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of the mysteries of the passion,
ii, 435

Joab, why king David ordered him

to be slain, i, 69
Joan, the maid of Orleans, waits on
king Charles at Chinon, i, 550;
she is retained in the king's ser-
vice, ib. ; goes to Orleans, having
command of a large force, ib.;
she reinforces and revictuals Or-
leans, 552; requests the king to
send a large reinforcement to pur-
sue his enemies, 553; conquers
the town of Gergeau, 554; over-
throws Franquet d'Arras, and has
his head cut off, 571; is taken
prisoner by the Burgundians, be-
fore Compiègne, 572; is con-
demned to be put to death, and
burnt at Rouen, 588
Joan, duchess of Luxembourg, i, 30
John XXIII., elected pope, i, 156;
ceremonials of his coronation, ib.,
et seq.; his request of tenths
rejected by the French church, i,
168; requests aid of the French
king against the king Ladislaus,
170; flies from Rome, and fixes
his court at Bologna, 249; is
dethroned, 218; is released from
prison, made a cardinal by pope
Martin, and dies, 391
John, king of Arragon, a deed of

arms is performed before him, i, 27
John, brother to the duke of Bar, slain

at the battle of Azincourt i, 344
John of Bavaria, bishop, makes his
entry into Liege after the battle
of Eichtfeld, i, 122; surnamed
John the Pitiless, 123; dies, i,
515. See Liege.

John of Montfort, duke of Brittany,
dies, i, 12

John de Moreul, knight to the duke
of Burgundy, appointed ambassa-
dor, i, 250

John de Nevers is ordered to lay
siege to Moreiul, ii, 626
John, sir, bastard de St. Pol, is
taken prisoner by the French, ii,
608

John de Toisy, bishop of Tournay,
death of, ii, 615
Josquin, Philip, acquires great riches
in the service of the duke of Bur-
gundy, i, 426

Josse, son of the duke of Burgundy,
born at Ghent, i, 612

Joinville, the lord de, refuses, but
upon conditions, to deliver up the
castle of Montereau to the dau-
phin, i, 426

Jubilee in France, for the support

of a war against the Turks, ii, 491
Juchy, near Cambray, twelve houses
burned at, ii, 275

Julian the apostate, fell through
covetousness, i, 65
Julius II. pope, by the assistance of
the French, gains Bologna, ii,
499; regains several places from
the Venetians, 501; goes to war
with the king of France, 502; his

ii. 126

army united with the Venetians | La Réole, siege of, by Charles VII.,
and Spaniards is defeated by the
French near Ravenna, 505; dies
at Rome in the ninth year of his
pontificate, 508

Justice and royalty, i, 91
Juy, John de, the accuser of John
Coustain, beheaded, ii, 286

K.

KIRENNIER, le, attaches himself to
the king's army to drive out the
English from Normandy, ii, 23
Kiriel, sir Thomas, defeats the
count de Clermont, i, 566; is taken
prisoner by the French, 582; is
appointed governor of Clermont
castle, 601; takes Valognes, ii,
178; is defeated by the count de
Kyme, the earl of, killed at the
Clermont, 179
battle of Baugey, i, 458

L.

LAGNY-SUR-MARNE, the bulwark
at, is conquered by the English,
i, 604; the duke of Bedford
marches to the aid of, 605
La Hire, surnamed Estienne de
Vignolles, made prisoner, i, 457;
takes Louviers, 567; he and others
overrun Artois and Cambresis,
623; treacherously makes the
lord d'Auffemont a prisoner, 631;
gains the castle of Breteuil, in the
Beauvoisis, by storm, 633; takes
the old fort of Amiens, 635; he
and several others defeat the earl
of Arundel, 637; a truce is agreed
on between him and the Burgun-
dians, 639; overruns and forages
the country of the duke of Bur-
gundy during the convention at
Arras, ii, 7; conquers Gisors, and
loses it soon afterwards, 33; is
wounded at the siege of Calais,
37; conquers the town and castle
of Soissons, 45; is nearly taking
Rouen, but is defeated, 49; com-
mits great waste in several coun-
ties, 54; is taken prisoner, ib. ;
is liberated and goes to the king,
55; makes excursions into Ger-
many, 72; dies, 127

Lalain, sir James de, makes an in-

road to the walls of Ghent, ii,
211; is slain before Poulcres, 216
Lallier, Michel, his wife reveals the
conspiracy at Paris, i, 352
La Mothe, the town of, is taken by

storm by the bastard of Bourbon,
ii, 88

Lancelot, or Ladislaus, king of

Naples, invades Florence, i, 140
Lancelot de Lisle, sir, is slain at
the siege of Orleans, i, 546
Laon, the French are defeated at, i,
623

La Roche-Guyon, siege of, i, 421
Laws have double meaning, i, 73
Lau, the lord du, arrested and im-
prisoned because in disguise, ii,
373; falls into disgrace with the
king, and is confined in the castle
of Usson, 382; escapes, 385
Launoy, the lord de, receives many
favours from king Louis XI., ii,
293

Laurens du Puy, ordered to be
arrested by the queen of France,
and is drowned in attempting
to escape, i, 384
Lectoure regained from the count
d'Armagnac, ii, 405; burned and
razed to the ground, ib.
Le Bourg castle, siege of, i, 46—

ii. 192

Leger, John, put to death at Rouen,
i, 366
Leigny-les-Chastiniers castles de-
stroyed by the duke of Burgundy,
i, 584

Lens, sir Charles de, arrested, i, 260
Leo X. pope, succeeds Julius II.,
ii. 508; sends Prospero Colonna
with a force to join the emperor
Maximilian, 517; holds a confer-
ence with Francis I. at Bologna,521
Libourne taken by the French, ii, 226
Liege, the bishop of, ejected for
refusing to be consecrated as a
churchman, i, 49; takes arms
against the Liegeois, ib; many
of the inhabitants of, beheaded
and drowned, 123; meeting for
settling the affairs of, 124; the
town of, destroyed, ii, 387
Liegeois, the, arm against the
Hainaulters, i, 179; resolve to
combat the duke of Burgundy and
John of Bavaria, 119; surrender
themselves to the dukes of Bur-
gundy and Holland, 122; raise a
large army, and invade Namur,
574; peace between them and the
duke of Burgundy, 614; enter into
an alliance with Louis XI. against
the duke of Burgundy and the count
de Charolois, 326; lay siege to
the town of Luxembourg, ib.
discomfited at Montenac, 330;
obtain a truce with the count de
Charolois, 336; recommence the
war against the duke of Bur-
gundy, 338; besiege the town of
Huys, proceedings of the duke
against them, 380
Lievin Nevelin, doctor, ambassador
from the college of cardinals to
the duke of Burgundy, i, 383
Lignac, sir Philip de, endeavours to
make peace between the duke of
Berry and the king, i, 221
Ligne, the lord de, in Hainault,
taken prisoner at the battle of
Azincourt, i, 346
Ligny-en-Barrois, siege of the town
and castle of, i, 444
Ligny, the count de, and others,

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keep the appointed day at Villiers-
le-Carbonnel, i, 622

Lihons, invaded and pillaged, i, 355;

the English commit great depre-
dations at, ii, 89
Lindsay, sir Walter, killed at the
battle of Verneuil, i, 511
Lion, a tame one, kept by a gentle-

man of Auvergne, escapes and
does much mischief, ii, 442
L'Isle Adam, the lord, submits to
the duke of Burgundy, i, 378;
he and the lord de Croy lead an
expedition toward the Auxerrois,
437; is sent to garrison Joigny,
448; is reproved by Henry V.,
for looking that monarch in the
face, 449; is arrested by orders
of the duke of Exeter, 458; is
liberated, 491; turns against the
English, ii, 25; enters Paris,
which submits to the king, 29;
is slain at Bruges, 50
Lisieux, the city of, is taken by the
count de Dunois, 156
Lithuania, the king of, invades
Prussia, i, 154
Limbourg, duchy of, i, 32
Loigny castle, taken by the senes-
chal of Poitou, ii, 157
Lombards and Gascons, teach their

military horses certain strange
movements, i, 168

London, the populace of, rise
against the king's officers, ii, 149
Longueval, the lord de, conquers
the castle of Aumale, i, 561;
turns to the king's party, 509
Longueval, sir Arthur, enters St.
Quentin in the name of Louis XI.,
ii, 394
Longueval, John de, seizes the
towns of Arleux and Crevecœur
for the bastard of Burgundy, ii,

315

Lore, the lady Ambroise de, widow

of sir Robert d'Estouteville, dies,
ii, 384
Lorraine, the duke of, with the
lords de Ront and de Heilly,
attack and defeat a party from
Bourges, i, 221
Lorraine, the duke of, opposes the

duke of Burgundy at Morat in
Swisserland, and in the county of
Romont, ii, 426; recovers the
town of Nancy, 427; destroys
the Burgundian army, the duke
of Burgundy slain, 430; reduces
the duchy and county of Bur-
gundy to the king, ib.
Louis, the dauphin, is persuaded to

join in a conspiracy against the
government of Charles VII. ii, 90;
returns to the court to seek par-
don, 92; some of his men invade
Burgundy, 135; takes refuge with
duke Philip of Burgundy, 244;
accompanies the duke to Bruges,
and is honourably received, 249
Louis XI. crowned at Rheims, ii,
277; makes his public entry into
Paris, 278; takes leave of the

duke of Burgundy and leaves
Paris for Amboise, 280; abolishes
the pragmatic sanction, 282;
grants succours to queen Marga-
ret of England, 288; makes a
progress through his kingdom to
examine the state of it, 290; re-
purchases the towns on the Somme
from the duke of Burgundy, 292;
summons the count de St. Pol,
and the lord de Genly to appear
before him, 293; comes to Arras
and Tournay, 297; comes to
Hedin, entertained by the duke
of Burgundy, 300; summons de-
puties from the towns on the
Somme, to Rouen, 302; appoints
the count de Nevers governor of
Picardy, and sends an embassy to
the duke of Burgundy at Lille,
303; orders Crevecoeur near Cam-
bray to be taken possession of,
305; his correspondence with the
duke of Bourbon, respecting the
flight of the duke of Berry, 313;
publishes other letters throughout
his realm, ib.; advance of the
army of the count de Charolois,
318; resolves to combat him,
defeated at Montlehery, 320;
sends the bishop of Paris to nego-
tiate, 323; leaves Paris for Rouen
to recruit his army, 324; returns
to Paris and procures a truce,
325; forms an alliance with the
Liegeois against the duke of Bur-
gundy and the count de Charolois,
326; meets the count de Charo-
lois at Conflans, 328; establishes
a treaty of peace, 331; royal edict
respecting what he had conceded
to the count, 332; is present at a
review of the count de Charolois'
army, 334; goes into, and retakes
possession of, the duchy of Nor-
mandy, 335; orders some of the
lords of that country to be ar-
rested and drowned, ib. ; advances
toward Angers to learn the inten-
tions of his brother's partisans,
353; enters the Bourbonnois and
takes many towns and castles,
354; lays siege to Riom in Au-
vergne, 355; comes to Paris after
the battle of Montlehery, 356;
grants several favours to the inha-
bitants, 358; nobles arrive from
Normandy to serve him against the
confederates, 363; confirms the
privileges of the Parisians, and
offers them new ones, 370; goes
to Orleans, ib.; proceeds to Nor-
mandy, meets the duke of Brit-
tany at Caen, 371; recovers the
duchy of Normandy from his
brother, 372; sends ambassadors
to England, 373; issues an edict
against the English, 374; sends
commissioners to make reforms
at Paris, 375; appoints certain
lords for the guard and defence
of his realm, 376; goes to Rouen
to meet the earl of Warwick, 377;\

orders the Parisians to have ban-
ners for the respective trades and
professions, 379; musters the
banners without the walls of Paris,
ib.; goes on a pilgrimage on foot
to St. Denis, 380; gives letters to
abolish the pragmatic sanction,
ib.; concludes a truce with the
count de Charolois, in which the
Liegeois are not included, 382;
sends commissioners to muster
the banners, his army marches to
oppose the Bretons between Mans
and Alençon, ib.; consents to the
assembly of the three estates at
Tours, 383; goes to Meaux, 385;
substance of what passed between
him and the dukes of Berry and
Brittany, 386; concludes a peace
with the duke of Burgundy, ib. ;
goes on a pilgrimage to Notre-
Dame of Halle, 387; sends all
the live game round Paris as a
token of friendship to the count
de Foix, 388; receives the king
and queen of Sicily, is reconciled
to his brother, now duke of
Guienne, 390; summons the ban
and rear ban to oppose Edward
king of England, 391; signs a
peace with the duke of Brittany,
393; orders a thanksgiving for
the delivery of Henry VI. king of
England, 394; his victories in
Burgundy, Charolois, and Picardy,
395; goes to Paris and Orleans
with the duke of Guienne and
others, 396; obtains indulgences
for those who shall say Ave Maria
three times, 399; sends commis-
sioners to settle differences with
the duke of Burgundy, 407; mar-
ries his eldest daughter to the
lord de Beaujeu, 408; discovers a
plot for poisoning him, ib.; his
edicts respecting the gens-d'armes
and coin, 408, 409; an embassy
arrives from the king of Arragon,
409; reviews the Parisians, accom-
panied by the Arragonian ambas-
sadors, 410; agrees to a truce
with the duke of Burgundy, ib.;
sends a large army to conquer
Arragon, 411; receives a sum-
mons from king Edward to re-
store to him the duchies of
Guienne and Normandy, 412;
good news from the army of Ar-
ragon, ib.; orders troops into the
territories of the duke of Bur-
gundy to retaliate the damages
done in contempt of the truce, ib.;
concludes an alliance with the
emperor of Germany, ambassadors
from Florence and the emperor,
414; his prudent acts, takes Tron-
quoy, Mondidier, and other places
from the Burgundians, ib.; gives
notice of the arrival of the English
at Calais, and orders his vassals
to be in readiness, 416; goes to
Pecquigny, to hold a conference
with the king of England, 417;

.

agrees to a truce, pays king
Edward seventy-five thousand
crowns, and promises an annual
pension of fifty thousand, ib.;
concludes a truce with the duke
of Burgundy, 418; his conversa-
tion with the count de Roussy,
419; orders a council, and esta-
blishes certain taxes, 423; meets
the king of Sicily at Lyon, ran-
soms queen Margaret of England,
425; makes several pilgrimages,
426; informed of the death of
the duke of Burgundy, he makes
a pilgrimage of devotion, 431;
reduces Arras, Hêdin, and other
towns and countries which the
duke had usurped in France, ib.;
summons his parliament from
Paris to Noyon, to try the duke
of Nemours, 432; on his return
from Picardy sets at liberty the
prisoners confined in the Châtelet,
436; has twelve great bombards
made, 437; his troops gain the
town of Condé from the Burgun-
dians, 439; amused and deceived
by the duke of Austria, 441;
holds a council at Orleans for
recovering the pragmatic sanction,
ib.; forms an alliance with the
king of Castille, 442; his prepa-
rations for war with Austria, 444;
several towns in Burgundy re-
duced to his obedience, ib.; am-
bassadors arrive at Paris from
Spain, ib.; defeats the duke of
Austria near Therouenne, 445;
his troops are again successful,
and gain seventeen towns, 446;
an embassy from England, he
issues a commission against the
duke of Bourbon, ib.; concludes
a truce with the duke of Austria,
ib.; sets cardinal Balue at liberty,
447; subsidises a body of Swiss
in lieu of the franc-archers, ib. ;
forms a camp between Pont de
l'Arche and Pont St. Pierre, 448;
recovers from a severe illness, and
performs certain pilgrimages, dur-
ing which he visits the dauphin,
ib.; receives an embassy from
Flanders at Clery, 450; again
taken ill, visits his son at Am-
boise, and recommends to him
Olivier le Daim, 451; makes peace
with the Flemings, 452; sends
for the holy ampulla from the
church of St. Remy at Rheims,
454; his devout death and burial
in the church of our Lady at
Clery, 455

Louis XII. duke of Orleans, conse-
crated king of France at Rheims,
ii, 484; sends an army to recover
the Milanese, ib.; sends troops
to reconquer Naples, which in a
short time is won, 491; makes
war against the Turks by sea and
land, 492; goes to Lombardy and
makes his public entry into
Genoa, ib.; taken with a serious

illness, 498; orders a large force
to join the pope, 499; defeats the
Venetians at Agnadello, 501;
makes a triumphant entry into
Milan, ib.; goes to war with the
pope on account of the duke of
Ferrara, 502; victory of the duke
of Nemours near to Ravenna,
504; sends succours to the king
of Navarre, 508; his army defeat-
ed by the Swiss at Novara, 509;
a body of his troops attacked and
put to flight by the English and
Hainaulters, 510; makes peace
with the Venetians, 511; marries
Mary, sister to Henry VIII. of
England, 513; his death and in-
terment, 514

Louvroy, siege of, i, 473
Louvain, Pierre, murdered by sir
Raoul de Flavy, ii, 300
Lovecte, Thomas, a monk of the
temple at Paris, murdered by one
of his brethren, ii, 378
Louviers, the town of, surrenders to
the duke of Bourbon for Louis
XI., ii, 372

Louviers, Charles de, cup-bearer to
Louis XI., wins the prize at a
tournament at Paris, ii, 385
Lucca, reception of Charles VIII.
at, ii, 469

Lucifer, account of his rebellion in
heaven, i, 67

Lupus, a Hussite heretic, is slain
in Bohemia, i, 625
Lusignan, John de, succeeds to the
kingdom of Cyprus, i, 605
Luxembourg, sir John de, made
governor of Arras, i, 305; attacks
the town of Hamme, 306; mar-
ries Joan of Bethune, 408; sends
six hundred combatants to meet
his brother in the county of
Brienne, 414; assembles a large
body of men at Arras, and leads
them before Roye, 431; makes an
excursion with his whole force
toward Alibaudieres, 436; is
blinded in one eye during the
siege, and puts an end to the
attack, 437; witnesses a deed of,
arms against six champions of
the Dauphinois, 463; disbands
his forces, and retires to his castle
of Beaurevoir, 470; waits on
Henry V. to solicit the liberty of
his brother the count de Conver-
san, 471; conquers the fortresses
of Quesnoy, Louvroy, and Heri-
court, 473; takes Oysi in Tier-
rache, 507; besieges the church
of Broissi, ib.; besieges the castle
of Wiege, ib.; he lays in ambush,
in which Poton de Saintrailles is
made prisoner, ib.; besieges the
town of Guise, 508; besieges
Beaumont in Argonne, 542; takes
command of the siege of Com-
piègne, 517; some captains at-
tached to him surprise the castle
of St. Martin, 585; marches into
Champagne against the French,

598; he is joined by the earl of
Warwick's son and others, 599;
reconquers the castle of Haphin-
court, 622; refuses to join the
duke of Burgundy against the
English, till he is discharged of
his oath to the English, ii, 59;
sends letters to the knights of the
Golden Fleece, 79; sends letters
to exculpate himself to the great
council of the duke of Burgundy,
84; dies, 104, 105
Luxembourg, Louis de, marries
Joan of Bar, ii, 1; count de St.
Pol, his men rob the king's ser-
vants as they were conducting
warlike stores to Tournay, 108;
makes reparation for the injury
done to the king, 109; he and the
count of Eu, take the new castle
of Nicorps, ii, 160
Luxembourg, Louis, the constable,
his treachery, ii, 415; is delivered
by the duke of Burgundy to the
king's officers, and carried prisoner
to the bastile, 418; his trial and
execution, 420, 421; a short epi-
taph on him, 422
Luxembourg, the duchy of, is re-
duced to obedience to the duke of
Burgundy, ii, 133

Lyon, various processions at, occa-

sioned by the mortality of the
season, ii, 497

Lyonnet de Bournouville, i, 414
Lyons, the inhabitants of, rebel,
ii, 48; council of, 145

M.

MAESTRICHT, the town of, surren-
ders to John of Bavaria, i, 50;
siege of, 118;
Mahomet II. See Morbesan.
Maillotin de Bours combats sir

Hector de Flavy at Arras, i, 586
Mailly castle is besieged by the
king's army, ii, 127
Mailly, sir Robinet de, is suffocated
in a bog while attending the duke
of Burgundy, i, 435
Malatesta, the lord, makes a propo-
sition for the removal of the
council of Pisa, i, 139
Malefactors, three, two men and a
woman, are hung for various
enormous crimes in Paris, ii, 150
Malcolm Fleming. See David de
Combrebant.
Malmaison castle taken by sir John
Blondel, i, 537; it is surrendered
by sir John Blondel, 538
Manniel, Gauvain, lieutenant-gene-
ral of the bailiff of Rouen, be-
headed, ii, 373
Mansart du Bos, sir, i, 183; beheaded,

204; his head and body restored
and interred, 239
Mans, St. Julian, siege of, i, 528
Mans, siege of, ii, 146
Mantes, summoned to surrender to
the king of France, ii, 156

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

et seq.
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,
523

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, 208

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, rencontre 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 hôtel 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
Mortaigne, damsel of, judgment
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

N.

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

VOL. II.

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

| Nevers, John, count of, i, 31
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, 20

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

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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

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