Constantinople, besieged and cap- tured by Mahomet II., 228, et seq.
Conti, the lord de, slain at Milan, ii, 503
Conversan, Pierre de Luxembourg, count de, captured, i, 446; is liberated, 474
Convention of Arras is attended by the cardinals of Santa Croce and Cyprus, ii, 1 ; ambassadors arrive from England to, 2; ambassadors from France arrive at, 3; the cardinal of Winchester attends, 6 Coppin de Mesinacre is beheaded, ii, 64
Corbie, the town of, attacked by the French, i, 587 Corbeil, siege of, i, 383 Courtois, Simon, beheaded for trea- chery, ii, 442
Coustain, John, master of the ward-
robe to duke Philip of Burgundy, his disgraceful death, ii, 286 Courtray, besieged by the Ghent men, ii, 214 Covetousness, on, i, 63 Cordes, the lord des, his successes in Picardy, ii, 460; falls ill at Lyon, and dies, 462 Corlart de Forges, killed, i, 626 Coroam, William de, puts to flight
John de Beauvain, i, 622 Coucy, the damsel of, her marriage
with the count de Nevers, i, 134; castle of, is taken by prisoners confined therein, and the governor killed, 412 Coulogne-les-Vigneuses, siege of, i,
Coulomiers-en-Brie, the town of, Cône-sur-Loire, siege of, i, 482 taken by scalado, i, 584 Conecte, friar Thomas, preaches and Coulon, and other adventurers, cap- inveighs against the extravagant ture four-score Flemish vessels on dresses of the women, i, 546; the coast of Normandy, ii, 446 goes to Rome, and is burned, 610 | Courtjambe, sir James de, i, 128 Confederates, the Burgundians and Cramailles, Anthony de, is beheaded, Bretons, under the count de Cha- rolois, besiege Paris, ii, 359; pro- visions brought from Paris, on payment being made for them,387 Conflans, treaty of, between Louis
XI. and the confederated princes, ii, 331; a royal edict respecting
Craon, sir John de, lord of Dom-
mart, taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, i, 346 Craon, sir James de, is taken pri- soner at the castle of Dommart, i, 601
Craon, the lord de, his victory over the prince of Orange, ii, 433 Crasset, Perrinet, a famous adven- turer, i, 505
Creil, siege of, ii, 112 Crespy, siege of, i, 434; town of, surrenders to Philip duke of Bur- gundy, 435; won by the French, by scalado, 619 Crevant, siege of, i, 499; the Eng- lish and the Burgundians triumph, 501
Crevecoeur, the lord de, attacked by the French, i, 569; is sent to the French court to negotiate a mar- riage between the count de Cha- rolois and the king's second daughter, ii, 70
Crichton, sir William, has the guardianship of the young king of Scotland after the murder of James I., ii, 47
Croisade against Bohemia, i, 444; against the Turks by pope Nicho- las V., ii, 222
Cross, a miraculous white one, ap- pears in the heavens, to turn the English to the French, ii, 198
Crotoy, siege of, i, 499; treaty of, 502; the town and castle of, are surrendered to the duke of Bed- ford, 506; is conquered by sir Florimont de Brimeu, ii, 42; is besieged by the lord d'Auxy and sir Florimont de Brimeu, ii, 59 Croy, the lord de, made prisoner, i, 170; obtains his liberty, 207; nominated governor of Boulogne, ib.; sends aid secretly to the duke of Burgundy, 286; is slain at the battle of Azincourt, 344 Croy, the lord de, opposes the Ger- mans in Luxembourg, ii, 222; receives a grant from the king of the county and lordship of Guisnes, 290; labours to make peace with the count de Charolois, 329 Croy, sir John de, is arrested by orders of the queen of France, i, 278; escapes, 286; attacks the English, and is discomfited, ii, 34, 35; besieges Guines, 38; breaks up the siege to aid the duke before Calais, 41; attacks certain pillagers in the town of Haussy, 110
Cyprus, brother to the king of, comes to Paris, i, 353; the king of, is made prisoner by the Sara- cens, 583; the king is taken to Cairo, 534; the king is liberated, 535; the king of, dies, 605; the cardinal of, attends the conven- tion at Arras, ii, 1
D'AILLY, Peter, bishop of Cambray, i, 211
D'Airaines, siege of, i, 474 Dammartin, the lord de, condemned
for high treason, but banished to Rhodes, ii, 292; escapes from the bastile into Brittany, 311; makes an exchange with king Louis the XI. of his castle of Blancaffort for certain rights, 373; appointed grand master of the royal household, 377 Dampierre, lord de, i, 36; slain at the battle of Azincourt, 343 Daniel, a servant to Olivier le Daim, horrid accusations against, ii, 437, 438; hanged on the gibbet at Paris, 456 Darius, king, i, 92 D'Armagnac, the count, his body is taken up and decently interred, ii, 57
D'Auffremont, the lord de, is made prisoner by La Hire, i, 631 Daulphin, sir Guichart, appointed grand master of the king's house- hold, i, 149; he and others sent out of Paris, 268; slain at the battle of Azincourt, 343 D'Auxy, the lord, and sir Florimont de Brimeu, march to lay siege to Crotoy, ii, 58 Dauphinois, the, continue the war against the Burgundians, i, 401; take the town of Laigny-sur- Marne, 405; take the city of Soissons, 406; the dauphiness is sent to the dauphin, ib.; the dauphin carries on a vigorous war against the Burgundians, 414; retake Villeneuve-le-Roi, 457; defeat the duke of Clarence near Baugy, 458; advance to Alen- çon, 459; take Avranches, 472; assemble to raise the siege of D'Airaines, 474; the dauphin's lady, called the queen, is brought to bed of a son, who is christened Louis, dauphin of Vienne, 505. See Charles the dauphin, and Charles VII.
Dauphiny, the Burgundians are de- feated in, i, 578 Davencourt, the town and castle of, taken by the foreign companies in the service of the duke of Bur- gundy, i, 368
David de Combrebant is put to death, with his brother the young earl of Douglas, ii, 48
Dax, the city of, is regained from the French, ii, 127; is besieged by the count d'Albreth, 193; submits to the king, 194 Denis, sir, de Sainct Fleur, is beheaded, i, 613 Denisot de Chaumont, a butcher of Paris, his quarrel with the bastard of Bourbon, i, 229 Desrey, Pierre, beginning of his chronicles of Charles VIII., ii, 455
D'Estampes, the count, reconquers the town of St. Valery, i, 628; recovers the castle of Roullet from the men of the lord de Moy, ii, 72; marches an army into the
duchy of Luxembourg, 131; suc- ceeds to the duchy of Brittany, 262; makes prisoner the viscount d'Amiens, 269; quits the house of Burgundy and attaches himself to the king of France, 291 Devils, on what conditions they will assist wicked men, i, 76; an assemblage of, to destroy the king of France, 78 Devices of the Orleans men and the Burgundians, i, 42 Deymer, Jean, condemned and quartered for treason against the lord of Beaujeu, ii, 404 Dieppe, the town of, escaladed by the French, ii, 23
Digne, the bishop of, preaches before the council of Pisa, i, 139 Dijon, the king's palace at, burned down, ii, 493
Dinant, the inhabitants of the town of, insult the count de Charolois, 327; besieged and battered with cannon, 340; forced to surrender, plundered and demolished, 342 D'Ollehaing, the lord de, is rein- stated in his office of chancellor, i, 246
Domfront, siege of, i, 212 Dommart, fortress of, taken by the French, by scalado, i, 495 Dommart castle taken by the French, i, 600
Dommart, the lord de, is made prisoner by the French, ib. D'Orris, Michel, challenges the knights of England to combat, i, 5; his challenge answered by sir J. Prendergast, 6; his answers to sir J. Prendergast's letters, apo- logising for not fulfilling his en- gagement, 8; conclusion of his second letter, ib.; his second general challenge, 10; fourth letter, addressed to the knights of England, ib. Douay, heretics of, i, 474 Douglas, the earl of, defeats the lord Percy, and sir Thomas de Hauton, i, 155; is killed at the battle of Verneuil, 511 Dours, attacked by the English, ii, 107
Doyac, John, intercepts the duke of
Brittany's armour from Milan, ii, 326; has his ears cut off, and his tongue bored with a hot iron, 456 Dorset, the earl of, governor of Harfleur, invades the country of the Caux, i, 361 Dreaux, siege of, i, 468 Dress, changes of, in France, A.D. 1467, ii, 345 Dudley, captain, killed at the battle of Verneuil. i, 511 Dun-le-Roi, siege of, i, 218 Dunois, the count de, takes the city of Leiseux, ii, 156; takes posses- sion of Mantes, ib.; replies to the speech of master Guillaume, 158; gains the castle of Harcourt, 160; takes Argentan, 163; is
ordered by the king to join him against Rouen, 164; enters Rouen, 168; is appointed lieutenant- general in Guienne, 191; be- sieges Mont-Guyon, ib. ; enters Bordeaux, 194; besieges Bayonne, 196
Dunot is charged with an attempt to poison the duke of Orleans, and drowned, ii, 111
EARTHQUAKE, dreadful, at Naples and in Calabria, ii, 240 Eckeloo, the town of, is burnt by the marshal of Burgundy, ii, 212 Edelin, master Guillaume, repri- manded and imprisoned for having bound himself in servitude to Satan, ii, 235
Edward, duke of Bar, slain at the battle of Azincourt, i, 343 Edward, earl of Marche, eldest son to the duke of York, defeats queen Margaret of England, ii, 272; crowned king of England, ib.; gains the battle of Hexham, 300; marries the daughter of lord Rivers, 306; banishes the earl of Warwick and the duke of Cla- rence, 392; defeated by the earl of Warwick, flies to Burgundy, 394; returns with a great army and regains the kingdom, 396; sum- mons the king of France to restore the duchies of Guienne and Nor- mandy, 412; meets the king of France at Pecquigny-their con- ference, 417; causes his brother the duke of Clarence to be drownel in a butt of malmsey, 437; dies, 453
Egypt, the sultan of, determines to
conquer the whole kingdom of Cyprus, i, 527
Eichtfeld, battle of, between the duke of Burgundy, the duke of Holland, and the Liegeois, 120 Elephants, war, i, 29 Encre, church and town of, almost
entirely destroyed by fire, ii, 281 Engennes, sir John de, beheaded by order of the king of England, i,
England, a truce between France and, i, 52; custom in, of placing a crown beside the bed of their dying monarchs, 240; ambas- sadors arrive at Paris from, 322; assembles an army to invade France, 329; a meeting is held between Calais and Gravelines to negotiate respecting a peace with, ii, 73, 88; troubles in, between the dukes of York and Somerset, 199; civil war in, 236, 359; ambassadors from, denied access to the king of France, 269; slight mention of the rebellion and dis- cord in, 270; battle of Towton, queen Margaret defeated by Ed-
ward earl of Marche, 272; the earl of Warwick drives the French from the places they had won, 288; an embassy sent to king Louis XI., 292; battle of Hex- ham, 300; a truce concluded with France for twenty-two months, 374; Henry VI. delivered from the tower by the earl of Warwick, 394; return of Edward IV. from Burgundy, who regains the king- dom, 396; conference between king Edward and king Louis XI. at Pecquigny, 417; the duke of Clarence drowned in a butt of malmsey, 437; a peace concluded with Scotland, 452; succession of Henry VII. noticed, 458; Henry VIII. prepares to invade France, 508; battle of Spurs, 510 English, the, marching to reinforce the siege of Orleans, are met and attacked by the French, i, 549; make many conquests, 566; conquer the bulwark of Lagny- sur-Maine, 604; defeat La Hire at Le Bois, ii, 24; make excur- sions towards Boulogne and Gravelines, 32; make an excur- sion into the country of Santois, 89; make an inroad on the Bou- lonnois from Calais, 262 Englemonstier, burnt by the Ghent men, ii, 214
Enguerrand de Bournouville, attacks
the Armagnacs near Paris, i, 197; attacks them near Bourges, 222; is beheaded, 303 Erpingham, sir Thomas, i, 52; his gallant conduct at the battle of Azincourt, 340 Esparre, lord de l', arrested for
treason, and pardoned, ii, 237; again offends, and is executed, ib. Espineuse, sir Binet d', executed, i, 307; his body is taken from the gibbet and interred, 229 Essars, Anthony des, complaints against him, i, 232; enters the bastile with his brother, 242 Essars, sir Peter des, provost of Paris, arrests the ministers of finance, i, 147; is deprived of all his offices, 167; is reinstated in his office of provost, 190; flies for refuge, 238; is arrested and imprisoned, 242; is beheaded, 250.
Esternay, lord d', general of Nor- mandy, flies from Rouen in dis- guise, ii, 371; taken and drowned, 372
Estienette de Besançon, the wife of
a rich merchant, seduced by the count de Foix, ii, 388 Estouteville, sir Robert d', restored to the provostship of Paris, ii, 369; his gallant defence of Beau- vais, 402; dies, 444 Estrepagny, the castle of, is taken by storm, i, 561
Eu, the count d', arms in defence of the duke of Acquitaine, i, 250;
is taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, 346; is liberated and returns to France, ii, 70; king Louis XI's lieutenant, negotiates with the rebellious princes, 359; dies, 397
Eu, reconquered by the French from the count de Roussi, ii, 404 Eugenius IV. pope, is solicited by the emperor of Germany to con- tinue the general council at Basil, i, 591; sends the cardinal of Santa Croce to France to promote peace, 603; the Romans quarrel with him, 627; escapes to Flo- rence, ib.; a quarrel arises be- tween him and the council of Basil, ii, 70; sends bulls to divers parts of Europe against heresy and the council of Basil, 74; dies, 145
Eustache, friar, harangues the king, i, 245
Eustache, sir de Lactre, succeeds sir Reginald de Corbie as chan- cellor of France, i, 250 Everard de la Marche, destroys the town and castle of Orchimont, ii, 32
Evereaux submits to the king, ii,
FALAISE, siege of, ii, 185 Famechon, sir Peter de, beheaded, i, 204
Famine, a great one in France, ii, 61; rages in many places, 68; another great one, throughout France, in 1481, 449 Fassincault, captain, comes to Ge- noa to assist Boucicaut, i, 146 Fastolfe, sir John, commands the armament to reinforce the siege of Orleans, i, 549; is deprived of the order of the garter, 555 Fauquembergh, the count de, slain
at the battle of Azincourt, i, 344 Feast of the Golden Fleece, ii, 102 Fécamp, city of, is taken by the
marshal de Rieux, ii, 24; is recovered by the English, 54 Felix V., pope, relinquishes all claims to the papacy, ii, 147 Ferdinand, king of Arragon, dies, ii, 522
Ferry de Hengest, bailiff of Amiens, i, 185
Ferry de Mailly, taken prisoner by the duke of Burgundy, i, 350; obtains his liberty, ib.; invades the towns of Quesnel and Hang- est, 354
Finances of France, public report respecting, i, 230
Flanders, the three estates of, are
anxious for peace, ii, 213 Flanders, the countess of,dies, ii,449 Flavy, William de, murdered while shaving, by his wife, ii, 300
Flemings, the, their unruly beha- viour in the Burgundian army, i, 188; demand permission to return home, 191; forcibly re- treat, and commit many excesses, ib.; receive letters from Henry of England, 215; resolve not to break their truce with the Bur- gundians, ib.; march to the siege of Calais, ii, 35; their great pre- sumption, 37; resolve to leave the duke before Calais, 40; re- treat in disgrace, 41; again take up arms after their retreat from Calais, 44; send money to Douay, which is seized by the king's troops, 439; are admitted into Cambray, 444; make peace with the king, 452
Flisque, de, cardinal, offer of pardon to, i, 143
Flocquet, one of the king's com- manders, dies, ii, 282 Florence, conspiracy of the Pazzi at, ii, 435; entry of Charles VIII. into, 469
Florentines, pay their duty to pope John XXIII., i, 159 Florimont, sir, de Brimeu, conquers Crotoy, ii, 42
Foix, the count of, gains the town and castle of Mauléon, ii, 162; besieges Guischen castle, 177; falls in love with the wife of a rich merchant of Paris and se- duces her, 388
Folleville castle is taken by the English, ii, 89
Fontaines-Lavagam, siege of, i, 433 Fontenoy, the castle of, besieged, i, 218
Forbier, Louis, lieutenant-governor of Pontoise, admits the Burgun- dians into the town, ii, 365 Foronuovo, the battle of, ii, 479 Fosse, the town of, is burned by the lord de Croy, i, 575 Fougares is taken by sir Francis de
Surienne, ii, 148; surrenders to the duke of Brittany, 173 Fradin, Anthony, a Cordelier friar, preaches at Paris, and is after- wards banished, ii, 439 France, the marshal of, goes to England to the assistance of the prince of Wales, i, 28; the duke of Burgundy's petition relative to the internal state of, 39; the clergy of, summoned to meet the king on the subject of church union, 48; the prelates and clergy of, summoned to Paris, 87; a reformation in the finances of, resolved on, 147; a tax is laid on the clergy of, by pope John, 174; a civil war breaks out in several parts of, 185; re- port respecting the abuses in the government of, 229; proposi- tions for restoring peace to the kingdom, 255; the ringleaders of the rioters are banished from, 267; a heavy tax is laid on the
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