Marchant, Andrieu, appointed pro-
vost of Paris, i, 268 Marche, de la, count, defeated at Yeure-la-Ville, i, 205; goes into Italy, and marries Johanna queen of Naples, 348 Marêts, Charles des, is appointed governor of Dieppe, i, 23 Margaret, the duchess, heiress of Flanders, i, 31; dies, 33 Margaret, queen of England, de- feated by Edward earl of Marche, seeks aid from the Scots, ii, 272; goes to France, to require aid of her cousin-german the king, 283; her hard fortune, and singular adventure with a robber, 290; holds a conference with the duke of Burgundy, ib.; visits Louis XI. with her son the prince of Wales, 393; her honourable re- ception at Paris, 394; the victory of king Edward and death of her son, 396; is ransomed by the king of France, 425 Marignano, the battle of, between the Swiss and Francis I. ii, 518
Mark, sir William de la, levies a
war against the bishop of Liege and kills him, ii, 451 Marle, Henry de, fearful of arrest, promises to pay a large sum to the king, i, 238
Marle, the count, is slain at the battle of Azincourt, i, 344 Marle, siege of, ii, 108 Marmonde, the town of, admits
Charles VII., ii, 126 Martelet, sir du Mesnil, taken prisoner by the duke of Burgundy, i, 350; is tortured and hung, ib.
Martin, king of Arragon, i, 26 Martin, pope, i, 318; is elected head of the church by the council of Constance, 371; adjourns the council of Constance, 400; sends a croisade against Bohemia, 445; sends his bull to John duke of Brabant, 523, declares the mar- riage between the duke of Glou- cester and Jacqueline duchess of Bavaria void, 535 Mary of Anjou, dowager queen of France, dies, ii, 293 Mary, dowager countess of Blois, i. 44
Mary, the princess, sister to Henry VIII. of England, is married to Louis XII. ii, 513; makes her public entry into Paris, 514 Massa, a burgh and castle, visited
by Charles VIII. in his march through Italy, ii, 468 Mathagon, captain, lays siege to St. Severin, ii, 630
Matthew, count de Foix, i, 33 Matthew, bastard of Bourbon, made prisoner at Foronuovo, ii, 480 Maucour, the lord de, beheaded by orders of Henry VI. i, 512 Maufroy, sir, de St. Leger, and the
bastard de St. Pol lead an army | Mohammedism, origin of, i, 66 into Barrois, i, 514 Monchas castle in Normandy is Maugué, John, killed at Paris by taken by the French, i, 606; the bursting of a bombard, ii, 422 siege of, 628 Mauleon castle taken by the count| de Foix, ii, 162
Mauroy, sir, de St. Leger, takes the castle of Chaulnes, i, 355; in con- junction with Jean d'Aubigny, invades and pillages Lihon, ib. Maximilian, duke of Austria, sends ambassadors to Louis XI., ii, 440; defeated near Therouenne, 445; concludes a truce, 446; seizes the town of Arras, 460; concludes a peace with Charles VIII., ib.
Maximilian, the emperor, joins the league of Cambray, ii, 500; as- sembles a large army to attempt the conquest of the Milanese, and drive the French from Italy, 522; marches away from Milan,
Meaux, siege of, i. 468; is stormed,
472; surrenders, 475 Medici, Guiliano de, assassinated by the Pazzi at Florence, ii, 435; Lorenzo de, wounded, ib.; Pietro de, places himself under the pro- tection of Charles VIII., 468 Mello, sir John de, a Spanish knight, combats the lord de Chargny, ii, 4; his dress during the combat, 5; fought with his vizor up, ib.
Melun, siege of, i, 208; surrender of the town and castle of, 449 Menau, sir Pierre de, beheaded, i, 304
Mercq castle besieged, i, 35; the
French totally defeated at, 36 Merville, the lord de, taken prisoner and hanged by the Burgundians and Bretons, ii, 385
Metz, siege of, ii, 140; treaty of, 141 Meulan, the bridge of, is besieged by the English, ii, 23 Meun de Châtel, an assembly held at, respecting the murder of the duke of Orleans, i, 156 Mezieres, sir Philip de, i, 107 Milan, duke of, makes the kings of Arragon and Navarre prisoners, ii, 7; yields up to his nephew, the duke of Orleans, the county of Asti, ii, 146; assassinated, 428 Milan, taken by the French, ii, 484; retaken by the duke Ludovico Sforza, 485; the inhabitants are bribed into subjection, 486; taken possession of by the Swiss on the departure of the French from Italy, ii, 507
Melun, Charles de, beheaded for suffering the escape of the lord du Lau, ii, 385 Mirandola restored to John Fran- ciscus Picus, ii, 501 Miraumount, the lord de, i, 119; village of, 306 Moerbeke, the Ghent men are de- feated at, ii, 203
Monk of St. Denis's account of the murder of the duke of Orleans, i, 55, note.
Monster, a girl born at Verona, with one head, two feet, and four arms, ii, 435
Mons, in Vimeu, rencountre at, i, 465; names of the principal lords who had accompanied and re- mained with the duke of Bur- gundy, and of the principal Dauphinois, 467
Montagu, Charles de, marries Ca- therine d'Albert, i, 144 Montagu, Gerard de, consecrated bishop of Paris, i, 143 Montagu, grand-master of the king's household, sent to confer with the duke of Burgundy, i, 130; is arrested, 147; beheaded, 148; his hotel and furniture given to the count of Hainault, ib.; his body is taken from the gibbet and joined to the head to be decently interred, 228 Montagu, the lord de, narrowly escapes with his life during the murder of the duke of Burgundy, i, 424; refuses to deliver up the castle of Montereau to the dau- phin, 425; writes letters to several of the principal towns of France respecting the murder of the duke of Burgundy, 428 Montagu, the lord de, a Burgundian, concludes a treaty with La Hire, i, 514
Montaigu, the fortress of, is de-
stroyed by orders of the duke of Burgundy, ii, 111
Mont-Aquilon, siege of, i, 499 Montargis and Chevreuse, the towns and castles of, submit to Charles VII., ii, 69
Montargis, siege of, i, 536 Montauban, the lord de, admiral of France, dies, ii, 374 Montereau-faut-Yonne, is besieged by Charles VII. and reconquered, ii, 52, 53 Montenay, sir James, seizes sir James de Monstrade, with a design to stab him, i, 27 Mont-Epiloy, a party of English defeated near, i, 452 Montferrat, the marchioness of and her son place themselves under the protection of Charles VIII., ii, 467
Montgardin, sir Baldwin de, taken
prisoner by the duke of Bur- gundy, i, 121 Mont-Guyon, is besieged by the count de Dunois, ii, 191 Montlehery, siege of, i, 381, 405; battle of, ii. 320; various accounts of, reported in various places, 323; recapitulation and further description of the battle, 349;
other particulars not mentioned by Monstrelet, 361 Morbesan, Mahomet II. besieges and captures Constantinople, ii, 228; plan for resisting him, 232; sends letters to the pope, 233; besieges Belgrade, 243 Moreau, Pierre, attaches himself to the Ghent men, ii, 214; makes an attack on Dendermonde, ib. Moreuil, siege of, i, 626
prisoner at Carlat, in the king's name, ii, 424; found guilty of high treason and beheaded, 433 Nemours, Gaston de Foix, created duke of, ii, 502; besieges Bo- logna, 503; takes Brescia with great slaughter, ib., et seq.; de- feats the united armies of the pope, the Venetians, and the Spaniards, but is himself killed, 504
Mortaigne, damsel of, judgment | Nevers, John, count of, i, 31 given against, ii, 235 Mortain, count de, dies of a dysen- tery, i, 224
Mortain, siege of, ii, 156
Mory, Laurence de, hanged for high treason, for having favoured the Burgundians, ii, 356 Moses, justified in slaying the tyrannical Egyptian, i, 74 Maulevrier, the count of, seneschal of Normandy, murders his wife and his huntsman for adultery, ii, 425
Monk, the Little, attempts to gain
the castle of St. Angelo at Rome, i, 611; is detected and executed, ib.
Moy, the lord de, the men of, lose
the castle of Roullet, ii, 72 Moyennes, the castle of, besieged, i, 202; siege of, i, 530-535 Murder, forbidden by every law, i, 72
Murray, earl of, killed at Verneuil, i, 511
Mussi-l'Evêque, siege of, i, 618
NAMUR, the count de, dies, and makes the duke of Burgundy his heir, i, 548; is invaded by the Liegeois, 574
Naples, triumphant entry of Charles
VIII. into, ii, 473; attack and capture of the Castel Nuovo and the Castel del Ovo, ib. Navarre, Louis, king of, and other princes of the blood, resolve to reform the management of the royal finances, i, 147; makes propositions to the king relative to his majesty's ministers, 165; is made prisoner by the duke of Milan, ii, 7; demands succour of the king of France against the king of Arragon, 508; dies, 524 Neapolitans, the, rebel against their king, and take the queen pri- soner, i, 361 Neelle, the inhabitants of, resign
the keys to the duke of Burgundy, and swear affiance to the king, i, 190; storming of the castle of, 355; the lands of, are overrun by the French, ii, 93 Negotiations relative to the resig- nations of popes Gregory and Benedict, i, 50 Nemours, the duke of, is made
Nevers, Philip, count de, his mar- riage with the damsel of Coucy, i, 134; brother to the duke of Burgundy, slain at the battle of Azincourt, 344; appointed go- vernor of Picardy, ii, 303; issues proclamations for the king, throughout the provinces of his lieutenancy, 314; endeavours at a reconciliation with the count de Charolois, 316; made prisoner in the castle of Peronne, 330 Nicholas V. elected pope, ii, 144;
marries the emperor of Germany to the daughter of the king of Portugal, 199; sends a legate to France respecting peace, ib. ; notifies to the duke of Burgundy a croisade against the Turks, 222; dies, 236
Nicosia, is plundered by the Sara- cens, i, 534
Nicorps castle, siege of, ii, 160 Nieneve, is fortified by the Ghent- men, ii, 205
Noëlle, besieged by the English, i, 499
Nogent, surrenders to the count de St. Pol, ii, 154
Nouaille, the lord de, murdered, i, 424
Normandy, the whole duchy of, is reduced to obedience to Charles VII., ii, 187; extent of, ib. ; the common people of, rise against the English garrison, 632; they assemble in large bodies before Caen, 635
Northumberland, earl of, his unsuc-
cessful application to the king of France against the king of Eng- land, ii, 45
Notre Dame, church of, solemnities at, ii, 355
Norwich, bishop of, i, 334 Nove, Paul di, doge of Genoa, be- headed, ii, 500
Novara, the town and castle of, surrender to Francis I., ii, 517 Noyelle, the lord de, surnamed le Chevalier Blanc, and Baudo his son, taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, i, 346 Noyon, the parliament summoned to, to try the duke of Nemours, ii, 432
Nuys, a town near Cologne, be- sieged by the duke of Burgundy, ii, 411; relieved by the Germans from Cologne, 413
OCTAVIAN, the emperor, anecdote of, i, 94
Odart de Remy, is killed at the siege of Lagny, i, 606 Offemont, the lord de, enters St. Riquier, i, 462; is made prisoner by the English, 472 Oliver de Blois, count of Penthievre, marries Isabella, daughter of the duke of Burgundy, i, 46 Olivier le Daim, his infamous cha- racter from Comines, ii, 437, note; hanged at Paris, 456 Ollehaing, lord de, advocate of the duke of Burgundy, i, 133; dis- putes with the chancellor of France, 238; is thrust out of the council chamber, ib. Opiterge, a youth martyred there by the Jews, ii, 435 Oran, the island of, discoveries of the Portuguese on, ii, 502 Orange, the prince of, is conquered by the French, i, 578; restored to liberty by Louis XI. without ransom, ii, 416; his troops defeated in Burgundy by the lord de Caron, 433; his devasta- tions in Burgundy, 436 Orchimont, the town and castle of, are destroyed by Everard de la Marche, ii, 32 Orfevre, John l', president of Lux-
embourg, pleads before the king for the duke d'Alençon, ii, 260 Orgemont, lord de, John, bishop of Paris, death of, i, 143
Oriole, a Gascon captain and his lieutenant, beheaded at Tours, ii, 443
Orleans, Louis, duke of, takes pos- session of the duchy of Luxem- bourg, i, 13; sends a challenge to Henry, king of England, 16; his second letter to the king of England, in reply, 19; is com- missioned to remonstrate with the pope on the necessity of union in the church, 32; defeated in his attempt to carry off the dau- phin of France, 38; sends an immense force into Paris, 41; publishes circular letters through- out France, concerning the defa- mations of the duke of Bur- gundy, ib.; reconciled to the duke of Burgundy, 42; besieges Blaye and Le Bourg, 46; is pre- sented with the duchy of Acqui- taine, 52; is assassinated at Paris, 54; mourning, and order of the procession at his funeral, 55; exertions made to discover his murderers, ib.; charged with covetousness, 77; charged with having committed high treason against the king, 78; devised the death of the king by sorcery, ib.; contracted illegal alliances, ib.; offended the king in the person of
the queen, 79; devised the death of the dauphin by poison, 80; guilty of high treason by false representations to the pope, ib. ; treasonably offended against the public welfare, ib.; reply to the charges against, 90; his charac- ter as delineated by the duchess dowager, 93; cleared from the charge of tyranny, 99; cleared from the charge of witchcraft, 104; did much service to the church, ib.; gave no aid to the schism, 105; the king of France has solemn obsequies performed for him, 320
Orleans, Charles, duke of, son of the murdered duke, sends letters to the king against the duke of Burgundy and his party, i, 172; several of his captains assemble an army, 175; writes again to the king, ib.; is taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, 346; is brought to Calais during a meeting respecting peace, ii. 98; is conveyed back to England, ib.; obtains his liberty by means of the duke of Burgundy, 100; marries the lady of Cleves, 101; leaves Bruges with his duchess, 104; is not permitted to see the king on his release, 105; returns to the duke of Burgundy from France, 118; receives from the hands of the duke of Milan, the county of Asti, 146; dies, 306 Orleans faction assemble in large numbers near Paris, i, 164; ap- plication is made to them by the king and the university of Paris to disband their army, ib.; plun- der the country round Paris, 166; condemned to death by the king, ib.; peace between them and the king, ib.; the natives of Paris take up arms against, 185; enter the town of Roye by fraud, ib. ; overrun the country of Burgundy, 186; return toward Paris, 192; proclamations issued against, 193; are declared rebels and traitors, 194; are sentenced to banishment and excommunica- tion, 195, 196; assemble their whole army at St. Denis, and forage, 197; retire to their respec- tive countries to reinforce their armies, 199; many of their ad- herents executed, 200; reduced to great distress, 203; many of them perish in prison, 204; are harassed by the king of France on the frontiers, ib.; send an embassy to England, 207; their ambassadors attacked and de- feated, ib.; their intercepted let- ters to England, 208; insult and abuse the Burgundians before Bourges, 220; behave treacher- ously, and attempt the life of the duke of Burgundy near Bourges, ib.; harass the king's foragers,
220; their meeting for peace near Bourges, 222; treaty of peace between them and king, 223; are in favour at Paris, 261-265; effectually govern the king and the duke of Acquitaine, 321; are routed and dispersed at Paris, 397; several are cruelly put to death by the Parisians, 398 Orleans, duchess of, complains to the king of the murder of her husband, i, 57; details the manner in which the duke was murdered, 58; again complains of the mur- der of the duke, 89; conclusion of her defence of the character of
the duke, 111; reply to, by the chancellor, 115; dies broken- hearted, 131
Orleans, town of, is besieged by the
earl of Salisbury, i, 544; the siege is raised by the maid Joan, 553; inhabitants of, send supplies to Beauvais, ii, 462; the duke of, his gallant conduct at Genoa, 466
Ormond, John, governor of Vernon, insults the king of France by sending him old keys, ii, 157 Orsay castle, siege of, i, 499 Orval, the lord of, defeats the men of Bordeaux, ii, 190 Oudenarde, is besieged by the Ghent men, ii, 202 Ourse, wife to Coppin de la Vief- ville, suspected of having hastened the death of the duchess of Bur- gundy, i, 485 Ovidianus, (probably Huniades) defends Belgrade against the Turks, ii, 243 Owen Glendower, prince of Wales, assisted by the French against the English, i, 28
Oye, the town of, is taken by the Burgundians, ii, 36
PAGEANTS, given by the count de Foix to the court, at Tours, ii, 252 Paleologus, Manuel, emperor of Constantinople, departs from Paris for England, i, 12; account of his reason for coming to England, ib. note
Palis, one of the duke of Burgundy's heralds, sent to the king during the duke's encampment at Mont- Chastillon, i. 381 Paoul, master Peter, i, 115 Pardons, great, granted at Rome, i, 12 Paris, the university of, quarrels
with sir Charles de Savoisy, i, 25; the inhabitants of, arm themselves against the duke of Orleans, 42; the inhabitants of, allowed to wear arms, 44; the bishop of, retires to Savoy, 149; great distress in, for want of pro- visions, 165; the inhabitants of, arm against the Orleans faction,
166; the butchers of, enjoy greater power and privileges than any other trade, 185; the natives take up arms against the Armagnacs, ib.; regains its former privileges, 206; the inhabitants request the king not to make any treaty of peace without their being person- ally named, 214; the university of, make a report on the abuses in government, 229; the inhabi- tants of, demand the persons of certain traitors, 242; the bishop of, assembles a body of theolo- gians, concerning the speech of master John Petit, 276; the chains are taken away from the streets, 295; the inhabitants are kept in great submission, 296; the bishop of, sends to know whether the duke of Burgundy would avow the sentiments uttered in the speech of master John Petit, 298; the inhabitants and mem- bers of the university wait on the duke of Acquitaine to propose measures of public safety, 349; strongly defended by the count d'Armagnac, 350; a conspiracy at, 394; is taken by the duke of Burgundy, 395; the commonalty of, put to death their prisoners, 398-405; an epidemical dis- order rages at, 405; six thousand of the commonalty sent to the siege of Montlehery, ib.; the inhabitants renew their oaths and Vow revenge against the murder- ers of the duke of Burgundy, 428; is attacked by Charles VII., 562; the inhabitants send an em- bassy to the young king Henry VI. of England, and to his minis- ters, 402; is reduced to the obe- dience of Charles VII., ii. 28; various regulations in, 355-356; beset by the Burgundians and Bretons, 359-363-365; many persons of both sexes lose their senses at the bean season, 374; violent quarrel of the pages and clerks of the palace, 375; the queen most honourably received, 378; tournaments, 385; alliance of France and Spain proclaimed, 391; different edicts published, succours sent to Beauvais, 401; the Parisians mustered and re- viewed, 403; the king's physi- cians open a man alive and recover him, 412; execution of the con- stable, 421; several officers of the city displaced, 423; a man punished for forging the king's signet, 432; several persons hanged for having assassinated the son of the public execu- tioner, 434; the statue of St. Louis and St. Charlemagne removed, 436; great entertain. ments are given, on the king's return from Picardy, 438; a great bombard on trial bursts and kills
many people, 442; a severe frost, 447; many persons die of incu- rable disorders, 449; the steeple: of St. Genevieve burned by light- ning, 453; festival on the acces- sion of Charles VIII., 457; order of Magdalens established, 459; the bridge of Notre Dame falls down, with a heavy loss, 484; an extraordinary heretic punished at, 494; a great mortality at, from the unwholesomeness of the season, 497; tilts performed in celebra- tion of the marriage of Louis XII., with the princess Mary of England, 514
Parisians, the, their uniform during
a mob, i, 243; they propose whatever measures they please in the presence of the duke of Acquitaine, ib. ; cause the king to publish an edict of indemnity, 264 Pataye, battle of, i, 555 Paul II. succeeds pope Pius II., ii, 301; shortens the intervals of the jubilees, 397; dies and is succeeded by Sixtus IV. 398 Pavia, entry of Charles VIII. into,
ii, 467; inhuman murder of a Frenchman at, 507
Pazzi, the conspiracy of the, at Florence, ii, 435 Pecquigny, near Amiens, meeting of king Louis XI. and Edward king of England at, ii, 417 Pembroke, earl of, slain at the attack on the castle of Sluys, i, 37; Holinshed's account of, ib.
Penhors, lord de, attacks the English fleet near Brest harbour, i, 25
Pensart, Jean, a fisherman of Paris, robbed of a great sum of money, ii, 413
Penthievre, the count de, treacher-
ously takes the duke of Brittany prisoner, i, 454; is arrested, ib.; marries the daughter of the lord de Quievrain, 457; dies, 621; is sent into Guienne against Bor- deaux, ii, 189; receives an em- bassy to Louis XI. from the king of Arragon, 409 Pentoise, peace negotiated at, i, 255 Perche, the count du, son to the duke of Alençon, reduces the town of Alençon for the king, ii, 383
Percy, Thomas, conducts queen Isabella to France, i, 12 Percy, lord, his unsuccessful appli- cation to France for aid against Henry of England, i, 45 ; invades Scotland, ii, 155 Perpignan, siege of, by the king of Arragon, ii, 406; surrenders to the king of France, 413 Perrin de Loharent's answer to the fourth letter of Michel d'Orris to sir John Prendergast, i, 11 Perrinet le Clerc admits the Bur- gundians into the town of Paris,
i, 395; is in great repute at Paris, but becomes as poor and as wicked as ever, 398 Perrinet Chalons is hanged at Amiens, ii, 22
Persia, soldan of, commander of the Turks in Hungary, discomfited and driven into Greece, ii, 240; the sophi of, makes war on the Turk Usson Cassan, 406 Pestilence, in many places, ii, 68 Peter de Brabant, arms against the English, i, 44, and note ; his army dismissed, ib. ; marries the dowager countess of Blois, ib.; besieges Neuf Chastel, 45; engages the English at sea, 46 Peter of Candia elected pope. Alexander V. pope
Petit, master John, defends the murder of the duke of Orleans, i, 61; his speech in defence of the duke of Burgundy, ib. et seq.; why he is bound to defend the duke, 62; conclusion of his speech, 81; dies, and is buried at Hesdin, 174; schedule containing propo- sitions, &c., relative to his heresy, 276; his arguments condemned, 299; the sentence against him revoked, 351
Petit, John, the son of the public executioner at Paris, murdered, ii, 434
Philibert de Vaudray, offers his services to the duke of Bedford, i. 605
Philip, the archduke, makes his public entry into Lyon, ii, 493; dies at Burgos in Spain, 499 Philip, duke of Brabant, dies at Louvain, i, 576
Philip, count de Charolois, marries Michelle, daughter to the king of France, i, 33; his marriage op- posed by the duke of Orleans, 34 Philip, count de Nevers, espouses the sister of the count d'Eu, i, 250; is slain at the battle of Azincourt, i, 344
Philip, count de St. Pol, goes to
Brussels, and arrests the ministers of the duke of Brabant, i, 448 Philip of Savoy, detained prisoner | by king Louis XI. notwithstand- ing his safe-conduct, ii, 299 Phineas, commended for his conduct towards duke Zambray, i, 67 Picard, the Petit, the king's com- mander at Nesle, hanged by the duke of Burgundy, ii, 400 Picardy, the lords of, are prevented by the duke of Burgundy from obeying the king's summons to arm against the English, i, 336 Picards and Ghent men, encounter
each other, ii, 213 Piccolomini, Æneas Silvius (pope Pius II.), dies, ii, 353 Piedmont, the princess of, meets Charles VIII. on his entry into Turin, ii, 465; the prince of, sent by Louis XI. to open certain
prisons at Paris, ii, 385; dies at Orleans, 397 Pier-yves, lord de, i, 118; his speech to the Liegeois, 120; is killed in battle, 121; his head exposed on the point of a lance, 122 Pieruels, lord de, made governor of Liege, i, 49
Pierrefons, the castle of, burned, i, 228
Pierre de Regnault, forages the country round Abbeville, i, 97; is forced to dislodge from the castle of Mailly, 127 Pierre Floure, friar, preaches before Philip duke of Burgundy, i, 430 Pietro della Luna, called Benedict XIII., i, 85
Pillagers from the household of the king of France, commit depreda- tions in the town of Haussy, ii, 110; they are attacked by sir John de Croy, ib.
Pisa, council of, i, 137, et seq.; condemn the two rival popes, Benedict and Gregory, 137; de- cisions of, ib.; bishops, dukes, and ambassadors at, 138. et seq.; some account of the city, 140; the ambassadors from Paris uni- versity to the council write letters of what passed, 141; entrance of Charles VIII. into, ii, 469 Pius II. succeeds pope Calixtus, ii, 256; dies, 353 Pius III. pope, dies after reigning ten days, ii, 494 Poitiers, ambassadors arrive at, from the duke of Brittany to Louis XI. ii, 352
Poitou, the county of, is given to John of Touraine, second son of the king, i, 239; the seneschal of, undertakes an expedition against the castle of Loigny, ii,
Poland, a discussion arises between the king of, and the grand master of the Teutonic order in Prussia, i, 154; the king of, is skinned alive by the Saracens, ii, 141 Pont-Audemer, captured by the French, ii, 154
Pont de l'Arche, is taken from the English by the duke of Brittany, ii, 151
Pont du St. Esprit, siege of, by the dauphin, i, 444
Pontorson, siege of, i, 538, 541 Pontoise, is retaken by the English, ii, 46; is besieged by Charles VII., 113; the duke of York marches an army to force the king to raise the siege, 115; the town is taken after an obstinate defence, 117; taken by the Bretons, 329 Porée, Martin, bishop of Arras,
causes the sentence against mas- ter Jean Petit to be revoked, i, 351
Portugal, the king of, raises an army against the infidels, i, 544; the queen of, dies, ii, 142; the
king of, comes to solicit the aid of Louis XI. to recover the crown
of Spain, 427; honours paid him at Paris, ib.
Poton de Saintrailles, defeats the Bur-
gundians near Guerbigny, i, 582; is made prisoner by the English, 585 Poulaine, the king of, his son killed
in battle near Therouenne, ii, 445 Poulcres castle, siege of, ii, 216 Poussay, siege of, ii, 599 Pragmatic sanction, abolished by king Louis XI., ii, 282 Prague, heretics of, i, 473, 495 Préaux, son of the lord de, slain at the battle of Azincourt, i, 344 Precigny, the lord de, the commis- sioner of Louis XI., to settle dif- ferences with the confederate princes, ii, 362
Pregent, a French captain, defeats Howard the English admiral, ii, 511
Prendergast, sir John, accepts the challenge of Michel d'Orris to single combat, i, 6; his second letter to Michel d'Orris appoint- ing the earl of Somerset judge of the combat, ib.; his third letter to the Arragonian esquire, com- plaining of not having received an answer, 7 Prenestin, cardinal, commonly called the cardinal of Poitiers, preaches before the council of Pisa, i, 139 Prie, the lord de, with a body of Genoese, sacks Alexandria and other towns, ii, 517 Prologue to the chronicles of Louis
XI. and of Charles VIII., ii, 348 Protection-money, or black-mail, ii,
Protestus du Tabouret, a Hussite heretic, is slain, i, 625 Provins en Brie, the town and castle of, are won by the English and Burgundians, i, 625 Prussia, invaded by the infidels, i,
QUARREL between the dukes of Burgundy and Orleans, i, 13; between the dukes of Brabant and Holland, 132 Quesnes, sir Peter de, attacks Mon- didier, i, 192
Quesnoy, a mortal combat fought
at, i, 34; siege of the castle of, by sir John de Luxembourg, 473 Quex, John, de, is killed by a fall from his horse, i, 462 Quieret, sir Boors, lord of Henchin, taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, i, 346 Quieret, sir Peter, lord of Hame- court, taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, ib.
Quieret, sir Gauvain, a renowned
knight in arms, dies, ii, 283 Quiers, handsome entertainment of Charles VII. at, ii, 465
RAGUIER, John, his exploits at a tournament at Paris, ii, 384 Ragnier, Raymond, complaint against, i, 231
Ragonnet de Picul is sawn in twain for his steadfastness in the Chris- tian faith, i, 258 Rambouillet castle, siege of, i, 257 Rambures, lord de, taken prisoner, i, 36
Rambures, the lord de, master of the cross-bows, slain at the battle of Azincourt, i, 343 | Rambures castle won by the French,
Rampstone, sir Thomas, waits on the duke of Bedford at Paris, i, 514
Raoul, sir, de Gaucourt, is put to death by the commonalty of Rouen, i, 366
Raoul, sir, de Neele, slain at the
battle of Azincourt, i, 344 Rasse Rouven, made commander of the Ghent men, ii, 63; his com- mission is signed by the duke of Burgundy, ib.
Raullin, Nicholas, death and cha- racter of, ii, 282 Ravenna, an extraordinary monster born at, ii, 504
Ravenstein, the lady of, niece to the
duchess of Burgundy, dies, ii, 282 Raymonnet, sir, de la Guerre, over- thrown by the foreign companies in the service of the duke of Bur- gundy, i, 368
Recourt, Pierre de, quartered and hung at Paris, i, 512 Regent, the, an English ship set on fire by the Cordeliere, ii, 509 Reginald, sir, de Corbie, is dismissed from his office of chancellor of France, i, 250
Réné d'Anjou, marriage of, i, 452 Retz, the lord de, is accused and convicted of sorcery, ii, 96 Reubempré, the bastard de, sent to Holland to take the count de Charolois, ii, 301; is arrested himself, 302; particulars of the capture, 352
Ribemont, the town of, surrenders to the king of France, ii, 108 Richemont, the lord de, taken pri- soner at the battle of Azincourt, i, 346 Richmond, heir of, sacks many towns in the Ardennes, i, 634 Richemont, the count de, gains the town of Meaux in Brie from the English, ii, 83
Rieux, the marshal de, is defeated by the Burgundians at Paris, i, 397; takes many towns and castles from the English in Nor- mandy, ii, 23
Riots, in various parts on account of the debasement of the new coin- age for the siege of Calais, ii, 62
Ris, doctor Michael, his reply to the harangue of Michael Toure at Milan, ii, 488
Riviere, sir James de la, death of, i, 249
Robert, sir, de Bar, slain at the battle of Azincourt, i, 344 Roche, the lord de la, married to the princess of Tarente, ii, 490 Rodemac, the youth of, ii, 254 Roderigo de Villandras is compelled to make war on the English, ii, 74
Rolin, Nicholas, harangues the two kings, Charles VI. and Henry V., respecting the murder of the duke of Burgundy, i, 451 Rollet d'Auctonville, principal of the assassins of the duke of Or- leans, i, 54; escapes with his accomplices from Paris, ib. Rome, entry of Charles VIII. into, ii, 470; a jubilee celebrated at, by pope Alexander VII., ii, 485 Roos, the lord, is killed at the battle of Baugey, i, 458
Rouen, an insurrection at, i, 366;
the dauphin of France arrives at, 367; submits to the duke of Burgundy, 391; is besieged by the English, 403; demands suc- cour against the English, 407; a large army is collected to raise the siege, 408; distressed for provisions, the inhabitants send another embassy to the king for succour, 409; surrendered to the English, 410; the castle is nearly taken by the French, 599; at- tacked by Charles VII., ii, 168; surrenders, 170; is entered by the king, ib.
Roullet castle is taken from the men of the lord de Moy, ii, 72 Roussy, the count de, is made pri-
soner, i, 203; slain at the battle of Azincourt, 344 Roussy, the count de, and several other great lords, taken prisoners by the duke of Bourbon, ii, 415; conducted prisoner from Bourges to Montils-les-Tours, 419 Roux, Robert le, i, 119 Roye, the inhabitants of, swear never again to admit the Orleans party, i, 190
Roye, the lord de, taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, i, 346 Roye, siege of, i, 431 Rully de Maurice, i, 232 Rue, the town of, taken possession of by the English, i, 499; is gained from the English, i. 636 Rupelmonde, battle of, between the duke of Burgundy and the Ghent men, ii, 206 Rutland, earl of, hung in effigy by the count de St. Pol, i, 24 Rutland, duke of, i, 264
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