Burgundy, John duke of-cont.
the people of Rouen, 248; his answer to them, 249; is unable to send assist- ance, 251; leaves Beauvais for Provins, 251; receives the English embassy at Provins, 258; returns to Pontoise, and prepares to receive King Henry, 258. attends at the reception of King Henry by the French court at Meulant, 259; offer of the dauphin to be reconciled with him, 260; is threatened by King Henry, his answer, 261; meets and becomes reconciled to the dauphin, 261, 262; takes leave of the dauphin and retires to Corbeuil, 263; goes to Troyes, 265; returns to the French court at Pontoise, and thence with the court to St. Denis, 268; plan by the dauphin to murder him, 269, 270; is invited to a conference at Monterau- faut-Yonne by the dauphin, hesitates and proposes that they shall meet before the king of France, 270; is persuaded to meet the dauphin, 270; sets out from Bray for the meeting, 271; being warned of treachery calls a council, 271; he de- termines to proceed, 272; orders Mr. Jaques de la Baume to be with all his men near the town, 273; meets the dauphin, is attacked and slain, 273, 274, 275; buried at Notre Dame, 276; his body removed to Dijon, 304, 305. Burgundy, Philip (the Good) duke of, succeeds his father John, 279; sends ambassadors to King Henry to obtain a truce, 280; resolves to avenge the death of his father, 282; concludes to make an alliance with the English, 282; receives ambassadors from King Henry, 283; is joined by an English force at Saint Quentin, 286; proceeds to join the French ambassadors at Troyes, 287; attends the conferences there, 287; pre- pares for the reception of King Henry, 289; receives the English king and attends his marriage ceremony, 291; assists King Henry in capturing the town of Sens occupied by the Dauphin-
Burgundy, Philip (the Good) duke of-cont. ists, 303; aids the English in the as- sault of Monterau, 304; disinters his father's body, 305; and has it trans- ferred to a Carthusian church at Dijon, 305; enters Paris with the kings of France and England, 325; demands justice on his father's murderers, 327, 328; proceeds to Beauvais, thence to Ghent to meet the duchess, 332; pursues the dauphin's forces into Picardy, 368; besieges the dauphinists at St. Riquier, 345; raises the siege and prepares to meet the Dauphinists, 347; attacks and defeats them, 349, 352; returns to Abbe- ville, 352, 353; negotiates surrender of Saint Riquier, 358; visits the kings of France and England, 359, 360; returns to Burgundy, 360; appoints a day with the dauphin to do battle, 383; applies to King Henry to help him towards establishing an army, 383; meets the English army under the duke of Bedford at Vezelay, 384; sets out with them for Cosne, 384; sends to inquire after King Henry's health, 385; on hearing of the King's death goes to Vincennes to confer with the English princes, and thence to Paris, 388; at- tends a council of nobles at Paris, 388; departs from Paris and returns to Flan- ders, 389; his wife, Michelle of France, dies at Ghent, 392.
Butler, Sir Ralph, 365, 367.
Caen (Kem, in text), the bailiff of, arrests the ambassadors from the duke of Orleans, 145; King Henry takes the town of, 237; fortified by King Henry,
Calais (referred to), 86, 97, 119, 143, 157, 158, 178, 218; the marches of, 48; defeat of the count of St. Pol at, 100;
the earl of Rutland's effigy hanged outside the walls, 87; about to be besieged by the duke of Burgundy, 108; the expedition stopped, 109; re- inforced by Henry V., 111; procla- mation made there by Henry, 149; the earls of Warwick and Kyme land there, 160; some of the prisoners from Harfleur sent there, 189; the duke of Orleans taken to, 216; the Governors of, refuse to admit the English men-at-arms fearing a famine, 217; Henry enters, 218; and is joyfully received, 219; the prisoners from Har- fleur arrive there, 219; the Emperor Sigismund received there, 226; and returns there after his visit to England, 228; duke Philip of Burgundy there, 230; Henry and his queen and the king of Scotland visit it, 333; the duchess of Brabant goes there on her way to Henry's court, 334; Henry V. lands there, 340; and leaves for Chartres, 342; Henry's body brought there, 390.
Calais, the lieutenant of. See Haston, Sir Richard.
Canterbury, archbishop of-cont.
king on his return from the war, 219; meets the French embassy at Pont de l'Arche, 244; treats with the people of Rouen for the surrender of the place, 252, 253.
Canterbury, 21, a French embassy reaches, 18; Henry IV. interred at, 167, 168; the ambassadors from France to Henry V. are met at, 175; King Henry received by the archbishop at, 219; King Henry's funeral procession at, 390.
Caoursin, the country of, 190. Captal du Beuch. See Grailly. Carlemanny, the fortress of, surrenders to King Henry, 256.
Carlisle, bishop of, imprisoned with other prelates, 21; conspires to release King Richard, 22.
Carmarthen, 92.
Carmien, Sir William, 136. Cassel, 108.
Castille, King of, 71. Catebrune.
See Cottebrune.
Catherine. See Katherine. Cauches, the river, 199.
Cauchon, Peter, bishop of Beauvais, 331. Caudebec, the fortress of, surrenders to King Henry, 256.
Cauffort, Henry de, sent with a garrison into Rouen, 238.
Cauffours, Rallant des, 151.
Caux, the country of, the Earl of Dorset makes a raid into, 232; Henry V. passes through, 332.
Caux, the gate of (at Rouen), 240, 242. Caumont, Bertrand de, 324. Caumont, the children of, 330.
Cauroy, the lord of, with his brother, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 223. Cays, the English army proceeds to, 194. Cennes, town of, King Henry's army at,
Cerixe, 219.
Challan, Ame de, 308.
Challers, Sir Robert de, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 222.
Challers, Pousses de, lord of Chastelneuf,
killed at Azincourt, 223.
Chalons in Champagne, the dauphin writes to the people of, 277; Philip duke of Burgundy at, 287.
Champagne, king at arms, 66 note, 73, 77. Champ-divers, William de, ambassador from France on treaty of peace, 244. Channensy, the lord of, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 222.
Channes-en-Brie, the English ambassadors
to the king of France attacked by the Dauphinists at, 258 (see errata). Channy, assists at the siege of Saint Remy, 151; in Boullenois, 157; taken prisoner at the battle of Azincourt, 225. Charenton, bridge of, 291.
Charité sur-Loire taken by the dauphin,
Charles VI., king of France. See France. Charles, duke of Orleans. See Orleans. Charles, duke of Touraine. See Dauphin. Charolois, John count of, succeeds his father Philip duke of Burgundy, 95. Charolois, Philip count of, summoned to Paris by his father duke John, 143; attends a council there, 145; is re- quested by the king to join the French army, 198; forbidden thereto by his father, 198; detained in the castle of Aire to prevent him joining the French army, 198; entertains the duke of Gloucester at St. Omer, 230; hears of his father's assassination, 279; takes possession of his father's dominious, and holds a parliament at Lille, 279. (See Burgundy, Philip III. duke of.) Chartres, the peace of, 134; the town besieged by the dauphin, 341; Henry V. pressed to succour it, 342, 355; the siege raised, 344.
Chartres, the bishop of, attends the count de St. Pol to receive Queen Isabella of England, 52; reconciliation between Orleans and Burgundy at, 134, 159. Chartres, Hector de, with his two brothers
killed at the battle of Azincourt, 223. Chartreux, Maison de (at Ronen), 240.
Chasteau-Molineaux, the fortress of, sur- renders to King Henry, 256. Chasteler, the lord of, 236.
Chasteler, Michiel de, with his brother killed at the battle of Azincourt, 223. Chastel-Gaillart, the fortress of, besieged and captured by the English, 268. Chastel-Morant, Sir John de, accompanies the duke of Burgundy to Bourbourg on treaty of peace with England, 48. Chastelneuf, the lord of. See Challers. Chastel-Pol, port of, the French fleet set sail from, 89.
Chastel Villain, the lord of, 292, 360. Chastelus, the lord of, 292.
Chastillon, Jacques de (lord of Dompierre, Admiral of France), killed at the battle of Azincourt, 221.
Chastillon, Charles de, killed at the same battle, 223.
Chastillon, the lord of, 370. Chatelet (Paris), 324.
Chausnes, Allemant de, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 223.
Chepe, the street of (Cheapside), 5, 8, 38. Chepoy, the lord of, killed at the battle of Agincourt, 224.
Cherbourg, besieged by the duke of Glou-
cester, and delivered up to him, 237, 238; fortified by King Henry, 240. Chevene, John de (Viscount of Brune- quet), 131.
Chim, the lord of, in the army of the
count of St. Pol, 101; killed at the
battle of Azincourt, 223.
Chollet, Sir John, a Burgundian, killed in the battle with the Liegeois, 131. Cirencester, the earls of Salisbury and and Huntingdon and other rebel nobles at, 29, 30; their proceedings discovered by a spy at, 31; the conspirators arrested by the constable of, 31, 32. Cirencester, the constable of, 31, 32, 39. Clarence, 47.
Clarence, Thomas duke of, appointed to lead the force in aid of the Orleanists, 153; arrives at La Hogue St. Vaast with an English force, 159; proceeds to
Clarence, Thomas duke of--cont.
meet the duke of Orleans, 161; sureties given to him by the Orleanists, 161; accompanies the king to France, 184; returns to England, 189; commands the army sent to France, 229; raises the siege of Harfleur, 230; garrisons the town and returns to England, 230; at Southampton with King Henry, 234; accompanies King Henry to the French court, 259; besieges and captures Gisors, 266; attends King Henry at his marriage with the Princess Katherine, 291; appointed captain of Paris, 315; intercedes for Bertram de Caumont, 324; present in the royal court at Paris, 325, 331; appointed captain-general in Nor- mandy, 332; attacks the Dauphinists in Anjou, and is slain at Beaujé, 336–338; King Henry's grief at his death, 338, 340; and expedition to avenge him, 356. Clarence, the duchess of, 312.
Clary, the lord of, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 221.
Clary, Lancellot de, killed at the same battle, 223.
Clary, castle of, captured by the dauphin,
Clau, John of, a captain in the duke of Burgundy's service, 265.
Clere, the lord of, with the army sent to defend Harfleur, 185.
Clermont, count of. See Montagu, the lord of.
Clermont, the province of, devastated by the English, 257; the carl of Huntingdon marches through, 267; town of, un- successfully attacked by the English, 285.
Cleves, count of, 72. Clichon, the lord of, 72.
Clifford, Lord, sent to the aid of the duke
of Exeter in Paris, 341.
Cobham, Lord, enters into a conspiracy against King Henry, 182; is examined by King Henry, confronted with the carl of March his accuser, sentenced and beheaded, 183.
Col, Walter, secretary of the French king, one of the ambassadors from France to King Henry the 5th, 175.
Collenbrun (Coinbrook), the earls of Salis- bury and Huntingdon reach, with their troops, 29.
Colonna, Cardinal, 235.
Colville, Sir Thomas, accompanies Sir Thomas Percy to Bordeaux, 15. Cologne, the bishop of, 308. Cologne, the duke of Heidelburg elected emperor of Germany and crowned at, 50.
Combomes, the lord of, killed at the battle of Aaincourt, 222.
Combourt, the lord of, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 223.
Comflans, the lord of, 352, 354. Commines, the lord of, 354. Commines, Collard de, 354. Compiegne, town of, 267, 289; held by the dauphin's troops, 330, 365; who are defcated by the English and Burgun- dians, 368, 397, 398, 400, 408; sur- renders to the duke of Bedford, 375, 380; King Henry arrives at, 381. Compois, John de, 308.
Concy, the town of, 399. Constable of England (the earl of North- umberland), 6, 7.
Constance, embassy from Henry V. to the
emperor of Germany sent to, 170. Constance, the council of, prorogued, 237. Contentin, 159.
Conversan (Peter of Luxembourg), count of, joins the forces of the count of Hainault against the Liegeois, 122; attacks and captures the dauphin's city of Alibaudières, 290; attends the marriage of King Henry, 292; is taken prisoner by the Dauphinists, 313; re- leased and retained in King Henry's service during the siege of Meaux, 361; retakes the bridge of Meulant from the Dauphinists, 366; arranges terms with the besieged for the surrender of Meaux- en-Brye, 371, 372.
Corbeil, treaty of, 263, 269 note. Corbeil, town of, the French court at, 310, 325.
Corbye, town of, 194.
Corbye, Regnault de, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 223.
Cornwall, a messenger from the seneschal
of Bordeaux arrives in, 13; Sir Thomas Percy sails to France from, 14. Cornwall, the lord of (John, Lord Fan- hope) engages in jousts at Paris, 136; accompanies King Henry the 5th to France, 181; is with the advanced guard of King Henry's army, 190, 203; two of his ships lost in a storm, 219; at South- ampton with King Henry, 234; assists in the attack upon Rouen, 241; is sent to repulse an attack made by the garrison of Rouen, and defeats the garrison, 250, 251; assists at the capture of Fontaines- la-Vagant, 284; and in the attack on Clermont, 285; one of the negotiators for the surrender of Melun, 322. Cornwall, Sir John de (son of the above), joins Henry the 5th at Southampton, 235; killed by a cannon-shot before Meaux, 371.
Cosne-sur-Loire, besieged by the dauphin,
383; the duke of Burgundy and the duke of Bedford, with their armies, set out for, 384; surrendered to the duke of Burgundy, 385.
Cottebrune (Catebrune), Sir John de, marshal of Burgundy, 292. Couchy, Damoiselle de, daughter of En- guerrand de Couchy count of Soissons, marries Philip count of Nevers, 135. Coucy, Le Borgne de, with others, makes terms with King Henry for the sur- render of Meaux-en-Brie, 371.
Coucy, the lord de, acquaints the king of France with the news of King Richard's deposition, 11.
Coucy, the lady de, brings the news to Paris of King Richard's deposition, 10,
Coucy, bastard of, 349, 354.
Coucy, castle of, 257, 367.
Coursy, the lord of, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 222.
Coutances, taken by King Henry, 236. Coutances, the bishop of, 145.
Courteheuse, Stas de, an accomplice in the murder of the duke of Orleans, 116. Courtenue, the lord of, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 222.
Courteauville, Jacques de, 292.
Courtiamble, Sir Jacques de, standard
bearer to the duke of Burgundy, 128. Craon, Sir Amoury de, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 222.
Craon, Sir Anthony de, assists in the capture of Domfront, 150; sent by the constable to Vernon for artillery to
besiege Saint Remy, ibid.
Craon, Sir John de (lord of Dommart), joins the count de St. Pol, 101; made prisoner at Azincourt, 228.
Craon, Sir John de (lord of Mobason),
killed at Azincourt, 222.
Craon, Sir Simon de, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 221.
Craon le Dasse, the lord of, killed at the battle of Azincourt, 222.
Crequy, the lord of, 188; killed at the battle of Azincourt, 221.
Crequy, Regnault de, with his son Philip,
killed at the battle of Azincourt, 221. Cresecques, the lord of, killed at Mercq,
Cresecques, Sir Morlet de, joins the army of the count de St. Pol at Therouenne, 101.
Crespy-en-Lannois, tower of, captured by the dauphin, 281; re-taken by the Bur- gundians, 286, 287. Crespy-en-Vallois, the town of, 407. Cressenfart, the fortress of, the Dauphinists make overtures to King Henry to sur- render to him, 375.
Cressey. See Croissy. Cressi-sur-Sere, town of, 286. Cressy, battle of, mentioned, 191. Cressy. See Croissy.
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