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A11931 A general inuentorie of the history of France from the beginning of that monarchie, vnto the treatie of Veruins, in the year 1598. Written by Ihon de Serres. And continued vnto these times, out off the best authors which haue written of that subiect. Translated out of French into English, by Edward Grimeston Gentleman.; Inventaire general de l'histoire de France. English Serres, Jean de, 1540?-1598.; Grimeston, Edward.; Matthieu, Pierre, 1563-1621. 1607 (1607) STC 22244; ESTC S117097 1,983,454 1,322

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sayd Philibert But the Kings deputies not able to drawe any reason from Charles Vncle to his Maiestie he must seeke that by force which he could not get by a friendly and amiable composition The Kings first stratagem was to bring a part of Rence de Ceres company into Geneua to succour them against Charles who besieged it The second was to stirre vp the Bernois allyes and neighbours to Geneua who taking the Towne into their protection went to field with tenne or twelue thousand men made the Duke retire 1535. spoiled him of a good part of the lands that were vnder his obedience chased away the Bishop of Lauzanna and ioyning it to their Iurisdiction they remaine still in possession thereof The Emperour returned then from his victorie of Tunis against Barberousse and seeming d●sirous to make a more stricter League with the King hee offred him a pension of a hundred thousand Crownes a yeare out of the Duchie of Milan for any one of his Children whome hee should name hee treated the marriages of the Daulphin with the Infant of Portugall Daughter to Queene Eleonor and of the Duke of Angoulesme with such a one as the King should well like of it seemed that he ment the Infant of Spaine to the ende that by these newe bonds of coniunction tying their friendshippes more firmely they might ioyntly participate sayd hee in the honour and profit of the mightie conquests which they should make vpon Grece All this was but cunning The Emperour was tired and his forces were ●as●ed by the toyles of warre and the great heat they had endured And the King being readie with a fresh and mighty armie The Emperours dissimulation threatned the Duchies of Sauoy and Milan he must therefore busie him with some ba●te and at the least stay the exploits of his forces The death of Francis Sfo●ce presents a newe occasion By this death the Emperour pretends to bee freed of that bloud The death of Francis Sforce and that he might dispose of this Duchie at his pleasure The captaines promise to hold their places of the Emperour The Emperour giues hope not onely to dispose of the sayd Duchie to the Kings liking but also to conclude of a generall warre against the Turke in the which he off●ed to impart with the King the good or euill that should growe thereby and of the faith a●d reunion of the Church namely for the reducing of Germanie and England to the generall beleefe of Christians and of a generall peace in Christendome In the meane time he prepared for wa●re hee caused Cont Nassau to make a great Leuie in Germanie and called backe Ferdinand Gonsague into Italie with his Spaniards which remained in Sicile Thus all the negotiations and practises of these two great Princes gaue sufficient signes of open war there wanted nothing but a lawfull occasion for either of them to blame his companion and to lay vpon him the causes of the first inuasion The Emperour required moreouer that for the quiet of Italie the King should desist from the action of Genes That excluding the Duke of Orleans from the estate and Duchie of Milan the which the King demanded for his second sonne according to the treatie made with the Pope at Marseilles the Duke of Angoulesme for that hee was farthest from the Crowne should be inuested That the King should send him the sayd Duke of Orleans to assist him at the conquest of Alger which he pretended The King desired greatly to maintayne true friendship with him and to vnite it by as strong alliances as the Emperour offred that the greatnesse of the one might not breed any iealousie in the other As for the action of Genes hee was content to surcease that controuersie vntill it might bee decided by good and lawefull meanes to renownce for euer his pretensions to Naples and to cause the sayd Duke of Orleans to yeeld vp his quarrell to Florence and Vrbin with such security as the Emperour should require so as his second sonne might be inuested in Milan He promised the Pope which was Alexander Farnese vnder the name of Paul the 3. successor of Clement 7. summoning all Princes to that ende to imploye his forces to make Germanie and England obey the sentence decree of the Church and to imploy himselfe in fauour of the sayd Emperour to the states and Princes of the Empire that they should ioyntly receiue his brother Ferdinand for the true and lawfull King of the Romains Hee offred to succour the Emperour in his holy warre with a certaine number of galleys and men entertayned promising to accompanie him the yeare following in the vo●age of Constantinople with all his forces But to exclude the Duke of Orleans from the enheritance of his Ancestors which his eldest brother did willingly yeeld vnto him in fauour of his marr●age to install his youngest sonne was it not to sowe dissention and cause of warre 1536. betwixt them whom he desired to breed vp in peace and brotherly loue And to what end did the Emperour demand the Duke of Orleans but rather to hold him in manner of an hostage then to make any shew of loue or trust On the other side to giue hope that hee would compound with the King touching Mil●n and to vrge this clause vehemently That all should bee managed without the Popes priuitie who no doubt would seeke all meanes to crosse it sayd the Emperour if he should vnderstand they had treated without imparting it vnto him and notwithstanding to giue intelligence to the Court of Rome by Andrew Dorie and to assure him that although hee gaue eare to the Kings ministers yet would he not conclude any thing without the aduise and consent of his Holinesse was not this a corrupt proceeding seeking to breed a iealousie and distrust betwixt the Pope and his Maiestie The King wearied with these long dissimulations and delayes without effect sent the Lord of Beauu●is vnto Venice to make a new League with the Senate and the King of England ●ent the Bishop of Winchester to the same effect The Emperour had some intelligence thereof and to crosse the Kings desseins he sent Du Prat a Gentleman of his house to make a new leuie of L●nsquenets and And●ew Dorie to Genes to prepare his armie by sea but vnder colour of his enterprise of Alger Who would not then iudge but in steed of a confirmation of peace and loue all things tended to open warre Nothing could detaine these inuincible warriours but that the Empeour after so great a dissipation of his forces could not so sodenly repaire his armie and the King making a scruple to be the first assailant would not incurre the blame to ha●e broken the treatie of Cambray But without breach thereof many motiues of discontent had long incensed him against the Duke of Sauoy Causes of the Kings dislike with the duke of Sauoy The Iewels which the Duke had engaged to borrow money for the
called the Bald King an● Emperour who raigned 33 yeares and to Charles the 2. succeeded 879. 27. Lewis the 2. his sonne called the Stuttering King and Emperour who raigned but a yeare and six moneths     At his death he left his wife with child who being borne was acknowledged for lawfull King and called Charles the Simple his minoritie lasted 22. yeares Many Tutors many confusions These Regents are crowned Kings and acknowledged by that name doe hold the ranke among Kings and so we must diuide these 22. yeares to euery Regent according to his raigne 881. 28. Lewis the 3. and Caroloman bastard of Lewis the stuttering raigne as Regents fiue yeares 889. 29 Charles the 3. a Prince of the bloud called the grosse as Regent he raigned 7. yeares being both King and Emperour he was put from them both 896. 30. Eudes or Odon sonne to Rob. Duke of Aniou as Regent he raigned 10. y. In the confusion of these last Maisters the royall aut●ori●y being greatly weakned many Countries freed themselues from the obedience of the French Monarchie So fell out     THE ECLIPSE OF THE EMPIRE     Both in Germanie Italy The body of the Empire remained in Germanie being afterwards gouerned by an Emperour chosen by the Princes Electors And Italy was dismēbred into diuers Principalities vnder diuers Potentates In the end after this minority of 22. ●eares 899. 31. Charles the 4. called ●he Simple sonne to Lewis the Stuttering was crowned as lawfull King raigned 25. yeares But Raoul of Bo●rgong●e 923. 32. A Prince of the bloud was called by the League to put downe King Charles called the Simple being imprisoned by them and forced to renounce the Crowne Charles dying with griefe Raoul raigned 13. yeares but in the end was expelled from this vniust vsurpation 936. 33. Lewis the 4 called d'Outremer or beyond the sea sonne to Charles the Simple being called out of England whether his Mo●her had carried him to preserue him from the League was acknowledged King and raigned twenty and nine yeares 954. 34. Lothaire his sonne su●c●eded him who raigned thirtie and three yeares 986. 35. Lewis the 5. sonne to Lothaire raigned about two year●s and dying without issue interred with him the race of Charles Martel as his Ancestors had of long time obscured his vertues and that of the valiant Charlemagne vnfortunate in their successors Thus the second race called Carl●●ingiens hauing raigned 230. yeare● ended 〈◊〉 Lewis the 5. and gaue place to the third ra●e which raignes at this day 750. PEPIN the short the 23. King of France and first of the second race PIPIN KING OF FRANCE XXIII THE French thus freed by the Popes dispensation from their oth of obedience assemble their generall Estates and to auoyde confusion in the Realme apparently growen by the negligence of their Kings they conclude to reiect Childeric and to choose Pepin the one vnworthie to raigne by reason of his vices and the other most worthie to be King for his royall vertues And to the end the fundamentall Law of state should not bee directly infringed in this new election they bring Pepin from the race of great Clouis of whome they sayd hee should be acknowledged for the next heire Pepin chosen King by the Parli●ment and Childeric reiected seing that vertue his race being duely weighed he approched nerest to him in vertue Pepin himselfe would not assist at this assemblie that the offer of this dignitie being made without his apparēt seeking it might be the more honorable Being called to heare the general conclusion of the Parliament and the common desire of all the French hee presents himselfe being pleasing to all men in more then an ordinary sort little of bodie but shewing in his countenance the greatnes of his spirit amiable by his mild and modest behauiour and admirable for his graue pleasing Maiestie The Assembly lets him vnderstand by Boniface Archbishop of Mayence or Mentz that the French in regard of his vertues and their future hope h●d by a free and generall consent chosen him King of France And for execution of the said decree hee was instantly in the presence of them all installed King the royall Crowne was set vpon his head by the said Archbishop and then he was raysed vpon a target and carried about the assembly after the ancient ceremonie of the French And by vertue of the same decree Childeric was chalenged as vnworthy of the Crowne degraded shauen and confined into a Monastery thereto passe the remainder of his daies This notable change happened in the yeare 750. in the Citty of Soissons but with so resolute a consent of all the French nation● as there appeared not any one that made shew to dislike thereof A most assured testimony that Go● had so determined Soueraigne c●u●es of this cha●ge hauing res●rued to himselfe the soueraigne authority ouer Kings to place and di●●lace gird vngird raise and cast downe according to his good pleasure alwaies iust alwaies wise To him we must ascribe the principall and soueraigne cause of all changes For God is the gouernour as hee is the Creator It being a necessary consequence that he gouernes that which he hath created and by his prouidence wat●●eth especially ouer mankinde for whom he hath made the world If we shall otherwise seeke the neerest causes of this alteration we may iustly say that vice dispossessed Childeric vertue set Pepin in possession of the Crowne loue the reuerence of s●biects being the s●pport of publike authority hate and contempt the ruine thereof To the end that Princes by so worthy an example may learne to banish vice which making them hatefull contemptible thrusts them from their Thrones and to plant vertue which causing them to be respected and honored makes them to raigne ouer nations Now we begin a new gouernment vnder new Kings and in a new race In the beginning we shall see two great Princes The estate of this second race vnder whom good order shall make an alteration of affaires with an abundance of all blessings both spirituall temporall Iustice wisdom pollicie armes valour large limits of territories abundance of peace the excellent knowledge of learning to raise this estate to the greatest happines that euer it enioyed scarse any other kingdom whatsoeuer let forraine nations say what they please But the happines of these two Kings shall not be hereditary in their poste●ity who beginning soone to degenerate shall decline by degrees vntil that vice depriuing them of the Crowne vertue shall giue it to another who shall shew himselfe a more lawfull successor and righter heire to Charlemagne hauing a better part in his vertues This second race shall enioy the kingdom 237. yeares beginning to raigne in the yeare 750. ending in the yeare 987. hauing begun by vertue and ended by vice A goodly l●s●on for Potentates th●t bounty wisdom and valour In●●●uction for
Lothaire dyes det●sted of all men and Lewis his sonne for a finall conclusion of his race as an outcast of great Charlemagne LEWIS the 5. the 35. King and the last of this second race LEWES .5 KING OF FRANCE XXXV HE raigned one yeare onely and dyed without heire 964. without friends and without memorie The last King of the race of Charlemagne leauing his place voyde at time of need in troubles of State and confusion of times horribly corrupted He was likewise called idle hauing done nothing worthy of memory but in leauing the place to a better Prince and more worthy then himselfe whom God the protector of the Crowne of France had reserued for this estate in so great necessitie God the disposer of Kingdomes and states for as God had decreed that out of the house of Hugues the great should issue a great King which should repaire the errors of this bastard race of Charlemagne so likewise hee had prepared the meanes both for the father to lay the foundation and for his sonne Hugh Capet appointed for this dignity to finish this goodly building as it appeares in the following discourse THE THIRD RACE OF THE KINGS OF FRANCE Called Capets or Capeuingiens of the name of Hugh Capet Father to the Kings which raigne happily to this day I haue made the earth with a stretched out arme and dispose of the estates of men at my pleasure By me Kings doe raigne A particular Chronologie of the third Race Yeares of grace Kings From the yeare 988. vnto the yeare 1598. 988. 36. Hugues or Hugh Capet The first of that race who setled the Estate of the French Monarchie much shaken by the confusion of ciuill warres and the multiplicity of masters He reckons twentie and eight Kings issued from him successiuely from father to sonne or from branch to branch according to the order of the fundamentall Law of the State of France Hauing raigned nine yeares he leaues 996. 37. Robert his sonne alone of that name a peaceable King who raigns 32. yeares and to him succeeds 1028. 38. Henry the first of that name his sonne who raigns 33. yeares and to him 1061. 39. Philip the 1. his sonne who raigned 49. yeares and to him 1109. 40. Lewis the 6. called the grosse his sonne who raignes 29. yeares and to him 1137. 41. Lewis the 7. called the yong who raigned 44. yeares and to him succeeded 1181. 42. Phillip the 2. surnamed Augustus or giuen of God his sonne who raigned 44. yeares and to him succeeded his sonne 1223. 43. Lewis the 8. called the father of Saint Lewis who raigned 3. yeares and to him 1227. 44. Lewis the 9. called Saint Lewis a great and famous Prince he reigns 44 yeares and to him his sonne 1271. 45. Philip the 3. surnamed the hardie who raigned 15. yeares and to him his sonne 1286. 46. Philip the 4. called the faire who raigned 29. yeares and to him his sonne 1315. 47. Lewis the 10. surnamed Hutin hauing raigned 2. yeares hee leaues the Crowne to his brother 1317. 48. Philip the 5. called the long who raigned 6. yeares and leaues the scepter to his brother 1322. 49. Charles the 4. called the faire who raigned 6. yeares And by the law of State for want of sonnes or brother the Estates of France notwithstanding the pretentions of Edward King of England 1328. 50. the sonne of the onely daughter of Philip the faire placed in the royall throne 1350. 51. Philip of Valois the 5. sonne of Charles Earle of Valois and second sonne to Philip the 3. and by consequence the neerest kinsman to the three former Kings Heraignes 23. yeares and to him succeeds his sonne Iohn alone of that name     Vnder him began a confusion in the Realme the which continued neere a hundred yeares with much miserie that is from this Iohn vntill the warre of the common weale vnder Lewis the XI So wee reckon 5. very troublesome raignes vnder Iohn Charles 5. Charles 6.   Charles the 7. and Lewis the XI who setled and augmented the Estate of the realme being greatly decayed by the continuance of ciuil wars Iohn hauing raigned 14. yeares leaues the realme to 1364 52. Charles the 5. his sonne called the wise who raigned 18. yeares and to him succeeded 1382. 53. Charles the 6. his sonne who raigned with much paine 42. yeares and to him 1424. 54. Charles the 7. his sonne     Who expelled the English out of France and setled the Crowne seized on by the King of England who was Crowned and proclaimed King in Paris hauing raigned 39. yeares He leaues the royall scepter to 1463. 55. Lewis the XI his sonne     Who vnited Bourgongne and Prouence to the Crowne and thereby tooke away all occasions of trouble leauing the royall scepter to his sonne 1483. 56. Charles the 8. with peace     The which continued without any disturbance a boute a hundred yeares from the yeare 1462. vnto the yeare 1562. vnder the raigns of Lewis 12. Francis 1. and Henry 2. Charles the 8. hauing raigned 14. yeares dying without Children the realme was transported to 1498. 57. Lewis the 12. Duke of Orleans who raigned 18. yeares and for want of heires male remits the Crowne to 1515. 58. Francis the 1. of that name Duke of Angoulesme who raigned 32. yeares     An excellent Prince who after the long ignorance of obscure ages caused the knowledge of learning to flourish hauing beautified his vniuersity of Paris with excellent learned men in the tongues and sciences the which were dispersed ouer all Europe and to him succeeded his sonne 1547. 59. Henry the 2. of that name who raigned 12. yeares and to him succeeded 1559. 60. Francis the 2. his sonne who dying without Children there succeeded him his brother   61. Charles the 9. who dying without Children left the Crowne to   62. Henry the 3. his brother the last of the royall race of Valois who beeing slaine by a Iacobin and dying without Children there succeeded in the lawfull masculine line   63. Henry the 4. before King of Nauarre and the first King of the royall line of Bourbon who now raignes and long may he rule happily and holyly beloued obeyed and respected The Genealogy of King Henry the 4. now raigning according to the order of succession is at the ende of the royall branch of Valois HVGVES or Hugh Capet the 36. King and the first of the third race the which raignes at this daye vnder Henry the fourth HVGH CAPET KING OF FRANCE XXXVI THE royall throne of France remayning voide 987. by the death of Lewis the 5. did visibly call Charles Duke of Lorraine to the Crowne of whome we haue before made mention as the first Prince of the bloud royall to whome I say the fundamentall Lawe did adiudge the Crowne for want of heires males Charles Duke of Lorraine h●ire presumptiue reiected from the Crowne and. Hugh Capet chosen King of
her impudencie did so fa●re exceed as shee would dishonourablie haue stayed in Antioche and left her husband presuming to cloake her shame with a shew of Religion saying without blushing that she could be no more the wife of Lewis to whom shee was Cousin in the fourth degree preferring the loue of a Iester named Saladin of the Sarrazin race Queene Eleno● vnchast before the greatnesse of a King of France her lawfull husband Lewis being much disquieted perswades this woman to returne a heauier burthen to his minde then to his ship being returned to his house hee frees himselfe with all the speed he can And whereas hee should haue cast this insatiate woman into the Riuer being no more his wife and retained her Dowrie iustly gotten she playing bankerout of her honour Lewis pretends a cause to be diuorsed from Elenor and restores her Guienne hee calles a Councell at Baugency to haue her diuorsed the which was granted vnder colour of this farre fetcht consangunitie But his desire was to bee freed from her So retaining two Daughters borne vnder the vale of their marriage hee restores vnto Elenor all her Countrie of Guienne that is he puts into the hands of his furious enemie a Torche to set his whole Realme on fire for so soone as shee sees her selfe freed from the subiection and feare of a husband shee stayed not long to acquaint her selfe with Henry King of England and Du●e of Normandie Elenor marries with Henry King of England the greatest and most capitall enemie that Lewis had So hee obtained Guienne by the voluntary cession which Lewis made to haue the better meanes to annoy him and his whole realme Moreouer Lewis payde deerely for so great a discomoditie for the Pope would not giue him a dispence to marrie againe without a great summe of money to be imployed in the warres of the Holy Land and to finish this worke hee tooke to Wife Constance the Daughter of Alphonso King of Galicia being a weake friend Lewis marries againe and farre off This marriage was not greatly conuenient neither for his owne quiet not the peace of his subiects This subiect of deadly rancor encreasing the hatred of these two neighbour Mona●kes of France and England burst forth soone by dangerous effects The benefit of the new purchase of Guienne was the cause of that perrilous warre the which had so long and so lamentable a continuance William Duke of Guienne Grand-father by the Father to Queene Elenor had marryed the onely Daughter of the first Raimond Earle of Tholouse who had ingaged the sayd Countie to Raimond Earle of Saint Gilles who since also called himselfe Earle of Tholouse being seized of the sayd Countie and enioyed it quietly vnder the Kings obedience Henry King of England offers the money to Raimond to redeeme it The first war betwixt France and England for the Earledome of Tholouse and demands the Earledome as his Wiues right Vpon his refusall he armes enters into Quercy takes Cahors spoiles the Countrie and besiegeth Tholouse Lewis intreated by Raimond runnes to quenche this fire Beeing arriued and the two Armies readie to ioyne a peace was made betwixt the two Kings by the marriage of Marguerite the Daughter of Lewis with Henry the eldest Sonne of Henry King of England The two kings reconciled by a marriage But for that shee was very young and not yet mariageable shee was deliuered into Henry the Fathers hands vntill shee were of fitte age to marry Lewis had now buryed his wife Constance who left him but two Daughters without any heyres male so as being desirous to haue a successor hee made no delay to matry and tooke to his third Wife Alix the Daughter of Thibaud Earle of Champagne his vassall 1151. and newly reconciled but not greatly affected vnto him vntill that time Hee had a Sonne presently by her whom hee called Dieu Donné or giuen of God as an acknowledgement that God had sent him at his and his subiects praiers This is hee that shall succeed him I should begin to describe his raigne but order commands me to relate what happened during the raigne of Lewis in the neighbour nations of England and Italy wherein Lewis had great crosses Henry King of England had two sonnes by Elenor Richard and Geoffr●y and by his first wife hee had Henry who was made sure to Marguerit of France of whom wee haue spoken The Father caused him to be crowned to settle him in his life time and tyed the English vnto him by homage A young Prince ambitious audatious ill aduised and rash who cannot long conteine himselfe with the taste of this new authoritie Notable troubles in England betw●●● the father and the sonne but will play the King with his Father And although his Fathers admonitions restrained him for awhile yet this ambitious humour still burst forth So as the Father from milde admonitions came to threats the insolencie of this young Prince increasing dayly Some yeares passed whilest this fire lay smothered very long for young Henry to whom the Fathers life seemed too tedious and the children of the second wife grew by the care of Elenor their Mother Henry the Father discontented with his Sonne and fearing that in consumating the mariage betwixt him and the Daughter of France the young Prince would grow proud augmenting his traine and State and through the fauour of King Lewis his Father in Lawe attempt something preiudiciall to his authoritie Hee delayed the accomplishment of this marriage although the Virgin wer● of more then sufficient yeares to marrie To this mischiefe was added an other more shamefull for that Henry the Father caused this Princesse to bee carefully kept the which should bee his Daughter in Lawe fearing least his Sonne should violently take her away Prince Henry iealous of his owne father and marry her Elenor falles into iealousie as if Henry had abused her And it was easie to settle this conceit in her sonne in Lawe Henryes head who had the chiefe interest in this delay And to publish this scandolous report vnto the people to make the old man more odious vnto the whole world A malitious and importune woman borne for a great plague to both these Estates As men doe commonly adore the Sunne rising so there wanted no Sicophants in Court to flatte● the cares of this young King and likewise to incense the two Kings one against the other in flattering their passions Thus Henry transported by these occasions complaines to Lewis of the double wrong his Father did him both in the delay of his marriage and deniall of his authoritie And as Lewis at his request had giuen some admonitions vnto Henry in the end this passionate young Prince came to Paris where beeing well receiued hee enters League with Lewis to make warre against his Father and to disquiet him in diuers parts William King of Scotland is an associate vpon condition that Henry shall giue him
the Countrie of Northu●●●●and adioyning vnto Scotland for his charges in the warres Henry the father aduertised of all these preparations moues not hoping that reason should reclaime his Sonne and to this end hee sends an honourable Ambassage to Lewis and to his Sonne being in France the which made them more resolute an vsuall thing in such as are sought vnto Elenor addes more to this dissention great enough of it selfe The sonnes make warre against the Father to crosse the affaires of her old husband with whom shee stood in very bad termes Shee doth bandie her two Sonnes Richard and Geoffrey against the Father causing them to ioyne with their Brother Henry who is puft vp wonderfully here-with hauing his bretheren for companions of his furie The warre breakes forth amongst them the Kings Armie enters into Normandie the which obeyed the Father Henry the Sonne takes some places and ingageth some men of warre with great promises and by great assurances of good the which was not in his power to performe Henry the Father hauing prouided for England against William King of Scottes passeth into Normandie where laye all the burthen of the warre and Armes with great speede The coldnesse of his age was chased by the liuely apprehension of so many indignities The greatest part of his subiects detested the presumption of this Sonne neither could they allowe of Lewis his proceedings 1155. who had done better in casting Water then Oyle into this home-bred fire Lewis supports the sonnes against the father Lewis besiegeth Vernueil and fearing to be forced to raise the siege vnder colour of a parley with Henry he takes the Towne and sends forces from other parts into England to cause new broyles Richard Duke of Guienne by his Mothers right makes warre there but all these vnlawfull attempts haue no successe The French that passed into England are beaten Richard preuailes not against his Father to whom most of the Citties yeeld daily leaue the Sonne Richard drawne to his duty by the respects of Nature But they preuaile not which cannot be denied forced by necessitie desires to parley with his Father He is receiued into grace and deales with his brother Henry for the like reconciliation Lewis finding Henryes disposition allowes of it They send Ambassadors of either side This vnciuill vnlawfull warre was ended by this accord Henry King of England reconciled to his sonnes That the Father should re●aine alone in the Royall authoritie acknowledged and obeyed of all his sonnes that he should giue honorable allowances to eyther of them according to their degrees That the marriage of Henrie with Marguerite the eldest Daughter of King Lewis should be consumated and that Alix his other Daughter should be giuen in marriage to Richard the other Sonne of Henry to make an absolute accord Thus this Tragedie seemed to end with a Comedie But there shall be change of subiects vpon another Scaffold As these things passed in England Italy was nothing quieter by the dissentions that were reuiued betwixt the Emperours and Pope After the death of Conrad Frederick surnamed Barberousse is created Emperour of whom Histories yeeld an honourable testimonie of his wisdome and valour Hauing pacified Germanie he came into Italie to repaire the confusions bred both by long absence and the death of Conrad The Emperour hauing punished the Veronois and the Milanois New dissencion betwix● the Emperor and Pope had incensed Pope Adrian who supported them the factions of Guelphes and Gibelins beeing confusedly spred throughout all the Citties so as hee was ready to excommunicate him when as death stayed this storme leauing it ready to his successors The Schisme which grewe in the Sea of Rome by these factions stayed the blowe some hauing called Victor as most affectionate to the Emperours partie● others Alexander as his sworne enemie To remedie this deuision Frederick calles a Councell at Pauia and sends to both the Popes to come thether Victor comes and offers to performe what should be decreed Alexander on the other side makes the old answer these be the words of the Historie That the Pope was not to bee iudged by any man liuing and that hee neyther ought nor would appeare The Councell being thus dissolued without any good conclusion the Emperour for the making of an accorde intreates Lewis King of France Henry King of England and the Kings of Scotland and Bohemia to meete in some conuenient place for a parley Dijon was appointed as bordering vpon the Empire They meete but their conference did aggrauate the quarrell Lewis was wholy for Alexander who had likewise gained the Venetians and the greatest part of Italy The issue of this pa●ley was open force the which Frederick imployed against the Milanois being the principall cause of this dissention Frederick the Emperor ruines Milan whome hee did punish seuerelie hauing taken spoiled and sackt their Cittie ruined it vtterly causing Salt to bee sowen there punishing the authors of this rebellion capitally Alexander not able to resist Frederick retires himselfe into France from whence he planted his battery against the Emperour The Milanois sauing what they could in this shipwrack begin to build their Citty vnder the fauour of Pope Alexander to make new desseignes against Frederick who returns into Italy makes himselfe maister of Genoa He takes Rom● and creates a new Pope from whence their means came defeats the Romaines in a pitched field takes Rome causeth another Pope called Calixtus to be created in the place of Alexander the 3. Alexander saues himselfe at Venice Otho The sonne of Frederick folows after to take him with 75. galleis Otho the Emperors sonne ca●en by the Vene●ians But the chance turned for he himselfe was taken by Cian Generall of the Venetians and carried prisoner to Venice Thē Frederick grew more mild accepted of such conditions of peace as Alexander had prescribed That he should craue absolutions on his knees and himselfe should lead his armie into Asia So as Frederick comes to Venice and being prostrate at the Popes feet in a sollemne assemblie 1171. he asketh pardon The Pope sets his foote vpon his neck and cries with a lowd voyce Super aspidem et basiliscum ambulabis The Emperour moued with this disgrace The Emperor subiects himselfe basely to the Pope answers Non tibi sed Petro. The Pope replies Et mihi Petro. This brauado of Alexander seemed so strange to some of his traine as Theodore Marquis of Misnia trembling and g●ashing his teeth with choller was held back by the reines of respect yet hee runnes to the Emperour and takes him vp The Pope fearing least these Germaines should offer him some violence beeing amazed casts himselfe about Fredericks neck whome euen now hee held vnder his feete beseeching him to preserue him from his traine The Emperour giues him his word for hee was the stronger both within the Cittie and without hauing humbled himselfe for
realme The King followed accompanied with the Dukes of Berry Bourgongne and Bourbon his Vncles and the Dukes of Lorraine and Bar he lodgeth at Blandelle two leagues from Cassell with an intent to charge the English who presently leaue the seege of Ypre Cassel and Grauelins and retyer to Bergues where Charles presently beseegeth them The English demande a parle with the Duke of Brittain they put him in minde of the benefits he had receiued from their nation Charles makes a truce with the English and demande requitall in this occurrent The Duke of Lancaster remaines at Calais by reason of his weakenesse the English Captaines requier respit to vnderstand his pleasure In the ende the King receiues them vpon honest conditions to depart with bagge and baggage and to leaue Flanders the which they performe Being returned into England they are accused to haue sold the Earldome of Flanders to the French so as by Richards commands they are beheaded The Gantois made a dutifull answere and promised obedience and loyaltie to the King A Truce was concluded for one yeare with the English by meanes of the Duke of Lancaster for King Richard and the Duke of Berry for our King Charles Such was the issue of this sodaine voyage of Flanders being a meanes to settle a businesse of a deeper consultation and more dangerous consequence seeing it concerned not onely the heart but the whole body of the Sta●e They sought how to suppresse the sedition which was apparently bred in Paris and by their example in many great citties of the Realme To this ende Charles vpon his returne from this voyage stayed at S Denis with his vncles the Constable Chancelour and his whole Councell they were all troubled to resolue in so important a cause for what should they do To punish the poore people ●yred with the warres threatened with losses halfe dead by the feeling of so great calamities that were to beat one lying sicke in his bed for his waywardnesse The King consults what course to take 〈◊〉 the mutineus 〈◊〉 and not to cure him of the paine which is the cause thereof It were a meanes to driue him to d●●pai●e to apply a remedye worse then the disease And not to punish them would argue ●ea●e and make them grow more proud and insolent a means to animate them to all impu●●ty and to lay the way open to a disordered rebellion But the last aduice preuailed beeing well verified that since the paiment of the sine the Parisiens were growne worse and more bitter hauing had conference with the 〈◊〉 audacious mutines and the right artisans of rebellion holding it a vertue to play the madde men against their naturall Lords and also had so farre abused the Kings bountie as they had presumed to sollicit the best Citties of the Realme to the like disorder It did greatly import for the good of the Kings seruice and of the State that such phrensies should be suppressed by an exemplarie punishment done vpon the chiefe authors Iohn de Marais was verie deepe ingaged in these tumults and the more dangerously for that he cast the stone and withdrewe his arme and making a shewe of seruice to the King he fed the people in these madde humours very torches of sedition vnder a colour of the Common weale for who can beleeue they would put so famous a person to death without some ●ust cause I knowe they write diuersly and euery man hath his iudgement ●r●e yet is it not true not likely that in pardoning a whole multitude offending they would punish him in whome there were no shewe of offence If hee were not culpable at the least he was accused of that which was the subiect of a publike condemnation Charles being aduised to punish the Parisiens for the insolencies they had comitted in h●s p●cience caused his armie to lodge about the Cittie and on a certen day he sends for the Prouost of Marchants the Sheriffs who come vnto him to Saint Denis with a countenance full of humility and shewe of amendment The King gaue them to vnderstand by Peter Orgemont his Chanceller that he ment to goe to his Cittie of Paris to punish the rebells and seditions who had not respected his presence The Prouost makes answere That the whole bodie of the Cittie was wonderfully greeued for that which had beene committed by men in despaire worthy to be seuerely punished but the good Cittizens had no comunity with these rascalls and that the whole Cit●ie was readie to do him faithfull seruice There were many about the King which made all odious that concerned the Parisiens but Charles made them no other answer but that he would be soone at Paris The King enters Paris with his army and doe what reason and the dutie of a good King required He causeth his foreward to march led by the Constable Clisson and the Mar●shall of Sancerre who seaze vpon the gates the which they found open without any gards The King accompained with the Dukes of Berry Bourgongne and Bourbon with other Lords of his Councell and an infinit number of Noblemen and Gentlemen in great shewe terrible to the people marcheth into the Cittie Being come to Saint Denis gate he causeth the barres to bee beaten downe The Prouost of Marchants the Sheriffs with the chiefe Inhabitants of the Cittie carrying the keys beseech the King to giue them audience hee denyeth them and passeth on to the house of Saint Pol but the army is dispersed throughout all the quarters of the Citty Presently they take away all the chaines and send them to Bois de Vincennes 1385. They search all houses for armes the which are instantly carried to the Louure and the Bastile The Dukes of Berry and Bourgongne with the Prouost and his Archers go throughout the citty causing 300. of the most seditious to be apprehended The next day many heads were stroke off at the Halles amongst the rest that of Iohn de Marais Iohn de Marais a f●mous aduocate with many others executed whō al men had heard of late discours so eloquently with admiratiō being held for the Oracle of France These executions were done by fits with such a shewe of grauitie as the seat of Iustice did more terrifie then the executioners arme vpon the scaffold A whole day was spent in these slowe proceedings the citty gates being kept so straitly as no man might issue forth houses and shops were shut vp with so great a silence as if all had beene dead euery man being hidden in his house or else so amazed as he durst not looke into the streets The vniuersity which then was in great credit with the King becommeth sutor for the people and beseecheth him not to include the Innocent with the culpable The King answereth coldly that he would aduise what to do willing them to retyre In the meane time a great Scaffold is made on the highest staire of the Pallace before the great image of Philip
the greatest dignities of the realme· for he made Charles Steward Earle of Boucquam his Constable and Iames Earle Du-glas Marshall of France and to honour the Scottish-mens faith he gaue them the gard of his person an institution which continues vnto this day He institutes a gard of thē for his person He had likewise some friends in Spaine and Italie who succoured him in due time according to their meanes We haue shewed what Prouinces followed the partie of our Charles amongst the which Languedo● was a principall The importance of this countrie did much aduance his affaires This reason moued both the Bourguignon and the Sauoiard against this Prouince The instruments fit for this enterprise were Iohn of Ch●●lons Prince of Orange and the Lord Bochebaron a Nobleman of Velay one of the 22. diocesses of Languedoc The first by the commodity of his neighbourhood did win Nismes Pontsaint Esprit Aiguesmortes and all the rest of base Languedoc vnto Beziers Warre in Languedoc except the Castell of Pezenas the tower of Villenefue by Auignon the castell of Egaliers now wholy ruined neere vnto Vzez This losse was somewhat repaired by the fidelitie of the inhabitants Aiguesmortes set vp their ensigne of libertie by the direction of the Baron of Vauuerbe and killes the garrison of Bourguignons which the Prince of Orange had placed there To this day they shew a great tub of Stone wherein they did salt the Bourguignons The example of this strong and important Citty A strange cruelty whereby they are called Bourguignons sallies to this day awaked the rest and euen vpon the approch of the Earle of Foix who came with a goodly armye all the Townes yee●d vnto him except Nismes and Pont S. Esprit Townes of great importance in that countrye the one beeing the head of that Seneshauce the other a passage vpon the Rosne towardes Daulphiné But as the libertie of time made the seruant presume aboue the Master so it chanced that the Earle of Foix hauing tasted the sweet of command and transported with the common humour of men seeking to make their profit of the common confusions of France deteined the reuenues of Languedoc by his absolute authority imparting none to Charles being exceeding poore in this confused time This necessity was accompanied with a cruell warre stir●ed vp in Velay by the Lord of Roche-baron a partisan to the Dukes of Sauoy and Bourgongne who furnished him both with men and money for this rebellion for it was rather a horrible theuery then a warre These 〈◊〉 occasions drew Charles into Languedoc to confirme his authority and his voyage succeeded according to his intent for he chased the Prince of Orange out of Nismes and Pont S. Esprit he pacified the troubles of Velay and put the Earle of Foix from his gouernement giuing the place to Charles of Bourbon Earle of Clermont a Prince of the bloud to the great content of all the people Hauing thus happily prouided for his affaires he takes the way of Velay to returne into France beeing arriued at Espaly a Castle belonging to the Bishop of Puy he is aduertised of his fathers death Charles mou●rnes for the death of his father after Henry the 5. his Competitor He falles presently to teares and mourning yet he buries not his affaires in care His Councell aduiseth him to change his blacke roabes into Scarlet to set vp the banner of France in his name and to proclaime himselfe King for the first fruites of his coronation the which being performed at Puy to the peoples great ioye Charles goes to Poitiers where he caused himselfe to de crowned King and receiued the homage and oathes of the officers of the Crowne Princes Noblemen and gentlemen that were about him with such pompe as the strictnesse of time would permit Then he intituled himselfe King of France and made shew of more authority and greater pompe But on the other side the Duke of Bedford beganne to bandy more strongly against him Henry the 6. his pupill a yong infant was in England He caused him likewise to bee crowned King till the seauen yeares after he should be solemnely installed at Paris in the yeare 1430. He set his name vpon the money of France making a new stampe but without any other change then of his name So that hereafter two Kings two factions two armies shall contend for this good●● Crowne The heire being the weaker shall fight against a strong pretender Law ●●uours the one and force the other but the Protector of this estate will giue a fauourable doome for the weaker The Dukes of Bedford and Bourgongne hold a counsel a● Amiens that the honour of so memorable a preseruation of this monarchy apparently drawne out of the graue may be giuen to him who rules the deluge of our confusions by his miraculous prouidence Scarse had Charles receiued the first fruites of his royall authority when as the Dukes of Bedford and Bourgongne his capitall enemies assemble at Amiens to crosse his new dignity in the breeding There shall be seaueh yeares of exceeding bad time but after this sharpe winter there will come a goodly spring when as all seemed lost and in the ende Sommer shall follow with a plentifull haruest of rest to this Realme whereof the lawfull he●e shall remaine in quiet possession and the pretender expelled with losse euen of that which he might haue ciuilly inioyed In this assembly at Amiens great plottes are layde against Charles whose ruine was their soueraigne end All is done at the charge of the English Peter Duke of Brittaine and Arthur Earle of Richmont his brother are there present Amedee Duke of Sauo● sends his Ambassadors A great league against King Charles consumed by alliances vnder an other colour but he casts the stone hides his arme The Dukes of Bedford Brittaine and Sauoy make a defensiue offensiue league agai●●● Charles The soueraignty of the Crowne should remaine to the English the commo●●ties to the Dukes They set the seale of marriages to this alliance Iohn Duke of ●edford marries with Anne the sister of Philip Duke of Bourgongne and Marguerit his other S●ster take● Arthur the Earle of Richemont Then they seeke the fruits of this alliance with the preiudice of Charles Euery man takes his quarter to torment him on all side● The Bourguignon vndertakes Picardy where he settles Iohn of Luxembourg to expel the Daulphinois out of some places which they held there Henry of Lancaster Earle of Salisbury went into Champagne and Bry to clense the Country about Paris and to bud●e Orleans The Earle of Warwick vndertooke Guienne to make war against those to●nes that held the Daulphins party Lewis Prince of Orange had charge to arme in Languedoc and Daulphiné Behold a great storme rising against the lawfull heire of this cr●●ne Amidst all these difficultyes Charles must needs be in great perplexitie but I reade with ioy that he whom God had chosen to
In the end by the Dukes meanes yeelding him his libertie this quarrell was ended marrying the eldest sonne of René with the daughter of the Earle of Vaudemont But let vs reserue the rest to the following raigne About the end of this yeare a solemnitie was done in Paris which carried more shew then substance We haue said before how that Henry the 6. King of England Henry King of England crowned at Paris had beene crowned King of France when as our Charles was crowned at Poitiers after the decease of his father Henry was but two yeares old and came not out of England vntill that Charles had bin sollemnly crowned at Rheims to the great ioy of all the French but when as the Duke of Bedford found how much this autentike publication aduanced the affaires of Charles he caused Henry to be brought into France and to be crowned at Paris with an extraordinarie Maiestie to out-countenance Charles his Coronation by a greater shew of pompe But the bloud of France cannot dissemble no man was moued thereat no more then to see a Tragedie acted vpon the Stage This yeare is very barren of all memorable exploits but that this silence noted an entrance to an acco●d both parties being weary of pleading yet with great slacknesse as we see in diseases which come sodenly and passe away slowly we must therefore crosse this rough way before we come to Paris Montargis taken by the English as we haue said Montar●is taken and lost againe was no● recouered by the French but after a diuers maner for the English lost the To●ne by the Castell and the French the Castell by the Towne yet were they three moneths in winning of the Castell Hauing taken all they lost all by the same meanes t●at made them so much to gape after the Castell which was the want of money This shamfull losse greeued many of the greatest in Court and bred a new trouble by this occasion Tremouille was yet in great credit with the King Tremouille taken and deliuered againe hauing by this meanes a great hand in the State they accused him to haue heaped vp great treasure to the preiudice of such as daily imployed their liues for the Kings seruice The greater men re●olue to take Tremouille prisoner and to punish him like vnto Giac and others before mentioned The King was at his Castell at Chinon Tremouille followes him as his 〈◊〉 but it chanced as he was in his chamber the Lords of Brueil Coytiuy and Fetard 〈…〉 with 40. armed men enter and take him not one of a hundred of that sort could escape But six thousand Crownes saued his life hoping to returne againe into cred●t The Constable of Richmont growes into greater fauour then before Thus misf●rtune is good for some thing Bedford puft vp with the successe of Montargis takes M●lly in Gas●enois but hauing besieged Lagny in Brie he was repulsed· and at the same time Iohn of Luxembourg of the Bourguignon faction is dispossessed of Ligny in Barrots by the Gentleman of Come●cy A disgrace which shall draw the Bourguignon to a ●●mposition so much desired togither with the happy successe of the French in the C●untry of Arthois the taking of S. Valery in Ponthieu The confusion of the warre and the generall wauering of 〈◊〉 c●iefe Citties in Picardy tired with these confusions being so great as no man was 〈◊〉 of his person of what partie soeuer if he were the weaker The Cardes were so shuffled 1432. as an English man would become French to take a Bourguignon and a Frenchman become English or a Bourguignon to take a Frenchman These vnkinde treacheries were vsuall especially at Amiens Abbeuille and throughout all Picardie where the warres had been most licentious Which outrage hath been reuiued in ou● miserable age through the crueltie of these wretched warres which causeth men to make shipwracke both of faith and honour This yeare had a plausible beginning but without any great effect The Councell of Pisa being assembled as we haue said to redresse the confusion of Antipopes and to reduce the Church diuided by this Schisme vnto vnion sends the Cardinall of Auxerre vnto the Kings of France and England to exhort them vnto peace Charles protested that he desired nothing more the English said the like They assemble to this end at Auxerre in great troupes but at their first meeting all this treatie was broken off for both the one the other stood vpō the qualitie of King of France being the fundamētall point of all their quarrell The Duke of Bedford spake more proudly then Charles himselfe A treatie betw●xt the French and English as if the law of State which maintained this Monarchie had beene made in England an Iland become firme land and France changed to the Isle of Albion or of Brittanie of such force is error euen in matters of State when as passion ouer-rules the light of reason So as they all depart without any effect They onely conclude a truce for the great want of the poore people who could suffer no more But this truce was a pit-fall for many trusting the countenance of this courteous warre which making profession to meane nothing so is more to be feared when she smiles then when she frownes Io●n Duke of Bourbon dies in England Wee haue saied that Iohn Duke of Bourbon was taken prisoner in the battaile of Azincourt whom they could neuer redeeme at any rate This yeare he dyed in England and his sonne Charles succeeds him He had to wife the sister of the Duke of Bourgongne but they fall to words for their rights and so to warre Charles takes from Philip A quarrell betwixt the Dukes of Bourbon and Bourgongne Grancy Aualon Perepertuis Mucy-l'Euesque Chaumont and other places The Bourguignon had his reuenge and besiegeth Belleuille in Beauieulois belonging vnto Charles Mary Duchesse of Berry labours to reconcile these Princes and drawes them to a peace the which shall soone be a meanes of a generall accord betwixt the Bourguignon and France by the mediation of the Duke of Bourbon a profitable instrument of so good a worke This occasion not preuented was seconded by an other for the Duke of Bedford Bedford marrieth againe after the death of his wife being sister to the Duke of Bourgongne marries with Iaquelin the daughter of Peter of Luxembourg Earle of S. Pol who was no friend to the Bourguignon and moreouer the youth and beautie of this new spouse had so bewitched Bedford as he was easily drawne from Philip whose loue he entertained with great difficultie The Duke of Bedford and Bourgongne in dislike yet in respect of the generall cause they made a good shew and had met at S. Omer to that effect but this enterview encreased their discontents In the meane time the truce being ill obserued on either side is conuerted into a languishing warre Bedford makes warre in the Countrie of Maine by Scales and
you haue yet done So the accord was made without comprehending of these three The Dukes of Bourbon and Alenson sweare to serue the King and yeeld vp Loches Corbeil Bois de Vincennes Sancerre Sancouins Erie Conterobert and other places which they held The Daulphin remaynes with his father who changeth all his trayne except his confessor and Cooke But all this is but counterfeit you shal soone see other broyles This phrensie of state bred in the Kings house against the King himselfe was by our Ancestors called the Prag●●●y Nine monthes of this yeare being spent in these garboiles Charles returnes to Tours to prouide for the raysing of the seege at Harfleu where the Earle of Somerset had lien long but it was in vaine for the Towne was taken in the end after a long and painfull constancie of the Inhabitants who could not be releeued in time by reason of these home-bred troubles and yet there was a second mischiefe The Lord of Gaucourt gouernor of Daulphiné a most profitable seruant of the King returning from the seege and causing some of his baggage which was scattered from the troupe to retire he was surprised by a companie of English and led prisoner to Rouen to the great griefe of Charles who loued him hauing giuen good testymones of his loyaltie in his greatest extremities But in exchange Charles takes Conches and Lo●●iers Townes of importance in Normandie from thence he came into Champaigne to subdue a part of these aduenturing theeues who had surprized some places in this Prouince Musse l'Euesque Montagu and others The Kings army led by the Constable takes them and razed them by the Kings commande pardoning most of these theeuish Captaines the bastard of Vergy and the Lord of Commercy A memorable execution but he caused Alexander bastard of Iohn Duke of Orleans to be drowned a notable theefe who hauing followed the discontented Princes had spoken vnworthilie of his maister This execution of Iustice is memorable vpon one of so high a birth being followed the same yeare with the exemplarie death of Gyl●s de Raiz Marshall of France issued from a great and famous house The Marshall de Raiz burnt for sorcerie who beeing found guilty of Negromancie and Sorcerie was condemned by the Court of Parliament of Brittaine and burnt at Nantes with some of his seruants culpable of the same crymes He was honored for his valour but neither his armes nor his bloud could stay the hand of diuine Iustice meritoriously ex●cuted by this iust decree of the magistrate Priuate actions worthie to be registred in the historie to shew that the greatest cannot flie the hand of God after they haue long abused his patience But the treaty of peace betwixt France and England being discontinued aboue a yeare was againe reuiued by the industrie of the Duchesse of Bourgongne a Portugall but much affected to the quiet of the Realme and a very sufficient woman who had great credit with her husband She followes it so wisely as in the ende two Kings sends their Ambassadors to Calais On Charles his behalfe were the Archbishops of Rheims Narbon A treat●e betwixt the two Kings for a peace but 〈◊〉 and the Earle of Dunois bastard of Orleans For Henry King of England the Cardinall of Yorke and the Duke of Exeter who brought with them Charles Duke of Orleans so being longe kept prisoner in England This poore Prince after the languishing of so long a prison was exceeding glad to see some meanes to returne to his house hauing felt the aire on this side the Sea and imbraced the Earle of Dunois one of the branches of his house hee who ●ad so faithfully serued him in his afflictions but hee greeued to see himselfe presently carried backe into England for that they could not agree vpon the foundamenttall points the English being resolute not to leaue one foote of that which they held in France And although the King were content they should freely inioy what they possessed so as they held it as they had done in times past of the Crowne of France by homage yet would they not yeeld in any sort being loath to relinquish their pretended souerainty But he refuseth which afterwards doth sue At this time they were inforced to retire with this resolution That without infringing any thing of the treaty begun euerie one should go home and consider of his affaires to assemble againe when neede should require The Duke of Orleans deliuered the which eyther part desired And this is al could be done for the general They proceeded farther for the duke of Orleans but as in these trafficks such as hold the possession do cōmonly vse policy the stronger giuing lawe to the weaker so in so precious matter as life the English must bee sued vnto making no hast to deliuer him for that they drewe great profit yearely for the pension of this great Prince Moreouer Charles had no great care of his deliuerie for that some malicious spirits had seasoned him with some bad impression against this poore Prince perswading him that his long imprisonment was not without some mistery and that it hatched some mischiefe against the King and his estate The which being miserable in so great a person gaue all men a iust cause of compassion But notwithstanding all these difficulties yet must this Prince one of the goodliest plants of this Crowne be now deliuered to leaue a successor for the realme of France The diuers a●flictions of the Duke of Orleans and God who would honor his race with the Crowne had prepared an admirable meanes for his deliuery by his helpe from whom in reason he might least hope euen when his owne friends had abandoned him A notable example for all men in many respects a prison of fiue and twentie years was a great affliction to a Prince borne to commande and yet captiue to an other The losse of all his goods gaue him a sufficient occasion to resolue to perpetual miserie and to leaue it for an inheritance to his posterity In the ende sclander a most cruell sting to a generous minde which hath honour for his assured Treasor had beene able to suppresse him But God who go●erns the rodde wisely giues him libertie goods and honour in due season in despight of this deuilish enuy which seeking to afflict the afflicted and controuling aduersitie as well as prosperity is then corrected when it seekes to correct an other but God doth neuer send helpes too late The Duke of Bourgongne vndertaks for the Duke of Orleans ransome Philip hauing resolued to do this good turne for the Duke of Orleans and to withdraw him out of prison compoūds for his ransome with the King of England for three hundred thousand Crownes He giues his word for it and payes it and so Charles Duke of Orleans being honorably conducted comes first to Calais where the mony beeing payed hee comes free to Grauelin to the Duke of Bourgongne his deliuerer
where Charles was resident whilest that his army afflicted these poore people He feasted conducted this Princesse as his own daughter euen with tears of ioy The King of England marrieth but this ioy was sodenly cōuerted into heauines by the death of the Daulphins wife his daughter in Lawe whom he loued deerely for her vertues which made her amiable to all France She was one of the chiefest in this great solemnity from the which she went to the bed of death her death was the sepulchre of her Mother the widowe of Iames King of Scotts who was come to see her and whilest her funeralles were making her Sisters ariue from Scotland to attend on her nay rather to descend with her into the graue if the humainty of Charles had not reuiued them giuing them honest meanes to maintaine their estats in France Thus passeth the Ocean of this miserable life in the which there is more cause of mourning then of ioy The Daulphins wife dies both in great and small The marriage likewise of England wherein were so great shewes of ioy shall end with a lamentable Tragedie as we shall see hereafter The truce was so pleasing to both Realmes A truce prolonged for fiue yeares that before it was expired the Kings of France and England renue it for fiue yeares more in hope of a perfect peace promising by their seuerall writings published generally to meete togither within six monethes in some conuenient place to confirme this peace so generally desired of all their subiects 1445. 1446. 1447. 1448. And to confirme the assurance of their promises the English deliuers Mans to Charles with all thee held in the Countrie of Maine but all is put into the hands of King René his father in lawe Francis Duke of Brittain doth homage to the King for the Duchie of Brittain and the Earldome of Montfort This was at Chinon but some monethes after there chanced a tragicall desaster in that house Francis suspecting that Gyles his brother would deale treacherously with him by the too familiar correspondency he had with the Eng●ish caused him to bee put in prison by the Councell and care of Charles who had sent him foure hundred lances vnder the comand of the Admirall Coitiuy But they dealt worse with him causing him to die in prison for hungar The history of Brittain describes this accident very plausibly The cru●lty of the Duke of B●ittany against his brother but it is true that Gyles died beeing prisoner with his brother Peter who suruiued him not long after hauing a great remorse for this tragicke accident In the rest of this yeare and the three following there is nothing memorable but the pursuts which Charles made for the reunion of the Church But not to breake off the course of our history which is properly to treate of that which concernes our Estate we reserue it for a more conuenient place A worke in truth not onely worthy of a great Monarke but of a peaceable time that in the peace of the State we may see the peace of the Church The soldiars insolencie was nothing abated by this voiage of Germany They returne more flesht then before against the poore laborer Charles made new orders to restraine them causing them to bee duly obserued but the ouerwening violence of the English increased daylie not onely by the negligence but by the command of such as had the charge The Duke of Yorke being called home into England the duke of Somerset succeeded him a proud man who thinking to do better then the rest did absolutely ruine the English affaires in France Hee dispenced with his soldiars in all their villaines 1448 and kept them ready to breake the truce vpon any profitable occasion The English breake the truce In the meane time the Souldiers ordinarie practise was to stand in Sentinell to surprise some good house in the countrie being ill garded to robbe it spoile it and carry away the prisoners by vnknowne wayes To this end they had their spies their guides and their retreats The fields were full of robberies by men disguised in strange and fearfull habits being masked when they espied their pray and therefore they called them counterfeit faces But to draw men into danger they marched like passengers expecting the commoditie to surprize them There is heard nothing but complaints and repulses All the pursuites which were made to repaire the breaches of truce did but increase the paine and charges of the interessed But of these small disorders committed by the Souldiars there grew so great an inconuenience as in the end it filled vp the measure against the English being hated and detested of all the French for their pride and insolencie Fougeres surprized by the English during the truce Fougeres a Towne of Brittanie vpon the confines of Normandie then very riche and populous being without garde vnder the assurance of the truce was easily surprised by Francis of Surienne called the Arragonois a Knight of the order of the Garter and a great Captaine vpon the marches of France obeying the English The Towne being surprised by him being accompanied with six or seuen hundred souldiers suffered all the miseries that might be They kill spoile and sack rauish women robbe Churches take prisoners and from thence they runne into Brittanie and fill all full of feare and combustion The Britton appeales to the King and both complaine to Henry King of England and to the Duke of Somerset his Lieutenant in France they presse them to repaire so notable a breach else they would seeke a meanes of reuenge But they receiue nothing but words disauowed by mouth and aduowed in effect for Somerset causeth S. Iames of Beueron to be fortified contrary to the treatie Charles receiuing these bare answers from England sees which way the chance would fall and that the game would not passe without blowes yet he restrained his men with great modestie holding it for a maxime that he must vse no force But when as moderate remedies can take no place with men not capable of reason then to oppose force against the iniurious passion of his enemie I read with ioy in the Originall that Charles conteined himselfe and was forced to this last warre To haue God on his side and the wrong on his enemie To conclude this moderate proceeding did so iustifie the good cause of Charles as it was continued with a happy euent not onely to abate the pride of the English but to expell them out of the whole realme as the iust iudgement of God pursued their arrogancie in this attempt by the breach of publike faith the vndoubted ruine of humaine societie which hath no certaine foundation but in perfect faith Here endeth the yeare but the controuersie shall begin more hotly by iust armes accompanied with a victorious sentence the which the Iudge of the world shall pronounce against the pretender of this estate Normandie reduced to the Kings obedience THe
countenance who at his first approche winnes the bridge vpon the riuer The English are amazed especially when they see Matago who was somewhat retired from the body of their armie to succour at all euents take the way to Bayeux The Constable makes his profit of this flight who without pursuing them chargeth their dismayed Armie The victorie of Fourmigny against the English Thomas Tirell puts himselfe in defence with the fauour of the riuer the Orchards Gardens but the Constable commands some of his horsemen to leaue their horses The Earle of Clermont inuirons the enemie on the other side the English being charged of all sides feeling the waight of their blowes giue way leaue their armes and suffer themselues to be slaine and taken to mercy The courtesie of the French spa●ed many in this ouerthrow The number of the dead there were more taken prisoners then w●re slaine They buried in three pits 3774. carcases by the report of the Heralds priests and good men that were there This losse did likewise bury all the conquests which the English had made in Normandy The commanders of the armie were prisoners Tirell No●bery ●rient Kirqueby Warberton Arpel Alengour Vaquier Calleuile and a great number of English Nobilitie armed with coates of armes all are lead to Charles with their Ensignes An honorable spoile to his triumph but a perpetuall ignominie both to the runners away that saued themselues and to the cowards that were taken prisoners This absolute victorie cost France but eight men to the end they might doe homage to the great God of armes and victories who by this memorable ouerthrow made the way for the restauration I read with ioy the warrant of the Originall And therefore wise men do say that the grace of God was the cause of the Frenchmens victorie and so by his diuine power the English were ouercome This victory was giuen vs from heauen the 19. of Aprill in the yeare 1450. and thankes were giuen vnto God throughout the realme A solemne procession was made at Paris of foureteene thousand young children from the age of seuen to ten yeares carefully chosen ou● to the great content of the people going from S. Innocents to our Ladies Church All Normandie yeeldes to C●arles This notable victorie of Fourmigny did soone after cause the rest of Normandie to yeeld Vire yeelds by composition the which was granted to 400. Lances who might well haue contended for their liues Auranches stood the longer vpon termes through the resolution of fiue hundred voluntaries but in the end they departed with their liues onely and a wh●te wand in their hands The strong Castell of Tombelaine garded by a hundred English yeelded two daies after Bayeux resolues to fight it out all prepare to armes After the ordinance had made a great breach and the mine ready to play Charles fearing the sacke of his subiects as well as of his enemies would not suffer his men to attempt so dangerous a matter and the souldiers on the other side crie out to be led vnto the breach But ●n the end they march without command and are twise repulsed yet Matago being amazed at the furie of these desperate men demands a parle the which ●s granted by Charles but he obtained life onely and a white wande for euery Souldier to some gentlemen of marke a horse and to poore families some carts to carry them A pitous spectacle to see foure hundred women carrying their children eyther in their armes or in their cradels leauing al their goods and mouables behind them and hardly carrying a poore clout for their greatest neede So Misery comes to him that spoiles for he shal be spoiled that makes an other we●pe for heeshall haue time to weepe Yet Charles caused this troupe of 900. men being disarmed to be safely conducted with the rest to C●●●●bou●g a place which they had demanded for their retreate Bayeux being thus yee●●ed the Kings army marcheth to Saint Sauueur le Viconte the which yeelds without batterie They had a good composition for the number of men of wa●re that were 〈◊〉 being fiue or six hundred they grant them their liues and goods retyring to Che●e●ou●g Charles was loath to looose his men vnconstrayned ●or that there remained yet ●●me p●●ces of strength Ca●n a goodly and populous Citty was beseeged with great preparation The composition at Ca●n but to what ende should I consume time in the priuate report of assaults seeing we hast to the vi●●ory A great peece of the wall being beaten downe and our men burning with desire to 〈◊〉 to this hnorable breach Robert de Vere being gouernor demands a parle he h●ld the Castell being one of the goodlyest peeces in France with foure thousand soldi●rs So by the commandement of Charles the Earle of Dunois yeelded them 〈◊〉 honorable composition to depart with bag and baggage and their armes except the arti●le●●e the prisoners were set at libertie and all that the Cittizens might owe vnto the English ●as discharged to the benefit of the debt●r All depart the fift of Iuly and are conducted in safety according to the accord and the King makes his entry two dayes after Falaize is beseeged in the meane time and yeelds the one and twentith of the same moneth Fifteene hundred English of their best soldiars obtayned a good composition to depart with bag and baggage Domfront garded by fiueteene hundred franke archers yeelds vpon the like composition the second of August following Cherebourg one of the strongest places of Europe in those dayes was the conclusion of that account and the crowning of this happie worke It was garded by .2000 desperat aduenturers who wonderfully greeued with so many misfortunes would be buried in the ashes of this last losse but Thomas Gomel gouernor of the place preuailed more t●●n their obstinate resolution shewing that they had discharged their duties to their 〈◊〉 in being the last to fight But nature swayed most with Gomel for hauing his some prisoner with the King he would not loose himselfe with his sonne The accord was made absolute for his soldiars and his sonne and vpon this accord he leaues the 〈◊〉 and retires last into England to admonish Henry to prouide for Guienne ●here the whole burthen of the warre would fall So the 12 of August in the yeare .1450 Normandie one of the goodlyest and 〈◊〉 Prouinces belonging to this Crowne was reduced to the Kings obedience in a yeare and six dayes hauing remayned in the possession of the English thirty yeares and 〈◊〉 kept by them as it is a miraculous worke of God they were ●o easily dispossessed 〈…〉 Normandie let vs come to Guienne to finish the restoring of this Estate Guienne returnes to the Crowne of France GVienne had begon her last seats of armes by the taking of Cognac and Saint Ma●grin as we haue sayed whereas the wane continued coldly during that of Normandie But Charles after the happie conquest of this Prouince The
King Henry was descended and they wore the redde Rose for a marke and Clarence from whence the Duke of Yorke tooke his beginning bearing the white Rose for a distinction This rancor of parties hath bathed all England with the bloud of her subiects two yeares shall not passe after this losse but Somerset shall dye in a battaile and King Henry the 6. who had carryed himselfe as King of France shall be prisoner and whereas he sought to ioyne the Crowne of France to that of England he shall loose that of England both for him and his teaching vs that we must neuer thinke to doe harme to another but we shall receiue our share againe and not to dispaire in our greatest afflictions The beginning of this raigne did represent vnto vs a ruined realme and this end restores it to her first beautie Thus was this realme restored from the which the English were quite expelled except from Calais and the heyre recouered the possession of his right the which his successors enioye vnto this day The meanes of this singular deliuerance is worthy to be obserued vnder the conduct of the first moouer the which the wise acknowledge to be in the prouidence of God the Soueraigne of Soueraignes and the preseruer of States whereby he maintaines the societie of mankinde Truelie in the course of these ordinarie meanes which we seeke after Charles holds the first place being both capable of Councell and full of resolution to put in execution He was assisted by great personages in the gouernment of his affaires and for the warres He was furnished with two Constables which serued him faithfully the Earle of Boucquam in his aduersitie and the Earle of Richemont in his p osperitie of two Chancellors worthy men and fitte for the time Of Renald of Chartres Archb●shop of Rheimes and Iohn Iuuenall of Vrsins Baron of Treignel the one for the beginning the other for the end of his affaires And for warriours he had as resolute and happy commanders as might be found in any raigne of whom he had great need But from all this we must ascend vnto the soueraigne cause who hath shewed vs the rodde and cast it into the fire when as it pleased him that by the example of our Ancestors we may more perfectly obserue the causes and remedies of our difficulties Now we drawe neere vnto the end of this raigne but before we conclude we must obserue the estate of the Church finish the discourse of the Schisme wherof we haue shewed the beginning and proceding We haue made relation of this inexcusable con●●sion vntil the councell of Pisa which supposing to reforme the scandalous disorders of two Popes being enemies Gregorie and Benedict aduanced a third which was Iohn the 23 so as at one time there were three Popes Iohn at Boulogne Gregorie at Rimini not able to be resident at Rome and Benedict at Auignon This multiplicitie of Popes bred disorder to the great scandale and preiudice of all Christians So as Sigismond not able to cure this infirmity of the mind by force he resolued to haue recourse vnto the authoritie of the church to that end he passed through France England Spaine and Italie perswading all Kings Princes and Potentates to hold a Councel at Constance whether the Emperours of constantinople Trepisonde with the churches of Grece sent their Ambassadors and all Christian nations assisted to the end this councell might be oeconomicall and vniuersall In this Councell Iohn the 23. being accused and found guilty of greuous crymes was first deposed and then imprisoned Gregory the 12. and Benedict the 13. were likewise deprived Councell of Constance Otho Colomne a Romaine gentleman was chosen Pope by the Councel is called Martin the 15. This decree of the councell was accompanied with great and generall complaints by reason of the corrupted estate of the Church the which had exceded farre in some places Saint Bernard had begun in France as doth appeere by diuers places of his writings and by books written vpon this subiect But many of his disciples had followed him in great numbers Gabriell de Roquetaillade Tomas Couect Great complaints against the abuses of the Romish Church and Nicholas Clemangis had filled all France with these complaints But in England Iohn Wiclef and in Bohemia Iohn Hus had perswaded men with greater vehemencie for Bohemia was ready to disclaime the Popes authoritie Iohn Hus teaching them not only to leaue the abuse of manners but ●he doctrine it selfe as is conteyned at large in acts of the councel of Constance It shal be sufficient to coat them my stile not permitting me to set them downe at large The reader that is carefull to see the grounds of this controuersie may go vnto the Originall and I will obserue the effect according vnto the dutie of the historie Wic●efs doctrine was condemned Iohn Hus and Ierosme of Prague came to Constance hauing a pasport from the Emperour Sigismond and the Councell but they were condemned and burnt as heretiks Hus in the Bohemian tong signifies a goose Iohn Hus and I●rosme of Pr●gue condemned and burnt Iohn Hus when as the Iudges had pronownced this sentence that he should be burnt he said vnto them I appeale from you vnto the soueraigne Iudge and preseruer of all truth who a hundred yeares hence shall raise out of my ashes a Goose which shall not suffer him selfe to be roasted S● as Iohn Hus was burnt in the yeare 1417. and Martin Luther began to shew him selfe in the yeare 1517. There were great complaints against the abuses of the Church made by Peter d' Alliae a Cardinal Iohn Gerson Chancellor of the Vniuersitie of Paris deputie of the French Church The Colledge of Sorbon had giuen him great instructions vpon this subiect but nothing was effected They only make the Pragmaticall Sanction to suppresse the Popes authoritie Gerson returning from Basill died for greefe at Lions But this Councell did not end those two difficulties for the which it had beene called for Peter de la Lune called Benedict 13. being deposed by the councell and retired into Arragon had so incensed Alphonsus King of Arragon as he supported him with all violence The Bohemians take armes for the death of Iohn Hus. against Martin the new Pope And the Bohemians were so moued with the death of these two personages whom they reuerenced as they tooke armes vnder the comand of Zisca a very famous Captaine and did much annoy the Emperour Sigismond Peter de la Lune called Benedict 13. held his court apart doing at Laniscole a Towne in Arragon as Martin did at Rome but this humour brought him to his graue After his death the colledge made choise of Giles Munion who was called Clement the 8. Martin dies in the other seat and his College doth choose a Venetian of the familie of Condelme and calls him Eugene 4. who finds the means to cause the Antipope Clement
confusion of the Duke of Bourgongne Let vs generally confesse that it is not now alone that God doth shew his singular grace and fauour to this Monarchie The Britton was watchfull and ioyntly with the Bourguignon they practised crosses of dangerous consequence The English from a generall demand of the Crowne of France restraine himselfe to the Duchie of Normandie o● Guienne But a franke demander requires a bold denier Lewis protests that hee would doo any thing to send the King of England out of this realme but to yeeld him the possession of any lands hee will rather put all to hazard Hee had a goodly and mighty army which they esteemed saith the Originall a hundred thousand fighting men and in shew might doo much the English being in bad termes with the Bourguignon But the quietest course is the best and both being willing to agree an accorde is soone made In the end the King graunts the English three-score and twelue thousand Crownes present paiment Paris lent the money vpon promises of rest●tution by the feast of All Saints next following Articles of agreemēt with the English the mar●iage of Charles with the eldest daughter of King Edward both being yet very young neither shall it take effect and for the estate of her house the Duchie of Guienne or fiftie thousand Crownes yearely payable in the Tower of London for nine yeares following at the end whereof hee and his wife quietly to enioy the reuenues of the sayd Duchie and the King should remaine discharged of the payment of 50000 Crownes to King Edward Moreouer the King promised sixteene thousand Crownes pension to some of Edwards fauorites who had much assisted in this reconciliation to Hastings two thousand to Howard to Iohn Chene Maister of the Horse to Sellenger Montgommeri and some others the remainder and besides there was great store of Siluer and Plate distributed among King Edwards seruants so euery Saint had his candle These conditions performed Edward should repasse the Sea and leaue Howard and the Maister of his Horse in hostage vntill he had recouered England yet not without an enterview of both Kings This peace should continue nine yeares comprehending the the Dukes of Bourgongne and Brittanie if they pleased The Bourguignon hearing these newes hastes his returne to the English followed onely with sixteene hundred Horse The Duke of 〈◊〉 come to king Edward At his ●irst arriuall hee discouers his inward passions by his outward countenance But hee came too late to preuent it Edward tells him that hee hath made a truce for nine yeares and exhorts him to enter according to the reseruation he had made He reprocheth King E●wa●d for making a truce Charles replies by fitts and after a reprochfull manner That Edwards Predecessors Ki●gs of England had performed many high exploits in France and with much sweare and toyle had wo●ne great reputation He checketh him that hee did not procure the English to passe for any neede he had but onely to giue them occasion to recouer their ancient inheritance And to make it manifest that hee had no neede of their comming hee would not accept of any truce with the King vntill that Edward had bee●e three monethes in his owne Country And hauing thus sayd heereturnes towards Luxembourg from whence hee came A brauadoe of ill digestion to the English and his Counsell but plausible to all the friendes of confusion But what is become of our Constable is there no speech of him during this treatie The Consta●●● perplexed Nowe is hee more incombred with feare then euer Hee knowes well that he hath displeased the King the English and the Bourguignon all alike and still hee apprehends the conclusion at Bouuines In the meane time hee seekes to please all and setts a good face on it Edward had freely made offer to the French Ambassadors to name some Noblemen that were Traitors sayd hee to the King and his Crowne and to proue it by their hand-writings The King holds a Counsell vpon this matter some maintayne Edward discouers the constables disseins that this accusation is fraudulent and that the English would make his demandes the greater with the wracke of an others honour as hauing good intelligence in France But Lewis his iudgement was more sharpe hee knewe the Bourguignons courses he considered the season that the English had not any one place in their hands and that the Bourguignon had deceyued them Moreouer he knewe well that the Constable would not giue them any entry and least he should bee farther imbarked in the league the King entertayned him with many letters and kept him in good humour and the Constable likewise sent often to the King yet alwayes swimmyng betwixt two streames vnderstanding that the treaty betwixt the two Kings grewe to some perfection he seemed well satisfied and sends Lewis of Creuille a gentleman of his house and Iohn Richer his Secretary aduising the King that to auoyde this threatning forraine tempest hee should procure a truce to satisfie the English it were good to graunt them one or two smal Townes to winter in Hee supposed in doing this the English should be beholding to him and to rest fully satisfied for the affront at Saint Quentin Note alwaies that Lewis was a wonderfull instrument of diuision when he pleased Lewis subtill industry Cont●y a prisoner at the defeate of Arras went and came vpon his faith to the Duke of Bourgongne to treat a peace Hee was by chance in Court at the comming of these two persons The King hides him in his Chamber behinde the hangings to heare and report to his master the speeches the Constable and his people held of him Creuille by the Kings commandement with a loud voice sayd that the Constable had sent thē to the Duke of Bourgongne with many instructiōs to diuide him from the English and that they had found the sayd Duke so farre incensed as by their perswasions he was not onely readie to abandon them but to charge them in their retreat Creuille in speaking this did counterfet the gesture of a passionate Prince stamping and swea●ing S. George the oath of Charles of Bourgongne saying that he called the King of England Blan●borgne and the sonne of an Archer whose name he carried words accompained with all the indignities that might bee spoken This mooued laughter in the King who taking pleasure at the repetition thereof and seeming somewhat deaffe made him to straine his voice in the report Contay no lesse amazed then the King was pleased would neuer haue beleeued it if he had not heard it And although it grieued the King much to dissemble the Constables counsell to giue some places to the English yet would hee not discouer his discontent to these deputies but answered them gratiously I wil send to my Brother the Queene the Constables wife were Sisters and let him vnderstand my minde hauing cunningly drawen a promise from his Secretary to reueale
King will not leaue this outrage vnreuenged vpon such as remaine The treatie made at the Abbie of Victory had beene confirmed by the Estates of Brittanie Lewis had by his Deputies renounced all pretension to this Duchie but hee forgetts nothing though he sleepes He is nowe freed from his most mortall enemy by all probability he should hereafter imploy his forces in Brittain he must therefore warrant himselfe with some fauorable support and must seeke protection from the English This negotiation required much secrecy and silence Discouered by the King for Lewis was exceeding iealous and discouered cunningly such practises So as the subtill were surprised in their owne subtilties Peter Landays Treasorer of Brittain was the man best acquainted with the dukes most secret intelligences and vnder him William Gueguen For the dispatches for England he vsed one Maurice Bromel who for three yeares space was the messenger to carry letters betwixt the Duke of Brittain and the King of England It chanced that Bromel passing at some port discouered himselfe to a seruant of the Kings who presently aduerti●ed his maiesty Lewis did cunningly make his profit of these aduentures Yet must he not rashly apprehend the companion thinking it best to discouer more The King to winne this messenger cunningly imploies a certaine man of Cherebourg in Normandie who could counte●feit the Dukes hand the king of Englands their Sec●etaries This Agent for the King treates with Bromell and for a hundred Crownes for euery letter comming from eyther part getts a promise of him a place appointed to deliuer the letter to receiue his money The Agent made coppies coūter●eited their hands sealing thē vp with a seale either coūterfit or stolne by Bromel he sent the coppies into England brought the king the originals In the end 22. letters what of the Duke and Edwards fell into the Kings hands without discouery And although the Duke sought to the English more to defend him at neede then to offend yet would he mainteine himselfe in the Kings good fauour For this effect one day among others he sent Chauuin his Chancellor the Seneshal of Vannes others of his counsel to giue Lewis to vnderstand the deuotion he had to his seruice At that time the king pursued his cōquests vpō the heire of Bourgongne being ready to beseege Arras as we shall presently shewe Being arriued they are all committed prisoners sequestred vnder diuers gards After two dayes the King sends for the Chancellor reprocheth him that hauing often conferred with him of the affaires of Brittain holding him for an honest man he fi●des it strange Lewis discouers th● Dukes of Brittaines letters to his Chancellor that he had alwaies so constantly assured him that his maister had no secret intelligence with the King of England seeing that nowe the contrary was manifest The Chancellor continues in this protestation and for more assurance engageth his life but twelue letters written by Gueguen signed by the D●ke ten others by Edward made him hang downe his head to cōfesse himselfe faulty But for his owne particular he protests of his innocency in cause that he or his companions deputies be found to haue been acquainted with this intelligence he will loose his life ●he King is satisfied herewith hee returnes them backe without any fa●ther audience and giues them the originalls for a proofe against the Duke He i●st●y complaines that ma●ing shewe to fauour him hee doth notwithstanding practise with the most ancient enemy of the crowne That if he do not renounce al intel●igence with the King of England he will not take him for his friend Chauuin beei●g returned makes his report deli●ers the Kings commandement his answers his cou●tenance in spe●king the accents of his words the consequences that might ensue He beseecheth the Duke to retire himselfe in pri●ate then to certyfie his sayings he layes vpon the table the two and twentie letters The Duke of Brittain amazed to see hi● in●elligence● discou●r●d The Duke amazed to see that plainly discouered which he thought to haue bin cōmon but to two sends for Landays commands him vpon his life to tel him by what meanes they might fall into the Kings hands the which must needs proceed from one of the two Landays knows the hands seales but cannot conceiue the residue al amazed he offers himselfe to prison and to loose his life if he be any way found guiltie Then he remembers that onely Bromel had alwaies carried and recarried these letters they must finde out him being then imployed in that action and make him vnfold that doubt He therfore sends after him in post takes him at Port-blank where he attended a winde to imbarke and was brought to Nantes His confession did absolue Landays and he was cast into the riuer in a sacke very secretly least the King should bee aduertised thereof who sufficiently informed of the Dukes ill mind without doubt turned his armes into Brittaine But the warre against Mary of Bourgongnie troubled him sufficiently yet to proceed with some lawfull pretext hee would fortifie himselfe with a graunt he obtained from the Lord of Boussac and of Nichole of Brittaine his wife the onely heire of Charles of Brittaine Earle of Ponthieure a house which in old time did quarell for the succession of this Duchie by the which transaction in the yeare 1479. the 19. of Ianuary they yeelded vnto him all the rights they might pretend to the said Duchie But it is now incorporate to the Crowne by a iuster title then by armes By what meanes Abbeuille Dourlans Montreuil Roye Montdidier Peronne Han Bohain Saint Quentin Tournai Arras Hedin Monstreuil Douay Boulongue Terouenne and other places were reduced to the Kings obedience and Bourgongne vnited to the Crowne THe first intelligence the King receiued of the ouerthrow of Charles of Bourgongne gaue no assurance of his death for by meanes of the posts he had newly established he had spedie aduice Therupō he resolues to ēter Bourgongne with the armie he held in Champagne and Barrois attending the Duke and vppon this sodaine terrour to seize vpon the Countrie And hee imagined to haue both right and meanes to doe it right for his rebellion treacherie committed against the Crowne meanes for that the flower of all the Nobilitie of Bourgongne was lost and all his forces dispersed If happely the Duke liued this would bee his ruine It was also to keepe the Germaines and Suisses from the possession thereof and to saue the prouince from destruction loth to suffer a stranger to seize thereon seeing it holds in soueraintie of him In the meane time he giues away in case the Duke be dead some landes which the Duke possessed and sends the Admirall with the Lord of Argenton with ●uthoritie to open all pacquets vpon the way and if the Duke were dead to receiue into his obedience all ●uch as would yeeld themselues Vpon the first
her Vncle who in the end of their parlee at the Kings request crea●ed foure Cardinals the Cardinall of Veneur Bishop of Lisieux and chiefe Almn●● 〈◊〉 King one borne of those three notable houses Chastillon Chambre and 〈◊〉 This done the Pope imbarked for Rome the 20. of Nouember and the King to 〈…〉 way to Auignon Here the King resolued in his priuie Counsell vpon a request made vnto him as well by Christopher sonne to the Duke of Wirtemberg both in ●is owne name and 〈◊〉 fathers spoiled of their estates seuenteene yeares since by the Emperour Charl●s a●d Ferdinand his brother as also by Lewis and William Dukes of Bauiere his Vncle● The mother of Christopher was Daughter of a sister to Maximilian Grand-f●ther to the sayd Emperour and King of Romaines and the consummation of the marr●●ge of Eleonor their sister with his Maiestie gaue the Father and the sonne hope that t●e King in fauour of this alliance interposing his authoritie for them that were p●●led should eyther procure restitution of Ferdinand for these Dukes or refusing Iust●ce to purchase him the hatred of all Germanie which in the end might by open fo●ce d●sposesse him of the Duchie of Wirtemberg and of the name of King of the Romaines The King did greatly desire to see these Dukes restored to their estates and to that end would willingly haue opened his purse to weaken the Emperours and 〈◊〉 b●others forces and by the same meanes to confirme the amities which he had p●rch●sed in Germanie and to procure new requiting the Emperour who ●ought by a●l meanes to take from the King his ancient alliances But hee sought to 〈…〉 protection of these afflicted Princes in such sort as no man might iustly ch●●●e●ge him to haue broken the treatie of Cambray Hee therefore sent the Lord of 〈◊〉 with commission to do ●or these Dukes whatsoeuer were in his power not 〈◊〉 contradicting the conuentions and to conclude the consignation of a hundred 〈◊〉 Crownes into the hands of the Dukes of Bauiere with a sufficient b●●d to his Maiestie reseruing notwithstanding this clause That his money should not be 〈◊〉 to the inuasion of any one but onely for the defence of the ancient customes and 〈…〉 the Empire The publike and priuate perswasions of Langey were of such efficacie as that ancient and great League of Sueue which had continued three score and ten yeares to the benefit of the house of Austria was disanulled But for that the ●eintegration of these Dukes could not bee made but by armes they couered i●●ith this expedient That the Duke of Wirtemberg should sell the Countie of Montbeliard whereof he was Lord vnto the King for six score thousand Crownes vpon condition that he might redeeme it which money he might imploy to his vse either in peace or war without any ●reach on the Kings part to the articles of Cambray So the Landgraue of Hessen chiefe of this present League and the Dukes of Bauiere and Wirtemberg with their allies went sodenly to field with an armie before the Emperor or his brother could crosse their attempts restoring them that were spoiled to the possession of their Duchie and soone after 1534. they repayed the Kings money within thirtie or fortie thousand Crownes for the which the Dukes of Bauiere were answerable and the Countie of Montbelliard was restored vnto them Let vs now see what catastrophe the Popes rashe censure giuen against Henry King of E●gland shall cause Henry was wonderfully incensed against the Apostolick Sea Estate of England by reason of the iniustice he said was done him in that they had refused to send him cōm●ssioners to t●ke knowledge of his cause and of the contempt done to his authoritie in that they would disdainfully force him to abandon his realme and appeare personally at Rome Notwithstanding by the perswasions of Iohn du Bellay Bishop of Paris whom the King had sent vnto him presently after his enterview with the Pope hee granted that in case the Pope would surcease from the sayd sentence vntill he had sent Iudges to be heard that he would likewise surcease from his intention to withdraw himselfe wholy from the obedience of Rome The Bishop offers himselfe to go to Rome to that end Henry intreates him and assures him that hauing obtained his demand he will giue him authoritie presently to confirme what he had yeelded vnto The matter was not yet desperate but the Consistorie of Rome ga●e so short a time to haue an answer from the King of England as the Poste came short two dayes at his returne The terme expired they proceed hastily to the confi●mation of the curses and censures Troubles through the Popes rash hasty proc●eding notwithstanding the B●shops instance to obtaine six dayes delay seeing the King of England had wauered six yeares before he fell Two dayes were scarse past after the prefixed time but the poste ar●iuing with authoritie and declarations from England did greatly amaze those hastie Cardinals who afterwards could finde no meanes to amend that which they had marred The matter saieth the Originall was so hasted as that which could not bee finished in three consistories was done in one This indignitie done to the King of England and the small respect they had to his Maiestie caused both him and his rea●me to shake off the yoake of the Romaine obedience declaring himselfe immediatly vnder God supreame head of the Church of England In the meane time the King not able to get by Iustice a reparation of the vnworthy death of his Ambassador at Milan hee studied to haue his reuenge by armes To this end following the example of the Romaines he erected in euery Prouince of his realme a Legion of sixe thousand foote vnder the command of six Gentlemen who for euery thousand should haue two Lieutenants and vnder euery Ensigne fiue hundred men who in time of peace should once a yeare make a generall muster and the Captaines should know their names and surnames with the dwellings of euery one to haue them ready at all commands Then he sent William Earle of Fustemberg into Germanie to make a leauie of twentie Ensignes of Lansquenets and demanded passage of the Duke of Sauoy through his Countrie to bee reuenged of the wrong done him by the D●ke of Milan The Sauoisien refuseth it which causeth our Francis to demand the portion of Louyse of Sauoye his mother sister to the sayd Duke children to Philip Duke of Sauoy Philip had to his first wife a daughter of Bourbon New moti●●● of warre in Sauoy by whom he had Philibert Duke of Sauoy and Lowyse the Kings mother Then he had to his second wife a Daughter of Ponthieure by whom hee had Charles who is now in question and the Earle of Geneua afterwards Duke of Nemours Philibert was dead without children and therefore the King challenged a good portion in the succession of Sauoy his mother comming of the first venter and sole heire to the
such obedience as hee required of his subiects and with this desseine he went to Antwerp to receiue money by imposition and borrowing This voiage is a cloake to delay our Ambassadors 1546. But in effect he ment to know the minds of thē of Antwerp that according to the course of affaires he might be more milde or sharpe in his answers And the sayd Ambassadors discouering his ordinarie delaies and dissimulations in the end tooke their leaue returning with no other assurance but if the King began no warre against him hee was not resolued to make any A word serues to a man of Iudgement What might the King conceiue of this cold entertainement but that the Emperour sought an oportunity to begin a new war with aduantage and if he had forced them to obedience whom hee threatned in Germanie he would bring al forces both Catholiks Protestants ioyntly against the frontiers of this realme To auoide a sodaine surprise hee giues the gouernment of Languedoc to the Duke of Anguien that of Piedmont to the Prince of Melphe lately created Marshal of France he sent to fortifie the weake places of Picardie hee made a fort aboue Maubert-Fontaine seauen leagues from Veruein and fiue from Mezieres at the going out of the wood and for that the frontier of Champagne lay most open to the Germains hee fortified Meziers and Mouzon built a fort vpon Meuze on this side the riuer within the realme betwixt Stenay and Dunle Chasteau the which hee called Villefranche he fortified the Castell of Saint Menehoult Saint Desier Chaumont in Bassigny Coiffy and Ligny and made Bourg in Bresse able to make head against a mighty army Thus the King prouided for his frontiers and places subiect to the enemies inuasions But the plague had so diminished the number of soldiars that were in the fort right against Boullen as of twentie enseigns not aboue eight or nine hundred men escaped this mortalitie A great plague in the ●ort before Boullen The soldiars notwithstanding are commended for their fidelity constancie and patience in the gard thereof The raine snowe and other iniuries of the aire the moistenes of their lodgings being but hoales in the ground coue●ed with a pentise of strawe and when a whole household was dead the ruines serued to bury their carcases had bred these diseases But the spring time hauing tempered the season and stayed the plague the Lords of Essé and Riou being refreshed and supplied with men returned to their ordinary skirmishes to the enemies losse The fort wanted victualls Senerpont Lieutenant to the Marshall of Biez was appointed for this execution Three hundred English horse come to hinder this victualing He meetes them the day after Easter day neere to the bridge of bricke beneath mount S. Stephen the skirmish begins on eyther side the Lord of Tais and the Conte Reingraue ariue either of them with sixe or seauen score gentlemen the alarume comes to Boullen the English supplie their men with seauen hundred horse and foure hundred harguebuziers Senerpont chargeth the horsemen before they had ioyned with their shot the Reingraue is hurt at the first charge and ouerthrowen and on the other side the Marshall of Calais beeing chiefe of the enterprise is slaine with a hundred or sixescore English about two hundred horse on eyther side and threescore and fifteene English prisoners all in cassaks of vellet garnished with gold and siluer A while after the Marshall of Biez parted from his campe for the same effect accōpanied with fiftie men at armes the Reingraue with his regiment of foure thousand Lansquenets and two hundred French shot he incountred the Earle of Surrcy followed by six thousand English men with an intent to take from our men the meanes to refresh the fort with victualls and necessarie munition Here the combate was long and furious in the ende the English ouerthrowen retire to a little fort where they force them Seauen or eight hundred of their men are slaine Surrey saues himselfe by flight and leaue● seauen or eight score prisoners Boullen was but a Church-yard for the English a wasting for their treasor The King o● England considering how obstinate the King was in the recouerie of his Towne that moreouer the Emperour what league soeuer they had togither had his priuate desseins and regarded nothing but his owne interest he lettes the King vnderstand That he is resolued to haue hi● for his friend and to ende all controuersies So the Deputies for ●hei● maisters meete betwixt Ardres and Guynes For the King came the Amirall Annebault and Raymond the first President of Ro●an for the English Dudely 〈◊〉 of England and afterwards Duke of Northumberland and finally after many c●●●●●tations a peace was made with these conditions That the King within eight daies s●ould pay eight hundred thousand Crownes to the King of England as well for the arreriges of his pension as for many other expences made by the sayd King in the fortification of Bo●lle● of the Countrie And in regard of the said sum the King of Englād should deliuer vnto the King Boullen and all the Countrie belonging vnto it with the ancient places or newly 〈◊〉 by him Mont-Lambert the Tower of Ordre Ambletueil Blacquenay and others with all the artillerie victuals and munition in the said places This yeare is famous by the death of Anguien In the moneth of February the snow was very great The death of the Duke of Anguien and the Court being at Roche-guion some yong Noblemen attending the Daulphin made a challeng some to defend a house others to assaile it ●ith snow bals But this pastime ended soone with a pittifull and fatall spectacle As the Duke came out of this house a cofer full of linnen cast out of the window falls vpon his head and within few houres sends him to rest in the graue with his ancestors leauing a suspition of some great men being enuious and iealous of his vertue reputation and fauour which he had gotten with the King the people and men of warre of whome he was more then any other of his age esteemed beloued and respected The beginning is likewise remarkable by the decease of Henry the eight King of England The death of the King of England leauing for his successor his sonne Edward eight yeares of age This death bred a great alteration and change in the health of our Francis they were almost of one age conformable in cōplections And our King taking this for a presage or fortelling that his turne should soone follow after grew then more melancholy and silent then before He fals sicke of a feuer for the auoyding wherof hauing passed many places fit for the pleasure of hunting la Muette S. Germain in Laye Villepreux Dampierre neere vnto Cheureuse Limours and Rochefort he came to lodge at Rambouillet and as the pleasure he tooke both in hunting and hauking stayed him there sometime his feuer increased and grew to a
well defended the besieged with the losse of seuenteene Souldiars not onely repulse the enemy but also make them leaue about three score of their most resolute men slaine in the ditches aboue two hu●d●ed wounded to the death and as many maimed for euer then coole their heate ca●sing them to change this hasty fury of Canons and assaults into a more long but a more violent war They make many forts neerer vnto the Towne notwithstanding t●e ●allies and ordinary s●irmishes of the Sancerrois they furnish them with artillery men s●fficient to cut off all releefe so as being shut vp on all side● they begin to want ordinary victuals in the beg●n●ing of Aprill they eat their Asses Moi●es Sancerre in gre●● extremitie for victuals then fal they t● horses dogs cats mice moales lether in the end to parchmin hornes trappings o● horses gird●es and wilde rootes And in the end of Iune three parts of them had ●o bread to eate some make it of flaxe seede others of all kinds of hearbes ●●xt 〈◊〉 branne beaten and ground in morters and others of straw of nut shels and of s●●tes grease and tallow serued for pottage and frying yea some a strange thing and neue● heard of laboured to incounter the crueltie of their hungar by the excrements of horses and men But a horrible thing to see the nineteenth of Iune a labourer i● t●e vines and his wife satisfied their hungar with the head and intrayles of their young daughter about three yeares old being dead in languishing giuing no other graue to the members of this poore carkase but their bellies But the magistrate aduertised of this inhumanitie did for examples sake shorten their dayes finding them guiltie of other crimes neither were they forced hereunto by any extremitie seeing the ●ame day they had beene releeued with pottage made of hearbes and wine whereof there was store in the Towne To conclude foure score men died by the sword at Sancerre saith the Historie but of hungar both within and without aboue fiue hundred And euen now the King began to see his threats to take effect An admirable meanes for the deli●erie of Sancerre I will make them said he eate one an other They were hopelesse of all huma●ne helpe such as they sent out for succo●rs either fell i●to their enemies hands or died by the sword or returned no more or could not reenter So as they could not hope for any helpe but in dispayring of helpe when as the prouidence of God brings them a strange and far-bred nation to giue them the liber●ie ●f the fields and the vse of bread The Estates of Poland had chosen Henry Duke of Aniou brother to our Charles for their King as wee shall see in the end of the seege of Rochell but with a promise and oth taken by the Bishop of Velence and Lansa● in the name of the King their master That all the Townes and persons in France molested for the cause of religion should be set at libertie At the request thereof the Ambassadors of Poland th●s poore people languishing for hungar yet resolute to die one after another rather then to fall into their enemies hands who threatned them with a gene●all massacre the nineteenth of August they obteyned of la Chastre in the Kings name To depart with their armes and baggage impunitie for such as would remaine still permission to dispose of their goods Sanc●rre yeelded by c●mposit●on promise to preserue the honour of women and maidens and to pay la Chastre forty thousand francks by the inhabitants that were absent So la Chastre entring the last of the sayd moneth d●smanteled Sancerre beate downe some houses tooke away the Clocke Belles and other markes of a Towne but the other pointes of the capitulation were reasonablie well obserued the Baylife Ionneau was massacred the 12. of September neere vnto la Chastres lodging Seege of Rochel Nowe followes one of the most memorable seeges that hath beene in many ages A seege where many of the Commaunders and most part of those which were noted to haue forced the Admiralls lodging began the butchery and committed so many murthers at Paris and else where came to seeke their graues The Kings army ●as held to be fifty thousand men by land and sea and threescore peeces of artille●y The beseeged had a good number of gentlemen and horsemen eight companies of Inhabitants nine of strangers one of the Mayor one of voluntaries consisting of twentye M●squetiers fiue and twenty armed with corselets of proofe and thirty hargue busiers the two thirds thereof were Gentlemen and such as had the charge in the former warres Yet the mildest way is the best And therefore B●ron in the beginning seekes some meanes of an accord but the Rochelois discouering euery day some new practise beleeued that their preseruation consisted in distrust And a gentleman being in Rochell reuealed the intelligences which Biron had with him for the surprising of the Towne hauing alreadie drawne into the Towne some souldiars of Puigaillards and Saint Martins companies and was readie to drawe in the most resolute Captaines if the Mayor and Councell had not held it more fit by a small exemplarie execution to breake off a great and dangerous enterprise To incounter the enemie la Noue is chosen chief of the forces within the Towne without any diminution of the Maiors rights and authoritie in other things Montgo●●●●●● succors could not passe la Noue sends newe deputies into England to the same 〈◊〉 but the league confirmed of late yeares betwixt our Charles and Queene Elisa●●●● ●owe ag●ine renewed by the baptisme of the Kings daughter whereof Elisabeth 〈◊〉 ●o●mother with the Empresse seemed to withdrawe the affection which was wo●t to come from beyond the seas for the releefe of the Protestants whilest the sal●e● and daylie skirmishes at Rochell inflame both the one and the other where o● the reason of the nerenesse of their retreat they do greatly wast the number of the 〈◊〉 The eleuenth of February the Duke of Aniou arriues at his army accompained with 〈◊〉 brother the Duke of Alan●on the King of Nauarre The Duke of Aniou comes ●o campe the Princes of Condé and Daul●●●né the Dukes of Longueuil●e Bouil●on Neue●s Aumale and Guise the yong Earle of Rochefoueault the Grand Prior and many other Noble men bringing with them a great trayne of men who for the most part would haue beene greeued they should 〈◊〉 taken this Sanctuarie and succor from the Protestants This seege was great and 〈◊〉 seeme to be of long continuance Euery man runnes thether euery one will haue 〈◊〉 share They prepare things necessarie for the batterie and in the meane time make many skirmishes Before they come to their greatest force the Duke sollicits t●e gentlemen and Inhabitants by letters conteyning both promises and threats They h●mbly shew vnto him the necessity of their defence knowing no fitter meanes to pre●er●e their liues against
takes her Coach and comes amazed to intreat the Duke to pacifie this tumult Bellieure followes to the same ende But the Duke answered These are wild bulls broke loose whom I cannot stay So great a desseine was not attempted to faint in the midest thereof It was no longer time nowe to dissemble the maske vncouered and the ford sounded they must go on and seize vpon his person without whose ruine their victory should be imperfect for the effecting whereof ten or twelue thousand men were readie to enter by night at the newe gate to beset the Louure and to shut vp all the passages Foure gentlemen familiar with the Duke aduertise the King hereof yet canne hee hardly beleeue it but that the people will alwayes willingly yeeld to the Kings clemency Yet his Councell desired to be out of Paris They lay open before his Maiestie the generall reuolt in the which Philip the faire was forced to saue himselfe among the Temples The partie-coloured hoode of redde and skie coloure wherewith Charles Duke of Normandie and afterwards King of France the fift of that name and surnamed the wise was hooded to saue himselfe from the peoples insolencie during the captiuity of King Iohn his father in England The reuolt of the Mailotins The mutinie of the Caboches the crosses of S. Andrew the deposition of Salcedo the aduertisments of the King of Nauarre and the conspiracies of the last yeare which now hath broken the bankes and ouerflowed all H●s feare increaseth yet he settles his countenance It is reason saith he to proui●e for these disorders to assemble the Councell and to giue all men contentment And the better to disguise his intent he sends back the Q●eene Mother vnto the Duke to per●wade him to come vnto the Louure and to assure him that he shall returne with such satis●action as hee can desire She intreates him in this vrgent necessitie to make k●owne vnto the King that he hath more will to preserue then to ruine his Crowne and to settle the Estate which this mutinie hath wonderfully shaken To intreate an enemy is to shew that he feares him The Duke seemes colde he layes the motiues of these tumults vpon the people to whose assistance he is drawne more by the violence of necessitie then by his owne desire It were a great indiscretion sayd he for me to cast my selfe naked into a suspected place at the mercy of my enemies The K●ng vnderstanding by his Mother the Dukes obstinacie in his desseigne The King r●tires from Paris resolues for the safety of his person He goes from the Louure with a small traine with a shew to walke in the Tuilleries and from thence hee goes to lodge at Trapes I giue thee my curse said he turning at Chaliot towards Paris disloyall and ingratefull Cittie a Cittie w●ich I haue alwayes honoured with my continuall aboad a Cittie which I haue more inriched then any of my predecessors I will neuer enter within the compasse of thy walles but b● the ruine of a great and memorable breach Cursed likewise bee you all for whose content I haue purchased the hatred of so many O Duke thou hast drawne thy sword against thy Soueraigne but God hath stayed thine arme from striking It is a folly onely to terrifie him who may finde meanes of reuenge Many of his faction blame him to haue erred in the maine point wherein consisted the perfection of his victory By this attempt he hath blemished his reputation with all Princes All Kings are bretheren one royall bloud summons an other they haue an interrest in this cause they affect troublers of anothers Estate but they cannot endure them in their owne Without doubt the prouidence of God had prepared a strange Catastrophe for the Duke for the King and for his realme who at this time by his singular loue to this Crowne did diuert the successe which they expected of this shamfull and reprochfull mutinie O Paris King Charles the eight had in former times made the 12. day of May famous by the absolute conquest of the realme of Naples and now thou deuisest to h●ue this twelfth day noted with red letters and hereafter to bee celebrated for that in the same day thou hast presented vpon the Theater of thy rebellions a King dispossessed of the capitall Citty of his realme Nay rather what coale can sufficiently note to our posteritie this mournefull and vnfortunate daye What lawe of forgetfulnesse may wipe out the remembrance of thy shame ingratitude and treacherie what lotion can wash away the spottes of thy pollution filthinesse and villanies what fire shall euer consume the memory of the rebellions tyrannies and seditions of this fatall and abhominable League O Barricadoes you are the spring of those flouds which shall for a time drowne this Estate and the instrument wherewith that inscrutable wisedome would chastise both the King and the realme The sixteene did presently qualifie this cursed conspiracie with the title of a iust defence against the King They aduertised other Townes that God had preserued that holy religious Cittie from a great massacre and a fearfull spoile That the Duke of ●uise had subuerted the Councell of the Politikes namely of the Duke of Espernon by whose counsell the King had resolued the ruine of the chiefe and most Catho●●ke families in Paris as if the peoples suppression were the chiefe meanes to keepe th●m in obedience And the Duke of Guise at the beginning of this bold and insolent attempt writes ●re●ently to his most trusty friends to repaire speedily vnto him with armes and horses but no baggage I haue ouerthrowne the Suisses ●aid he to Entr●gu●s Go●erno● 〈◊〉 leans cut in peeces some part of the Kings gards and hold the Louure so straitly beset 〈…〉 giue a good account of what is within it This victory is so great as it will bee 〈◊〉 for euer But oh Duke is it pr●sumption that bandies thee against the rules of rea●●● 〈◊〉 weakenesse which abates thy courage and resolution in suffering him to escape 〈◊〉 within fewe moneths shall heape this thy victory vpon thy head and by t●y vtter ●●●fusion shall make it memorable for euer Both the one and the other 〈…〉 ●●daine repentance vnto man and makes him wise too late Thou seekest oh 〈…〉 touch the heauens with thy forehead and hell with thy foote but learne that out ●●stories are full of the violent deaths of those proud spirits who seeke their glory 〈◊〉 profit with the ruine of their Country the preiudice of States and the subuersi●● of common peace That great God which reuengeth the iniuries of Kings and people la●es publike ruines vpon them that doe them The slaughter at Vassy kindled 〈◊〉 fire of the first ciuill warres So thy Father died soone after the newe troubles which followed Euen so the like storme threatens thy ruine in the middest 〈◊〉 t●y violent passions Entragues had assembled the Nobility of the League at Baugency but the 14. of the moneth he
Canisia The seege of Canisia raysed in the ende was forced to leaue it with shame and disorder loosing his Artillery and Baggage and abandoning the sicke wounded He lost his reputation there for the good had successe of enterprises are euer imputed to the General although it were true that the diuision among the Commanders of the Christians Army the great want of victuals the ●ury of the Plague gaue this aduantage vnto the enemy The Duke of Biron came to Fontainbleau whereas the King Queene and Daulphin remayned The Duke of Biron returnes out of England to Court he gaue an account of his Ambassage into England deliuered the Queens Letter vnto his Maiesty He continued in Court vntill the ende of the yeare and presented vnto him the three Estates of Bresse Beaugey Veromey and Gex whom the King receiued as gratiously The King cōfirmes the Priuileges of Bresse as if they had bin Frenchmen by birth and affection he confirmed their Priuileges and made them ●eele the fruits of this change He erected a Presidiall Court at Bourg depending vpon the Parlament at Dijon notwithstanding any opposition made by that of Grenoble pretēding that the Countries exchanged should hold the place of the Marquisate of Saluces be incorporate vnto Daulphine He releeued the Coūtries exchanged in their Impositions Taxes and with such moderation as the most miserable promised vnto thē●elues happines vnder his sweet subiectiō Among other speeches which the King vsed vnto the Deputies these were noted It is reasonable said he seeing you speak French naturally His speech to the Deputies that you should be subiect to a King of France I am well pleased that the Spanish tongue shall remaine to the Spaniard the Germaine tongue to the Germaine but all the French must belong to me The Da●●phin made his first entry into Paris the 30. day after his birth the Port was beautified with Armes The Daulphins first entry into Pa●is the 2● Octob. 1601. The pompe was of a Cradle in a Litter wheras the Lady of Mo●glas sat with the Nurce The Prouost of Marchants Sheriffes went out off the Citty to meete him The Gouernesse made answer to the Oration His first lodging was at Zamets house Two dayes after he was carried back to S. Germain in Lay to the end the people might see him passing through the Citty the Nurce held him at her Breast The King had determined to conduct the Queene to ●loys but the desire he had to instruct the Duchesse of Bar his Sister in his Religion A Conference to instruct the Kings Sister stayd them all at Paris whether he had sent for the most learned Prelats Diuines to satisfie her in the presence of such Ministers as she had brought with her But they cōiured her not to yeeld vnto this chāge nor to dismember her selfe from the body and society of the children of God to bow her knees vnto Idolatry She continued so constant in her beleefe as she made a protestation that if her Religion were prei●●icial to the Estates of the Duke of Lorraine she was ready to returne into Bearn beseeching the King to suffer her to end her life as she had begun it So as the Cōferences vpon this subiect remained vnprofitable were of no more effect then that which was made at Ratisbonne at the same time for the ●ame cause The King hauing setled as happy a Peace in France as could be desired he sought to redresse the disorders which could not be cured during the violence of the War The King did two things to reforme the disorders of the Treasure in the one he cut off a great number of Officers belonging to the Treasure in the other he caused a great and seuere search to be made of their abuses Many of the Treasury ●ischarged The more Officers the King hath for the managing of his Treasure the lesse profit comes vnto his Coffers for that a great part is spent in their entertainement So as it was resolued at the Estates held at Roan to suppresse the Offices of the Treasurers of the Generalities of France by death without hope of reuiuing As for the abuses of Treasorers their couetousnes was so great and their abuses so countenanced as no man liued happely but they Such as robbe the Poore die in prisons and are hanged but they that steale from the King and the publicke are at their ease When as Rhosny was called to bee Superintendant of the Treasor they were out of hope to do their busines as they had wont By his aduice the King commanded a strict search to bee made of their abuses in the Treasure A Chamber royall e●ected and to that ende he erected a Chamber or Court which hee would haue called Royale consisting of Iudges chosen out of his Soueraigne Courts And for that they had giuen the King to vnderstand The transport of gold and siluer ●or●●dden that nothing did so much impouerish his Realme as the transport of gold siluer the which was vsuall by the suffrance of Officers he therefore reuiued the ancient Lawes for the transporting of gold and siluer or bullion out of the Realme adding paine of death therevnto and losse of all their goods that should do to the contrary the third whereof should go vnto the Informer He commanded all Gouernors to haue a care of the obseruation of these prohibitions and not to grant any pasports to the contrary vpō paine to be declared partakers o● these transports and for their Secretaries that should countersigne them confiscation of their goods and perpetuall banishment The wearing o● gold and siluer forbidden But the forbidding of the transportation of gold and siluer is not the onely meanes to make a Realme abound therewith if the vse of it within bee not well ordred And therefore the King did forbid the superfluous vse of gold and siluer in Lace or otherwise vpon garments This Edict did greatly trouble the Ladies in Court yet it was ob●erued for that it was generall and expected none the King himselfe did frowne of a Prince of his house who had not yet thought of this reformation The King continuing the same care to settle all things in good Estate seeing that forraine Coynes went at a higher rate in his Realme then where they were coyned he commanded that the vse of forraine coynes should bee forbidden after a certaine time giuen to the people to put it away re●●oring gold to his iust value This commandement was iust but it was a great ruine to the peopole for the Strangers seeing that their Coynes were not currant among vs discontinued the trafficke and liued without that without the which wee thought they could not liue Those which were wont to come to Lions went to Geneua where the Duckates were raised as much as we had abated them The King by all these Edicts had nothing releeued the necessities of the
King The Presence Authority and intreaty of his Maiesty was of Force to smother the remembrance of all iniuries and to reconcile their willes Let vs nowe see what they haue done in the Nationall Synode helde at Gap held by them of the reformed Religion A Synod held at Gap whereas many beleeued that in giuing audience to Ambassadors and receiuing Letters from Forraine Princes and Common weales they had done more then their condition would allowe and had taken the way to make an Estate in the Estate I will say no more The passion of Religion might diminish the beleefe of the Trueth Peter Math●w The Synode began the first of October It Treated of things touching Doctrine Discipline and the Gouernement of the Churches giuing a good Testimony that there are among them men full of zeale to the aduancement of their Religion and who in their Resolutions can ioyne Wisedome with Doctrine causing them to blushe that haue so much suffered the ancient constitutions of the Church to degenerate and haue so much neglected the Gouernement and Discipline as the Synodall Assemblies of Diocesses so necessary and profitable are nothing but vaine and fond Ceremonies where they doe onely exhort them to do well hereafter not caring to correct or amende the ill that is gone and past Of many meanes which the Church in her infancy did vse to preserue this spirit of Peace and Charity which gaue life vnto all the members and intertained the Cyment and bond of the whole building The profit of Synodes that of these Assemblies hath beene held the most fruitfull and should bee made twise a yeare if they will follow the Canons of the Apostles and the Decrees of Nice and Sardinia Th●re they conferred of the Order and Direction of all affayres There the Pastors taking knowledge one of an other entertayned their friendships renuyng the bonds of their affections It serued for a bloud-letting and a good purgation for badde humours in a corrupted Body to preserue and keepe it in Health Purytie and Chasterye of the Fayth There they shewed the power of the Spirituall Sword vppon the incorrigible who in the ende found the pappes of the Church drye for them when through Errour Malice or Obstinacy they made themselues vnworthy of the swetnesse of her Milke There in the ende they did strayne the strings of the Policy and Discipline of the Church the which beeing through negligence growne slacke made no Sounde nor Harmony In this assembly of Gap after that all the Deputies of the Prouinces of the Realme had shewed their Commissions they began by the Inuocation of the name of GOD the which was followed by the reading of the confession o● the Fayth wherein they did expound those things that were not playne enough The common desire of the Ministers te see the schisme pacified that was betwixt them and the other Congregations of Germany England and the Low Countryes made them resolue that the Assembly should write vnto the Vniuersityes both Lutherans and Caluinists to deuise some meanes to reconcile these contrarieties in some poynts of their confession This yeare the King did graue in the register of his vertues a memorable example of Iust●ce The cause is considerable and the subiect of consequence A yong gentlewoman of Normandie visited and courted by her Brother disdayned her husband A memorable example of a crime and of Iustice. by whome she had two Children for that he was some-what aged and made no profession of Armes This inequality of age togither with his condition made the Coniugall a●f●ction like vnto a small Brooke whereof when the spring is stopt the bedde remaines drie and there is nothing left but filthe for Toades and Frogges The greene gra●●e that was vpon the bankes withereth yea the trees that were planted along die This marriage hauing lost the radicall humor of Loue it made all pleasure and content to wither produced nothing but noise disdaine contempt and quarrell This miserable woman car●d no more for her husband b●t to drawe meanes from him to make her selfe more pleasing in the eyes of an other delighting in Lux●riosnesse and excesse o● Apparell vnder the which the Diuill is accustomed to make open Warre to Chasterie and to rauish the Honour of a woman without the which her life is a life without a Bodie a Bod●e without a Soule a Soule with out a Spirit a Spirit without Breth and a Breth without A●re It seemed that the first acquaintance of this woman with her Brother was nothing but a perfect Loue such as Honour and that which they were one vnto another might well allowe Who so had seene the familiarities of this Sister with her Brother would not haue beleeued that they had made Loue the Lawe of Nature beeing of greater force then Reason or Truth it sel●e In the meane time this furie prooued Adultery and Incest making the Wife to abandon the Company of her Husband to cleaue vnto her Brother who forgetting nothing that might be sayd or done to couer ●i● crime and to auoyde punishment wa●d●ed vp and downe the Coun●ry with h●r vnder disguised names but carrying still in his Conscience the sting and vlcer of so execrable a pleasure She grewe bigge with Childe and beleeuing that in hiding her great Be●lie her off●ence should bee also hidden shee caused her selfe to bee conduct●d into that great forest of Paris where she continued with her Brother the exercises of Cupid and Psyches The figge leaues could not couer their shame The al-seeing eye o● the diuine Iustice discouers them and will not suffer that so Infamous a Lust should contin●e These violent streames beeing runne out the Mudde and filthe that was in the bottom appered presently The hus●band opprest with so iusta greefe as the Lawe doth not hold him pu●nishable whom it forceth to kill the Wife beeing surprised in Adultery came to Paris and discouered those which had depriued him both of rest and Honour hee causeth them to be apprehended and committed prisoners the one in the great Chast●let the other in Four l' Euesques The Sister confesseth her-selfe guilty of Adultery to free her Brother from Incest laying the Childe to one that was a●togither innocent Vpon the difficulty of proofes the Lieutenant Cryminall condemned them both to the racke Hee might well haue proceeded to sentence A sentence giuen by the Lieutenant Criminell B●t considering that they must deliberate well before they iudge of the life of a Man which is not made without care he desired rather to proceed coldly therein then ouerboldly The Husband whose heart could not be mooued to pitty by the consideration of his two Children appeales from this sentence of the racke The Court confidering that mildenesse doth norrish and giues more scope to vice declares the appellation and sentence from the which he had appealed to be voide and amending it A sentence o● the Court. they iudge the accused sufficiently conuicted of the crimes of
948 Troubles at Constantinople ibid. The Valachian committed to prison fol. 949. Alba Regalis taken by Duke Mercure ibid. The seege of Canisia raysed fol. 950. The Duke of Biron returnes out off England to Court ibid. The Daulphins first entry into Paris ibid. A Conference to instruct the Kings sister ibid. A Chamber royall erected fol. 951. Sebastian King of Portugalls speech to the Seign●ury of Venice fol 953. D. Sebastian deliuered after two yeares imprisōment ibid He was stayed by the Duke of Florence sent prisoner to Naples where he was condemned to the Galleys fol. 954. His speech to the Duke of Medina Sidonia fol. 955. The Duke of Biron sent to the Cantons to confirme the Treaty His speech to the Suisses fol. 957. The Marquisate of Finall surprized ibid. An Army at Sea in Calabria fol. 958. The King disquieted touching the Duke of Biron ibid. The death of the Duke of Mercure ibid. The Duke of Birons conspiracy discouered fol. 959. He contemnes the Kings aduice fol. 961. The Duke of Biron craues pardon of the King fol. 962. Inst●uctions giuē by the Duke of Biron to la Fin. fol 963. The King expects repentance onely of the Duke of Biron ibid. An Army at Sea for the King of Spaine fol. 964 The President Ianin sent to the Duke fol. 966 Diuers aduices giuen to the Duke of Biron not to come to Court Badde signes of his voyage ibid. The Duke of Biron comes to Fontainbleau ib●d He excuseth his stay The Kings fauour to him growne cold He is not respected He seekes to iustifie himselfe fol. 967. The Duke of Biron praysed the King of Spaine   He playes at Primiero with the Queene fol. 968 He will not submit himselfe to the Kings clemēcy He is seized on at the Kings Chāber dore fol. 969. False brutes of the causes of the Dukes impris●ment fol. 970. The King comes to Paris fol. 971. The Dukes words in prison fol. 972. The Duke is amazed to see Renazé fol. 973. His Processe reported fol. 974. The Duke pleades for himselfe in the Golden Chamber ibid. Accusations of the Duke of Biron fol. 975. The Dukes answer ibid. Proofe by writing of the continuance of his practises fol. 977. The King did giue him his word without demanding it fol. 978. The iudgement of the Processe fol. 979. In Treason intents are punishable fol. 980. Euill vnpunished is suffered fol. 981. They that reueale conspiracies are to be rewarded fol. 983 The Chancellour pronounceth the sentence of death ibid. The Duke of Biron desires to see Monsieur de Rhos●y ibid. The Chancellor comes to the Bastille The Dukes words vnto him ibid. The Duke of Biron deliuers vp the Kings Order fol. 986. He falles into choller at the reading of his sentence fol. 987. He resolues to dye fol. 988. He sends commendations to the Count of Auvergne fol. 989. The Duke of Biron in chollor when hee sees the Executioner ibid His Head cut off fol 991. Honors done to great Gonsalue at his death f●l 992. The Duke of Birons Vertues his Vanitie and his Glory and compared with S●●la ibid. He went to a Mathematitiā to know his Fortune fol. 993. The Marshal Birons words vnto his sonne being but Barron fol. 994. The Duke of Sauoy leuyes Forces for Geneua fol. 995. The Duke of Birons Secretary rackt and Fontanells broken vpon the wheele ibid. The Duke of Bouillon refuseth to come vnto the King his Letter vnto his Maiesty fol. 996. The Prince of Ginuille committed fol. 997. Deputies sent out of Daulphine to the Daulphin of France A Present giuen vnto the Daulphin fol. 998. Alba Regalis yeelded to the Turke fol. 999 Cigale goes forth of Constantinople fol. 1000. The Galleis of Spaine commanded by Sp●●cla fol. 1001. Mines of Gold discouered ibid. An Edict for the ordring of those Mines ibid. Deputies from the Suisses to sweare the new alliance ibid. The towne of Mahomet taken by the knights of Malta 〈◊〉 1003. Mu●thers committed this yeare for Adultery fol. 1005. A Pardon promised to all of the Duke of Birons conspiracy 〈◊〉 1006. The Duke of Sauoys enterprise vpon Geneua ibid. The Dukes pretensions and the Geneuois defence 〈◊〉 1007. The first discouery of the surprise of Gen●ua fol. 1008. The Dukes forces repulsed and some of his men are slaine and some taken fol. 1009. Letters from the Seigneury of Geneua to the Gouernor of Lions fol. 1010. Monsi●ur de Vi● sent to Geneua fol. 1011. Geneua resolues to a Peace the which is concluded betwixt the Duke and them fol. 1012 The Inuention to make silke and the profit thereof fol. 1013. Rebellion in Asia against the Turke ibid. The Ianissaries power in Turky fol. 1014 A woman sent in Ambassage fol. 1015. The two Castels of Lepanthe taken by the Knights of Malta fol. 1016. The Kings voiage to Metz. ibid. Sobole deliuers vppe the Cittadell of Metz. fol. 1017. Foure Iesuits come to Metz for their restablishment ibid. A Controuersie for the Bisho-prike of Strausbourg ibid. The King returnes to Paris fol. 1018. The Princes of Sauoy go into Spaine ibid. Brute of the Kings sicknes fol. 1019. A League concluded betwixt the Venetians and the Grisons fol. 1020. The nauigation of the French to newe France or Canada ibid. A quarrell betwixt the Count Soisons and the Marquis of Rohsny fol. 1023. A Synod held at Gap by them of the refomed Religion fol. 1024 The Constable of Castile passeth through France fol. 1026. Alexander Monsieur made Knight of Malta fol. 1028. The death of the Dutchesse of Bar the Kings Sister fol. 10●0 The Kings sorrowe for the death of his Sister f●l 1031. The burning of the Turkes Gallies at Algier ibid. An other enterprise of the great Dukes in N●grepont fol. 1032. T●eason discouered and L os●● the Traito● r●turnes into France and ser●es 〈…〉 fol. 1033. The Traitor ●●oste drownes himsel●e fol. 1034. Creation of new Cardinalls fol. 10●5 The great promises of the Count Fuentes to the G●●sons fol. 1037. Halfe a Sedition at Rome fol. 1039. P●sta abandoned by the Christians fol. 1040. The Iesuites restored in France and a newe colledge built for them at La Flesche in Aniou fol. 1041. A channell from the riuer of Seine to Loyre ibi● New Inuentions of workes brought into France fol. 1042. The Co●stable of Castille comes to the King is receiued with all Honour and the King sups with him fol. 1043. Sluse lost by the vanity of 〈…〉 the Gouernor fol. 1044. Ostend yeelded by composition the 15. of September ibid. Aduantages of the vnited Prouinces for the warre fol. 1045. The Marquis Rohsny goes into Poitou ibid. The Daulphins second voyage to Fontainbleau ibid. Enteruiew of the Dukes of Sauoy and Mantoa ibid. The King sends for the Count of Auvergne to Ciermont who refuseth to come but with conditions He is taken and brought prisoner to the Bastille at Paris from fol. 1045. to 1050. A happy discouery of a Conspiracy the Conspirators amazed fol. 1050. Monsieur D' Antragues Gouernor of Orleans cōmitted to prison and the Marquise of Vernuill restrained fol. 1051. The Kings Letter to La Guiche from Fontai●bleau the 15. of Nouember Anno 1604. ibid. The Duke of Bouillon in danger to be surprised ibid. The death of the Duke of Tremouille ibid. FINIS
of grace 920. the Empire being then very weake After Conrad was chosen Henry the ●ouler Duke of Saxony and after him his sonne Otho Princes adorned with great singular vertues fit for the time to preserue the West for the East did runne headlong to her ruine so as since Nicephorus who liued in the time of Charlemagne they did not esteeme them but held them as abiects in regard of those great Emperours which had liued before them namely Michel Curopalates Leo Armenien Michel the stamering Con●usion in the East the two Theophiles father son Basi●e the Macedonien Leo the Philosopher Alexander Constantine a Romaine all which had nothing of the Romaine but the name Thus this poore sicke bodie languished being torne in peeces by the infamies of these men either of no valour or altogither wicked attending the last blow by the hand of the Mahome●ans whose power they fortified by their vitious liues vntill they had lodged them vpon their owne heads A notable spectacle of Gods iust iudgement who dishonours them that dishonour him In the Church and expells them from their houses that banish him from their hearts In these confusions of State the Pope of Romes power increased daily by the ruines of the Empire who thrust himselfe into credit among Christians by many occurrents Their desseins was to build a Monarchie in the Church by authoritie power Seigneuries ciuil Iurisdictions armes reuenues and treasor being growne to that greatnes as afterwards they sought to prescribe lawes to Emperours and Kings who refusing it and disputing vpon this primacie many dissentions grew among them and so were dispersed among the people This is the summe of all that shall be discoursed in the future ages in Christendome wherein we shall view the the sea of Rome the Empire and the kingdome I treat but of matters of State 929. wherevnto the subiect and the order of our desseine doth tie me to report by degrees so long and so obscure a discourse of those ages plonged in darkenesse Plantina the Popes Secretary reports a very notable accident happened at Rome in those times a yong maide loued by a learned man these are his words came with him to Athenes attyred like a boy In vita Ioannis octaus and there profited so well in knowledge and learning as being come to Rome there were fewe equall vnto her in the Scriptures neyther did any one exceede her in knowledge so as she had gotten so great reputation as after the death of Pope Leo she was created Pope by a generall consent was called Iohn the eight But it chanced that hauing crept too neere to one of her gromes shee grewe with child the which she did carefully conceale But as she went to the Basilique of S. Iohn de Lateran betwixt the Colises and S. Clement she fell in labour Pope Ioan deliuered of a Child in the open streete and was deliuered of this stolne birth in a sollemne procession in view of all the people And in detestation of so fowle a fact a piller was erected where this profane person died So without flattering the truth not the Empire alone went to wrack but also the realme and the Church being in those daies full of confusions in which they fell from one mischiefe to an other by the barbarous ignorance of all good things both in the State and Church as the wise and vnpassionate reader may obserue in the continuance of the history plainly described But let vs returne from the Empire and sea of Rome to France Wee haue sayd that when Charles the simple was first imprisoned the Queene Ogina his wife had carried her sonne Lewis into England to Aldestan the King her brother She had patiently suffred all during the furious raigne of Raoul the vsurper while the experience of diuers masters did ripen the French-mens discontents to make them wish for their lawfull Lord. After the death of Raoul Aldestan King of England hauing drawne vnto him Willam Duke of Normandie the sonne of Rhou sends a very honorable Ambassage to the States of France intreating them to restore his Nephewe Lewis to his lawfull and hereditary dignity The French wish it so as without any difficulty Lewis the sonne of Charles was called home by the Estates of France whether he was accompanied with a great troupe of English-men and Normans as the shewe of a goodly army which might seeme to force them to that which they willingly yeelded vnto LEWIS the 4. surnamed from beyond the seas 33. k●ng LEWES .4 KING OF FRANCE XXXIII 935. LEWIS returnes into France hauing remayned nine yeares or thereaboutes in England surnamed D'outremer or from beyond the seas by reason of his stay there He beganne to raigne in the yeare 935. and raigned 27. yeares A disloyall and vnfortunate Prince hauing made no vse of his afflictions 〈…〉 disloya●●●rince vnworthy the bloud of Charlemagne And thus their ruine aduanced by the default of men the which God held back by his patience He foūd the Estate of his realme like vnto one that returnes to his hou●e after a long and dangerous nauigation He was receiued with great ioye of all men Those which had beene most opposite vnto him made greatest shewes of faithfull and affectionate seruice to insinuate into his fauour Amongest the rest William Duke of Normandy but especially Hug●es the great Maior of the Pallace whome wee haue already noted as the sonne of Robert the chiefe of the said League Hee had imployed all his meanes for the calling home of Lewis into France and at his returne he spared nothing to confirme his authority This was the meanes to ●ay the foundation of a greater authority for his successors They must begin the newe gouernment of this Prince with a wife to haue lawfull issue The Emperours allyance was very needefull Ot●o he●d the ●mperiall dignity being the sonne of Henry the fowler Duke of Saxony ●ewis marrieth one of the Emperors sisters 〈◊〉 ●ather to H●gh Ca●et marri●th an other He had two sisters He●bergue and Auoye King Lewis marrieth the eldest and in signe of brotherly loue he motioned the marriage of the youngest with Hugues the great Lewis had two sonnes by Herbergue Lothaire who succeeded him to the Crowne of France and Charles who shal be Duke of Lorraine and contend for the Crowne but shall loose it Hugues the great was more happy then Lewis for of the yongest hee had Hugh Capet who shall take their place and ascend the royall throne to settle the French Monarchie 937. shaken much in the confusions of these Kings vnworthy to raigne or beare any rule And of the same marriage Hugues had Otho and Henry both Dukes of Bourgongne one after another Behold now vpon the Stage two great and wise personages the King and his Maior whom we may call a second King they striue to circumuent each other the which their actions will discouer but man cannot preuent that on earth
flies to Philip who comes himselfe with a very great army and enters Flanders The vncle suppla●●● his Nephew for the County of Flanders His meaning was to make a benefit of their common quarrell But it fell out otherwise by his prouidence who doth pull downe one raise vp an other alwaies iustly although the causes be vnknowne vnto vs. Robert defeates the King and his Nephews After this victory hee is receiued Earle of Flanders without any discontent of the King for the distressed pupills who relying no more on him fled for succor to Thierry Bishop of Liege who makes an accord That Robert the Frison should haue the Earledom of Flanders giue his Nephews some recompence After this peaceable possession of the Earledome of Flanders Philip f●rs●ks Baldwins Children at their neede In England Philip became a deere friend to Robert forgetting the good offices hee had receiued from his tutor measuring friendship by proffi● Such was t●ē the state of Flanders England had a greater change we haue sayd that Robert Duke of Normandy had instituted William his bastard sonne his heire and that hee had gotten possession of the D●chie but behold a greater happinesse attends him Edward King of England hauing receiued much kindnesse from him and knowing him fit for the gouernment of the realme names him his heire by his testament by vertue whereof notwithstanding all the policy and force that Herould brother to the Queene could vse William is receiued King of England and crowned in a so●lemne assemble of the English homage is done vnto him as to their lawfull Lord this great dignity continued in his posterity Philip sees this new power impatiently Philip discontented at VVilliams aduancement to the crowne of England yet can he not preuent it but God hath prepared it as a rod to correct this realme by the three sonnes which William left to succeed in his Estates Robert William and Henry Ambition is the Leuaine of these warres it shewed it selfe soone after the birth of this new power growen to the Dukes of Normandy whose first breeding we haue seene in the second race by the increase of the realme of England Robert and Henry the sonnes of William come to the King at Constans vpon Oise As they play at Chesse with Lewis the sonne of King Philip there fell some contention among these yong Princes and from iniurious words they fell to blowes Lewis called Henry the sonne of a Bastard Henry struck at him with the Chesse-board and had slaine him if Robert had not staied him This blow being giuen Robert and Henry made all hast to saue themselues in Normandy The Leuaine of distention betwixt France and England where they incensed both heauen and earth with their complaints From this light beginning grew all the troubles which disquieted these two Estates during 400. yeares vpon diuers occasions Robert Henry being escaped the fathers so imbrace the quarrell for their children as they fall to armes Philip goes to field and takes Vernon depending of Normandie Robert goes out of Normandie and doth seize vpon Beauuois King William parts from England and lands in France with a great and mighty power The English enter into Guienne and inuades Xaintonge and Poito● Behold the first check of a dangerous game Philip moued with these losses enters into Normandie with a great and mighty armie but he cures not one wound in making of another William on the other side runnes and spoiles all the Country euen vnto the gates of Paris where hee entred not then but his posteritie did after him Hee dies soone after but the quarrell suruiued in his children who augmented this hereditarie hatred in many sorts While they began to weaue this web Italy was in no better estate being full of horrible combustions and the cause was so much the more lamentable for that the mischiefe came from them Con●●●●ons in Italy betwixt the Emperour and Popes from whom all good was to be expected We haue formerly spoken of the deuisions growne betwixt the Emperours and the Popes of Rome for their preheminences In all ancient times the Popes were subiect to be summoned before the Emperour who had authority to create them to depose them that were vnworthy of their charges to call Synods and to confirme all things which concerned the outward gouernment of the Church The Pope on the other side maintaines that all this authority was his The Popes vsurpation as vniuersall Bishop hauing power to bind and loose to iudge of all men and all causes as the soueraigne Iudge of the Church not to bee iudged by any man and so to dispose absolutely of all matters as well Ecclesiasticall as Ciuill as Monarch in the Church not only armed with power of excommunication to damne rebels and authority to remit sinnes but hauing also the temporall sword with soueraigne authority ouer Emperours Kings and Princes of the earth to place and di●place and to dispo●e of their estates Hereafter we shall find in euery raigne some memorable example of this soueraigne authority This raigne giues a very notable one After the death of the Emperour Conrade called Salique Henry the 3. of that name hauing happily gouerned the Empire left it to his sonne Henry the 4 yet very yong so as the Popes during this weakenesse of the Empire had meanes to fortifie themselues and so imbracing this occasion Gregory the 7. called Hildebrand did prohibite the Emperour all authority ouer the Clergie and forbad vpon paine of excommunication to haue any recourse vnto him for the collation of benefices or for any thing else that depended on the Church Henry moued with so great an aff●ont S●range confu●o●s betwixt the Empero●r and the ●ope lets Gregory vnderstand that this his decree was contrarie to the ancient orders the vse of the Catholike Church Vpon this refusall he lets him know that hee will maintaine the rights of the Empire and complaines to the Clergie of Rome in an open assembly Gregorie calls an other wherein hee doth excommunicate Henry and all his adherents and sends forth his Bull into all parts wherby hee declares him excommunicate and degraded of the Empire and in his place causeth Rodolph Duke of Sueuia to be chosen Emperour Thus there growes two factions in Italy and in Germanie one for the Emperour and the other for the Pope behold two armies leuied of these factions ready to shed Christians bloud nine battailes were giuen vpon the quarrell of these preheminences In the end Rodolphe the new Emperour is taken and slaine by Godefroy of Bouillon who followed the Emperour Henry the fourth who after this victorie assembled a great Councell at Bresse where as Gregorie the seuenth is excommunicated and Clement Bishop of R●uenna appointed to succeed him they conduct him to Rome with an armie take the Citty after a long siege whereas the new Pope is sollemnlie installed and Henry the 4. Emperour restored
Henry but being too weake of himselfe neither hauing any such friend as the King of France according to the triall so often made time out of minde he comes into France but he died at Cluny and in his place Calixtus son to the Earle of Bourgongne was chosen Pope The reputation of the place from whence he was descended was great so as he being a Frenchman easily called a Councell in France to the great satisfaction of the French The Emperor degraded by the Popes decree in a Councell at 〈◊〉 It was held at Rheims where by an ecclesiasticall decree he declared Henry an enemy to the Church and degraded of the Imperiall dignity As this ignominious decree did moue the Emperor so did it minister matter to the King of England his brother in lawe to imbrace all occasions to annoy Lewis his capitall enemie for seeing this Councell had bin held in France and consisted chiefly of the French Church it was very apparant that the Kings fauour was very preiudiciall to the Emperours affaires The English fayles not to harpe vpon this string to the Emperour The Emperor and ●ing o● England ioyne against France being already incensed by the thing it selfe promising him all his meanes incouraging him to enter France on the one side whilest that he came on the other with all the forces of Normandy and England The party was not small neither had Lewis small cause to feare being incountred by two such enemies But God shewed him the rod and reserued the punishment for an other season for as the Emperour was going to field the Germaine Princes foreseeing the misery of a warre vndertaken lightly vpon despight and weighing the importance of neighbourhood gaue him to vnderstand that he ought not to attempt warre against the King of France without declaring vnto him the causes of his discontent Hee therefore sends his Ambassadors to this end 1112. Lewis doth wisely answer him that hee is exceedinglie sorrie to see the two great Pillers of the Church so shaken by these dissentions and that it was to bee feared the whole building would bee ruined So as being a friend to both hee desired greatly to be a mediator of concord and not to carrie coales to increase the fire too much kindled alreadie the which ought to be quenched for the good and quiet of all Christendome This Ambassage was pleasing and preuailed so much as the Emperour disarmes The French King and the Emperour reconciled and was content to make Lewis a mediator for an accord betwixt him and the Pope to the great griefe of the King of England who expected a long continuance of this ia●●e The composition was made at Wormes very beneficiall for the Pope in the yeare 1122. whereby Henry grants him the installing of Bishops and other benefices This did ease the sore but not cure it as the sequell of the Historie will shew While that Princes haue leisure to contend the poore people dye for hunger in many places of Europe This famine was exceeding great in Flanders Notable troubles in Flanders who then had for their Earle Charles surnamed the good for his good disposition and great charitie to the poore He sought by all meanes to releeue them But as barrenesse was one of the causes of this famine so the cruell couetousnesse of the rich was a great hinderance to the commoditie of victuals whereby there grew as remarkable an act as the successe was strange the particular report whereof the reader must pardon in the breefenesse of our stile There were three brethren at Bruges of the chiefe of the Countrie the which had gathered together a great quantitie of graine and would not sell it expecting a greater dearth which might cause a greater price that is Bertholphe Wendestrate Pouost of S. Donas and Chancellor of Flanders Lambert and Boussard Wendestrate brethren and an other rich Bourges called Lambert one of the chiefe of the Cittie This dignity of Prouostand Chancellor was so great as hee supplied the Princes place in his absence Vpon the peoples complaint the Earle decrees that all the graniers of these great houses should be opened and the Corne sold to the people at a reasonable rate The Comission was giuen to Thamard Almoner of the Earles house as a thing befitting his charge he causeth the graniers of these rich Bourgesses to be opened the corne is sold to the people and the money deliuered to the owners The people being releeued by the couragious care of Thamard commend him The Wendestrates and Lambert greatly discontented with this sale wherein they held themselues interessed cause many indignities to be done vnto him Lambert is directly accused by informations being a very audatious young man and the Wendestrates were touched therewith The Earle offended with these audatious attempts repaired them by Iustice threatning Lambert that if he continued he would seuerely punish him There was also an other complaint made by an old Abbot against the Prouost Treacherie against the good Earle of Flanders to whom the Earle spake roughly commanding him to restore vnto the Abbot what he ought him These free admonitions of the good Earle Charles did so alter the proud trecherous minds of these Cittizens as they resolue to kill him his milde facilitie giuing these wicked spirits both courage to attempt and boldnesse to execute And the end is answerable to their wicked desseine As the good Earle Charles went ill accompanied in the morning to his deuotion to the Church of S. Donas on Ash wednesday behold a troope of yong mad men led by this Lambert comes vnto him being vnarmed on his knees in a Chappell the Priest attired in his ornaments at the Altar the Earle holding forth his arme to giue his almes to a poore woman without any warning they beat him downe with their swords kill him and so forcing all to giue way The Earle of Flanders and his Almonet murthered they seeke for Thamard whom they find massacre with so great a furie as they leaue him vpon the place hewed into many peeces Their troope increaseth and they flie to the Pallace where all are amazed and finding it without gard without keyes without any gate shut they enter it with horrible cryes they kill sack and spoile and running from thence into the Cittie Crueltie in the Citty of Bruges they commit the like in those houses which they knew best affected to the good Earle Charles This furious crueltie was accompanied with an ouerweening indiscretion as if they had made some goodly conquest they braue it 1117. and play the maisters without feare of any punishment The people exceedingly grieued to see these barbarous cruelties against their good Prince whom they loued as a father durst not speake a word during this furye whereas this troupe of murtherers commaunded absolutely But the wisest Cittizens fled to Lewis as to their soueraigne Lord. Lewis comes to Bruges with great speede
no other respect but for the reuerence of Religion and the zeale of publick peace This famous acte happened at Venice in the yeare 1171. in the presence of the Ambassador of the Kings and Princes of the greatest States of Europe that were Mediators of this Accord From Venice Frederick went into the East with a goodly Armie according to his promise And the dissention was well pacified by his humilitie but not altogether suppressed in Italy for it reuiued afterwards as wee shall see in the continuance of this Historie Thus the Christians liued whilest their enemies preuailed dayly in Asia to the great and shamefull losse of all Christendome Such was the estate of the Church and Empire vnder the raigne of Lewis the 7. 1179. Lewis caused his sonne Philip to bee sollemnly Crowned at Rheims at the age of foureteene yeares in the yeare of Grace 1179. Hee betrothed him to Isabel the Daughter of Baldwin Earle of Hainault and hauing thus disposed of his affaires hee dyed the yeare following 1180. An vnwise Prince and vnhappy with all his pollicies Lewis dyes leauing a Leuin of great miseries to his posteritie Doubtlesse the greatest pollicie is to bee an honest man This assured peace caused the Vniuersitie of Paris to flourish as farre as those obscure times would permit Gratian Peter Lombard and Comesior Complaints against the abuses of the Church learned men liued in that age The inexcusable confusion which raigned in the Church was a iust subiect of complaint to the good as appeares by the writings of Peter of Blois Ihon de Saraburck Bishop of Chartres and Bernard Abbot of Cistea●x great and worthy men Their Bookes liue after their deaths wherein the wise Reader may see an ample and free Commentary of this Text the which the Histori● suffers me not to dilate of PHILIP the 2. called Augustus or Gods Gift the 42. King of France PHILIPPE .2 KING OF FRANCE XXXXII. THe title of Augustus giuen to Philip is worthy of his person and raigne who not onely preserued the French Monarchie An excellent King and an excellent raigne amidst so many sorts of enemies and difficulties but enlarged it with many Prouinces diuided to diuers proprietaries by Hugh Capet and vnited them to the Crowne for this cause hee was also called Conquerour His dispositiō The beginning of his raigne was a presage of happinesse for there appeared in his face a great shew of a good disposition inclined to pietie iustice and modestie being strong quick vigilant valiant and actiue Hee did consecrate the first fruites of his raigne to purge the corruptions which raigned among the people Blasphemies Playes Dicing houses publicke dissolutions in infamous places Tauernes and Tippling houses Hee made goodly lawes which our age reads and scornes doing the contrary with all impuni●ie but whilest he raigned they were duly obserued The Iewes were mightily dispersed throughout the Realme who besides their obstinate supe●stition vsed excessiue Vsurie and were supported for some great benefit by the Pope and o●her Princes and States where as they haue liberty at this day to liue after their owne manner Philip expelled them The Iewes banished out of France although they obtained a returne for money yet in the end they were banished out of all the territories of the French obedience and so continue vnto this day This was a small apprentiship and an entrance of much more happy paine the which hee should vndergoe both within and without the Realme in great and troublesome affaires as a famous subiect worthy of his valour England Flanders and Asia prouided varietie and change of worke to imploy his raigne the which continued fortie foure yeares but the change of his intricate marriages troubled him more then all his affaires 1190. as the progresse of our discourse will shew In the beginning there was emulation who should be neerest to gouerne him Philip Earle of Flanders and the Duke of Guienne were competitors The one as Vnckle to the young Queene Isabell his wife Competitors for the gouerment of the state and named by his Father Lewis The other as his neerest Kinsman and both the one and the other had great meanes to preuaile but Richard was the stronger as well by the Kings fauour as by the forces of England of whence he was an In●ant and well beloued of Henry his brother who then raigned Behold the King is imbarked against the Earle of Flanders by the aduise of his Councell The subiect of their quarrell was for Vermandois which the Earle enioyed the King demanded it being no longer his by the decease of Alix dead without children and therefore must returne to the Crowne From wordes they go to armes Their troupes being in field and ready to fight a peace was made with this condition That Count Philip should enioy Vermandois Troubles in Flanders for the Earldome of Vermandois during his life and after his decease it should returne to the Crowne But this peace continued not long among these Princes The King could not loue his Wife Isabel It seemes this was the cheefe cause of the dislike the King had against the Earle of Flanders her Vncle. In the end hee put her away in the yeare 1188. from which time Philip loued Richard Duke of Guienne But this good agreement continued not long by reason of another cōtrouersie betwixt him and the English Margu●rite the Daughter of Lewis the 7. sister to Philip marryed to Henry of England as wee haue said dyed then without Children Philip doth presently redemand his Sister● dow●ie Hen●y sonne to H●n●y the 1. King of England dyes before the father which was the Countrie of Vexin The King of England is loth to leaue the possession so as they fall to Armes and the mischiefe increased by this occasion Henry first sonne to old Henry dyed Richard Duke of Guienne his brother who might haue compounded this quarrell being called to the Crowne embraceth the action with all eagernesse And to crosse Philip by an important diuersion like to olde Henry auoides the blowe in Normandie and enters Languedoc by Guienne into the Countie of Thol●usa renuing the old quarrel he had against Count Raimond Philip being assailed in two places is nothing amased Hauing leuied an Armie with all celeritie Warre with England hee enters the English pale Where he sodenly takes Chasteaucaux Busa●cais Argenton Leuroux Montrichard Montsor●au Vandosme with other Townes and passing on hee batters and takes Mans and hauing waded through the Riuer of Loire he presents himselfe before Tours which yeelds at the terror of his forces Philip of Fr●nce and Ric●ard of England make ● peace Old Henry amazed at the sodaine valour of this yong Prince faints and oppressed with grie●e dyes at Chinon in the yeare 1190. leauing his Realme to his Sonne Richard but no● his Mal●ce For presently after his Coronation hee concludes a peace wi●h ●hilip vpon a cause very honourable to them both The
Pironne and Ferrand to the Lovure at Paris All France made Bonfires for this happy successe and Philip built a Temple in honor of the holy Virgen which de called Victory nere vnto Senlis By a decree of the Parlament at Paris the Earledome of Flanders was adiudged vnto the King as forfeited who gaue it againe to Iane the heyre of the sayd Earledome being not guilty of her husbands trechery This memorable victory called the battel of Bovuens chanced in the yeare 1215. the 25. of Iuly To make his triumph absolute Philip gaue free passage to the Germaines and Otho the Emperor being returned to his house willingly resigned the Empire died of a pining griefe The Emperor di●s for gr●e●e of his lo●●e di●grace which neuer left him after that shamefull flight hauing willingly sought his owne misery in supporting wrong against right and serching danger to perish in danger A notable example which shewes That victories come from the Eternall that mortall man dies before his time by his owne rashnes and that no vniust warre can bee succes●efull But what shall become of Iohn the onely motiue of this warre while the Emperor and the Earles of Flanders and Bullen great Princes whom he had imbarked be at warre hee remaines at home free from blowes attending the euent Seeing his Confederates thus defeated hee feares the whole storme will fall vppon him what doth hee hee playes at Double or Quit and flies to Innocent the fourth as to his Sanctuary And being forced to saue his Estate in this extremity he resolues to giue him a good part The Popes hatred with the power of France was the last end of his downe fall The Pope had excommunicated him not onely for the parricide of his Nephew Arthur but for the ill vsage of his Clergie To purchase so difficult an absolution there needed a great satisfaction He therefore sends confident men in all hast to Innocent 4. humbly beseeching him to pitty him in his calamity Iohn makes the realme of England tributarie to the Pope That if it would please him to receiue him into fauour and protect him against the King of France he would bind the realme of England and Seigneurie of Ireland to hold of him and his successors and in signe of obedience to pay him a yearely tribute of a thousand markes of siluer This franke offer caused Iohns Ambassadors to be well entertained Innocent ●ends his Legat presently to absolue him to passe the contract and to receyue the homages of fealtie as well of himselfe as of his subiec● Iohn is absolued hauing laid his Crowne Scepter Cloake Sword and King the royal enseigns of a King at the Legats feet Iohn doth homage to the Popes Legate he doth him homage for his realme of England kissing his feete as his tributarie and binds the English to the like duty by a sollemne oth He was also willing to discharge that which he had taken from his Clergie This shal be the means to make him loose both his estate and life This hapned in the yeare 1215. These things performed in England the Legate returnes into France and denonceth vnto Philip in the Popes name That hee should suffer Iohn to enioyne his realme of England in peace and freely to possesse the lands which he held by homage of the Crowne of France Moreouer that he should satisfie the great complaints which the Clergie of his realme had made against him restoring that which he had exacted from them during the warres vpon paine of excommunication if hee did not presently obey Philip promiseth to submit himselfe and before the Legates departure hee frees the Clergie of his realme of the tenths which he had exacted for the charge of the warres according to the decree of a Nationall Councell held at Soissons Iohn liues at peace in England for that which concerned Philip but see hee is the instrument of his owne miserie Being exhaust of meanes through the long and chargeable warres wherewith England had beene afflicted hee had bound himselfe to the Pope to restore vnto the Clergie all such summes of money as he had extorted from them during his troubles and for want of paiment he sees an excommunication readie the which was reuoked but vpon condition of obedience Iohns oppression o● his subiects the cause of his ruine Thus freeing the Clergie he sur-chargeth the people and pressed by the Pope to satisfie his command hee oppresseth his subiects by extraordinarie impositions and tyrannicall exactions adding force to his commands So as it fell out that as hee could not helpe the one without hurting of the other and that the people hate him commonly that wrongs them behold the English make strange complaints in Parliament against Iohn who doth incense them the more by his rigorous answers The English seeing themselues reiected by their King flie to extraordinarie remedies and being denyed iustice by him that should giue it they seeke it else where chosing a King in the place of a Tyrant France was their onely refuge in these extremities The English reiect ●ohn an● offer the realme to Philip. and therefore they send the chiefe Noblemen of the realme to Philip to offer him the Crowne of England promising to obey him as their lawfull King Philip who desired nothing more makes shewe to refuse it pretending both the truce made with Iohn and his worde passed to the Pope but vnder hand he sends them his sonne Lewis his faithfull Lieutenant giuing him a traine fitt for his person in so great an exploite Lewis hauing taken hostages of the English for assurance of their faith Lewis of France receiued by the English hee passeth into England being receiued of them all with great ioy as the Prince from whom they attended their health and quiet Hee makes his entrie into London which was the Rendezvous of his most confident friends and by their example many Ci●ties come and offer him obedience In the meane time complaints come to Philip from Pope Innocent as if hee had broken his faith and threats if hee did not repaire it Philip denies any breach of faith The Po●e sends to Philip ●or Iohn They bee sayd he the discontents of the English against Iohn whom they accuse to haue slaine Arthur their lawfull King and hauing free libertie to make a new election they repaired to his Sonne who was of age to gouerne himselfe for whose errors hee was not answerable But attending the end of this sute let vs returne to England 1217. Iohn held strong places Winchester whether hee had retired himselfe Windolisor or Windsor The Pope ●ends to Philip for Iohn Norwiche and Douer hee had likewise factions in other Citties Lewis hauing receiued homage from many of them commandeth his Armie to marche to reduce the Citties to obedience who for the most part receiued him willingly Norwiche yeeldes without any dispute from thence hee goes to Douer hauing attempted the Captaine
King Iohn hauing long expected the time of his deliuerie parts from England with a strong garde and is conducted to Calis attending the money 〈◊〉 the first pawne of his libertie The Regent his sonne labours earnestly the 〈◊〉 of Paris did contribute willingly a hundred thousand Royals and after their example all other citties paied their portions Of such power is our head cittie both to 〈◊〉 good and euill so by this ende they made amends for all former errors The money is brought to S. Omer whether the Regent comes to see the deliuerie Edward returnes to Calis he is wonderfull kinde to Iohn The two Kings sweare a mutu●ll league of friendship and they sweare a league of friendship and comprehended Charles King of 〈◊〉 being absent in this peace his brother Philip vndertaking for him to the end that all quarrels might be troden vnder foote and all men liue in peace vnitie and concord So Iohn being set at libertie after a languishing imprisonment foure yeares take his 〈◊〉 of Edward with all the shewes of loue that might be betwixt brethren and 〈◊〉 friends Being parted f om Calis he findes his sonne Charles comming to meete him with a great and stately traine I cannot well expresse the ioy of this first encounter this good King imbracing his sonne as his redeemer with ioy mixt with teares and full of fatherly affection with the content of his sweete recouered libertie seeing himselfe in his 〈◊〉 armes who had giuen him so many testimonies of his faithfull loue in his necessitie 〈◊〉 in the middest of his subiects with his first authoritie depending no more vpon anothers will King Iohn receiued by his sonne with great ioy And contrariwise what ioy was it for this wise sonne to enjoy his father so precious a gage of the authoritie order and obedience of a State and a great discharge for him of this painfull burthen Thus discoursing of what had bin done during his imprisonment and of what was to be done they arriue at He●in whether not onely the whole countrie repaires 〈…〉 the Deputies of Paris and of all the prouinces of the Realme to congratulate their good Kings deliuerie where he disposeth of the gouernment of his house The King of Nauarre meetes him at Compiegne hauing fi●st sent back his hostages to shew that he relyed onely on his word put himselfe into his power Thus passeth the world after a storme comes a calme 1361. King Iohn made his entrie into Paris with this goodly traine being receiued with an incredible ioy of all his subiects The Kings reception into Paris The Parisiens going to kisse his hands offer him their hearts with a goodly cubberd of Plate worth a thousand markes for homage of their fidelitie and obedience The Parliament had surceased aboue a whole yeare Iohn for the first fruits of his recouered authoritie would honour the opening of the court with his presence being set in the seat of Iustice in the midst of all his officers to the incredible content of all men who beheld the cheerefull countenance of this Prince like the Sunne beames after a troubled skie Such was the returne of King Iohn into his realme after his imprisonment as the catastrophe of a Comedie in the which after mourning they reioyce This happened in the beginning of the yeare 1361. Some moneths were spent in these publike ioyes but they must seeke to get againe his hostages in the effecting whereof they found many difficulties for neither the priuate Lords whose homage he had bound to the King of England nor the countries whose Soueraignties he had yeelded by this accord would obey They argue with the King in councell and demand an acte shewing Difficulties in the performance of the conditions of peace that the King cannot dispose of the soueraigntie of his realme nor alienate the reuenues of the crowne Iohn on the other side fearing least Edward should reproche this vnto him as a practise betwixt him and his subiects made them sundry commandements to obey He went to Auignon to visit Pope Innocent who dyed at this time and Vrban the sixt succeeded in his place both Limosins To hansell Iohns recouered libertie and to ease his minde afflicted with long imprisonment Vrban exhorts him to vndertake the voyage of the holy land as generall of the action Iohn promiseth the Pope to goe with an armie Iohn not remembring the examples of Kings his Predecessors Lewis the 7. 9. nor apprehending the present burthen of his great affaires nor the danger of so mighty and watchfull an enemie who had so long and with so great paine kept him prisoner accepts the charge and makes a solemne promisse and to hasten the execution thereof he returnes into England Some saye the loue of the Countesse of Salisbury whose husband had the garde of the King being a prisoner was the principall motiue of his returne The which I cannot beleeue vpon the report of the English being vnlikely that his age his aflictions his great affaires and the voyage wherevnto he prepared should suffer this Prince to follow so vnseasonable a vanitie But whatsoeuer moued him therevnto he dyed there leauing his life in England where he had so long languished as a presage of his death Thus Iohn died in England in the yeare 1364. the 8. of Aprill Iohn dies in England His dispositiō leauing Charles his eldest sonne heire to the Crowne of France A good man he was but an vnfortunate Prince wise in ordinarie things but ill aduised in great affaires iust to all men but not warie how or whom he trusted in matters of consequence temperate in priuate but too violent in publick To conclude a good Prince but not considerate more fit to obey then to command Truely these heroicke vertues are the proper Iewels of Crownes and wisdome is a companion to the most excellent vertues especially in Princes who are aduanced vpon the Theater of manslife to gouerne the rest We haue noted that Bourgogne had beene giuen to Robert the grand-child of Hugh Capet for his portion A little before the deceasse of King Iohn Bourgogne annexed vnto the Crowne it was vnited to the Crowne of France by the death of Duke Philip a young man of the age of fifteene yeare sonne to that Iohn which dyed in the battaile of Poitiers He was betrothed to the heire of Flanders but both the Duchie and the Daughter were for another Philip the sonne of Iohn to whom the father gaue this new succession in recompence of the faithfull seruice he had done him the day of his taking and had continued it in prison CHARLES the 5. called the Wise the 52. King of France CHARLES THE V. KINGE OF FRANCE .52 THis Charles during the life of his father Iohn had giuen so many testimonies of his sufficiencie to gouerne well 1364. that he was held for King before he tooke the crowne Charles his raigne the which he receiued at Rheine
euent answered the proiect and by an admirable meanes the which ruined Peter through his owne folly This tyrant growne proud by the wishfull successe of the English forces makes no regard to satisfie the Prince of Wales for the charges of this warre although the successe were for his good but busying himselfe to take reuenge of such as had risen against 〈◊〉 he contemned such as had succoured him yea treading all pietie vnder foote he allyed himselfe with the King of Belle-marine a Sarasin and marrying his daughter he abiured the Christian Religion holding the neighbourhood of so mighty a King Peter forsaker● by the English is taken prisoner to be more certaine and profitable then all the forces of England But it fell out contrary to his conceipt for Henry assisted by the constable Gues●lin and the French forces hauing won fiue battels against Peter in the ende he was quite defeated and taken prisoner Hauing him in his power Peter King of Castile beheaded at the Castilians su●e wonderfully incensed against this Tyrant he caused his head to be cut off reaping the fruites of his impiety the which made him to forsake the true religion of his vanity trusting to a rotten planke with the losse of his conscience and of his exceeding cruelty hauing murthered his wife tiranised ouer his subiects and spoyled his brother of his estate against all right An excellent lesson for all men especially for great Princes not to dally with God who punisheth haynous crimes with haynous punishments euen in this life attending the euerlasting paine in the life to come Charles King of Nauarre was much perplexed seeing himselfe betwixt two armies for desiring to be a neuter and to please both he knew not how to gouerne himselfe He seeks to intertaine both Charles and Edward although he were more ingaged to the English and could not well trust his brother in law hauing greatly offended him The King of Nauarres dissembling So hee lets the English army to passe through his dominions when it marched into Castile to succour Peter and suffered himselfe to be taken prisoner by Oliuer of Mauny a Gentleman of Britaine who led him into Castile to make the English thinke he had bin forced and the French that hee did willingly imploy himselfe for them beeing in their troupes A miserable hypocrisie which of a maister makes himselfe a slaue who might haue bin one of the chiefe of the army without this wretched dissembling The good and wise King taught by the example of his father Iohn that an Eele is lost by ouergriping it desi●ed onely to pacifie his brother in lawe although he were well acquainted with his bad disposition and the practises he continued with England So he gaue him a safe conduct to come vnto him and restored vnto him Mantes and Meulan and the free possession of his lands in Normandy but this prince fraught with malice could not be reclaimed neither by the Kings prosperity no● by his clemency for not trusting him hee retires to his realme of Nauarre where he continues his old practises with the English Th● 〈…〉 King Charles hee helps the Britton with men out of Normandie and attempted against the Kings person seeking to poyson him by Iaquet Rue and Peter of Tertre his domesticall seruants who were executed and the Nauarrois places seized on as guilty of high treason Thus Charles was forced to fight against his owne bloud and to haue the malice of his kinsmen and allies No small combate for a great Prince We haue discoursed at large of the valour and happy successe both of Edward the 3. King of England and of Edward his sonne Prince of Wales But as humane things are not durable so there chanced a great accident vpon his returne from the war of Castile which brought them both to the graue The Prince of Wales finding himselfe threatned with a d●opsey passed from Bourdeaux into England to take the ayre of his natiue country but hee died soone after his ariuall the 46. yeare of his age A Prince of great hope not onely lamented of his friends but cōmēded of his enimies Edward the father The death of both Edwards seeing his right arme as it were cut off died for griefe leauing Richard the son of his son Edward in his place who was receiued without any questiō made by his vncles as the first by right of succession Richard not to degenerate from the example of his grandfather and father The English second passage through France being crowned King vndertakes a warre in France whether he sends a goodly army vnder the cōmaund of the Duke of Clarence his vncle who hauing landed at Calais passeth the Riuer of Somme at Clery neere vnto Peronne bending towards Soisson he crosseth the Riuer of Oise Ain Then marching towards Chaalons he passeth Marne and shewing himselfe before Troyes in Champagne he spoyles the country and so goeth ouer Seine betwixt Ville-neufue and Sousey and bending towards Beausse and Gastinois he crosseth into Brittaine there 〈◊〉 the war in fauour of Iohn of Montport spoyling the country with a strange desolatiō On the other side there lands an other army at Bourdeaux the which hauing entred the country fortified such places as held for the English to nourish the seeds of this new warre 1380 In the country of Geuaudan a dioces in that large Prouince of Languedoc there was a Castle neere to Mande named Randon whereas the English maintayned a strong garnison a retreat for theeues which did infinite harme in the country The country hauing sued vnto the King to free them of this incombrance he graunted them Gues●lin the Constable a man of great reputation but the army should be defrayed at their charges He comes into Languedoc 〈◊〉 Randon and brings them to the last extremity but as the beseeged not able to hold out were entered into composition behold the Constable sick to the death yeeld● vp the ghost At the same instant the place was yelded vnto the King so a● in signe that the honour of this prize was due to Gues●lin the Captaines carried the keyes of the castle vpon his herse The death of the Constable 〈◊〉 Thus died 〈◊〉 leauing an honourable testimony of his valour and loyalty and to Charles an 〈◊〉 sorrow for his death who honoured him with a notable obsequie causing his body to be interred with the Kings at S. Denis at the foot of his own tombe was that of Gues●lin with a burning Lampe maintained by foundation called The Lampe of Gu●selin vnto this day King Charles had g uen all Bourgogne to his brother Philip for his portion according to the will of his father Iohn as we haue said and had married him with Margueret the rich heyre of Flanders Being in possession of Bourgogne there happened another occasion in Flanders which won him great credit with those people whom he should comand after the death of Lewis his father in law
vertue Philip of Arteuille their leader was slaine he was found breathing among the dead carcases whom the King commanded to be hanged and so he had the reward of his imagined Empire This double euent may serue as a lesson both for great and small for great men in the Earles person for small in that of this Tribun For the first to command well for the others to obey well and forall not to passe the bounds of their duties God punishing the great for their tiranny and crueltie and the lesser for their disobedience dangerous plagues of mankinde the which canno● stand but by order and authoritie well gouerned and well applied They cal●th●s ouerthrow the battaile of Rosebecq●e which chanced in the yeare 1582. in December it was the more remarkable for that the vanquished had soone their reuenge Charles thus victorious could not manage his victorie for in steed of surprising the Gantois in this amazement he lingers too long at Courtray to seeke out the remainder of those miserable mutynous which remayned in this defeate whereas in pardoning the vanquished the victor getts a double victo●y This place also being infamous by a great ouerthrowe which chanced in the yeare 1312. mooued him to choler for that this ill aduised people to noa●e the memory of that day did ce●ebrate a ●ollemne feast yearely An vnworthy reuenge taken by King Charles and had reserued fiue hundred pa●er of gilt spures which they had taken from the French in that battaile Charles was so transported with the memorie of this audacious indignitie as he caused this poore Towne to be burnt An vnworthie reuenge of so great a monarke who should hold it the greatest reuenge vpon his enemies to pardon when he may reuenge The Duke of Bourgongne in all this confus●on did not forget to seeke for goodly mouables whereof there was abundance He carried away that goodly clock and that exquisite tapistry which is now at Dyion in the Kings house The Gantois seeing their ruine flie to Richard King of England The Gantois flie to England for succore they choose Francis Artrem●n one of their Cittizens for their head and renue the league of white caps more obstinatly then before being resolued to die rather then to trust their Earle to whome they imputed the cause of all their miseries the which had continued fiue yeares and deuoured two hundred thousand men So fatall are ciuill dissentions betwixt the Lord and his subiects Lewis their Earle hauing labored to settle his affaires both by the French and English against the Gantois fealing daylie the inconueniences of this rebellious people as thornes in his sides fell into such a melancholie as hee died Leauing his whole estate much troubled to his sonne-in-lawe Philip Duke of Bourgongne who beeing fa●re ingaged in his Father-in-Lawes quarrell was nothing pleasing to this his people The war●e was reuiued both by practises of the English and by meanes of Artreman the head of that faction who hauing tasted the sweete of popular commaund desired nothing more then to maintayne this diuision but there fell out a sodaine accident which pacified all this great trouble as a little raine doth a great winde Two Cittizens of Gand whose names deserued well to be registred in this historie discoursing one day of their common miseries A strange meane to pacifie Gand. and noating the true causes of these calamities within their Cittie as feeling the wound they sought the meanes to cure it the which had continued so long and cost their miserable Countrie so deere The Kings pleasure and the Duke of Bourgongnes must be knowne they were not ignorant of the peoples humour being verie wea●ie of so many miseries Their enterprise was not without exceeding danger by the absolute authoritie of three or fower who had most credit with the people being susceptible of any mischiefe when they are thrust forward with a shewe of good It was requisite in the managing of so important a busines to vse wisdome and silence vntill the foundation were well layed and for the execution thereof there needed one which had both credit and authoritie with both parties The God of peace presented one vnto them which gouerned this action discreetly Iohn Delle a gentleman of Gand but bred vp in the Court of France He that seekes peace finds it This Delle goes to the King and Duke of Bourgongne hee layes open his dess●ine and is well entertayned He returnes with a good answer both by letters of credit and priuate instructions to the Gantois At his returne the matter is so well furthered by those two Cittizens who were in great reputation with the people as without the priuitie of Artreman or the English Negotiators the banner of Flanders the signall of their popular power is sollemnly planted in the great market place Al the people flocke thether where hauing signified vnto the chiefe Magistrats that they would haue peace and obey the Duke of Bourgongne their Prince Deputies are appointed with power to negotiate conclude a peace with him This was effected after a long confusion to the content both of the Earle and Flemings Of a light beginning God performes a great worke when it pleaseth him Thus the Duke of Bourgongne pacified Flanders in the yeare .1384 when as he feared greatest tumults by meanes of some seditious persons to whose great griefe a peace was proclaymed throughout al the Esta●s of Flanders 〈◊〉 in Flan●●●● which gaue an incredible content to all the people after so manie miseries Nowe King Charles grewe great and although he were but sixteene yeares of age yet was he desiro●s to marry The Duke of Aniou his Vncle according to the aduice which King Charles the wise had g●uen on his death bed thought good to seeke him out a marriage in Germanie in the house of Bauiere to counterballance the credit of the Emperour W●nceslaus no friend to the house of France what shewe soeuer he made He therefore marrieth with Isabel the daughter of Stephen Duke of Bauiere a Princesse from whom they expected much good but shee brought infinit troubles to France as we shal see hereafter Thus mans wisdome is deceyued when as hee hopes for best that God might bee knowen for the author of al good both in the family and State This imperious Proserpina ver●fied the prouerbe That a woman raiseth or ruines a house She had almost ouerthrowne the State But shortly there shal an Italian woman be ioyned to this Germain to augment the confusions of this raigne reasonable good in the beginning but verie miserable in the ende This yeare likewise concluded a peace in Brittain after many troubles Iohn of Montfort hauing renued his homage to the King and sworne fealtie which shall not long continue to the great preiudice of the King and his realme The truce was continued in shewe betwixt France and England but with no more loue of the two Kings then betwixt capitall enimies who sought to annoye
shortest errors being best it were better to retire in time then to make an absolute shipwracke of the Kings person and the honour and good of the Realme too much dismembred by former afflictions The enterprise broken off This checke from heauen which God had sent Winter and the feare of worse made the Regents aduice to be allowed both by the King and his councell who changed opinion for their voyage to England So this great interprise was disappointed being very preiudiciall to the poore people who endured the warre that their enemy should haue felt by an vnseasonable and excessiue charge I haue coated this action in the yeare 1381. vnder the Regency of the Duke of Aniou I know some attribute it to the Duke of Berry but I haue followed the first opinion vpon the relation of true Authors and as it shall appeare by the progresse of this report most likely This action was the cause of seditions at Paris and Rouen bred without doubt by the discontent of this bad gouernement for this great shewe so incensed the people beeing weary and greiued to haue borne so great a burthen for so vaine an enterprise as they rise at Paris Rouen Amiens Pottiers Lions and many other Citties by this new occasion which presently succeeded the first folly The Regent was blamed by the people to haue beene too slacke in his oppositiō against this preparation for England Sedition at Paris and the chiefe in Court hated him for beeing so hastie for that he was the onely staie thereof Thus ill thought of by both he was maligned of all handes It chanced the realme of Naples was offered vnto him by Queene Ioane and Pope Clement the 7. This was his whole desire but he must conquere it by dint of sword The title only was offered him Naples offered to the Regent both by her that might giue it as being heire and by him that might confirme the donation as being Pope All the Kings councell being weary of the Regents cōmand wished to see him gone but they must flie to the people for money the which was hard to get as experience did witnesse Presently as they heare talke at Paris of a newe imposition although they sweetned these bitter pilles with the goodly name of subsidies all the world begins to crie out and from Paris this b●u●te flies through the whole Realme The people run●e tumultuously to the Greue they desire the Prouost of Marchants to bring them to the Regent th● which he delayes from day to day by excuses but in the end he cannot retaine them A great multitude runs to the Regents lodging they giue him to vnderstand by their Prouost into what extremity they were brought and vrge the late superfluous expences To what ende then say they serues a new warre to conquere a new kingdome in the aire with the ruine of the widow and the Orpheline This was not decreed no● practised by the good and wise King Charles wherevnto he had bound his sonne who should not suffer the memory of his fathers ashes to be taxed with this dishonour The Chancellour Dormans speakes at the Regents request he layes before their eyes the necessity of this voiage wherby both the King and realme might reape profit honour promising the King should prouide for the reliefe of the people This was gently put off to make them loose this humour in diuiding them but the people continue more obstinate they require a plaine resolute answer to their demaund so as the next day they come in troupe before the Kings lodging where the whole Councell was assembled with the Regent The King giues audience to the prouost of Merchants in the peoples name who deliuers the same complaints Then Iohn de Marais an aduocate in Parliament an eloquent and popular man prepared carefully for the purpose makes a goodly and artificiall oration to diuert the people from this bitternesse laying before them their duties the necessity of the Kings affaires and the good which should redounde by the enterprise of this forraine warre He omitted nothing of the office of a good Orator but he preuayled not for the people going from thence without respect of the King or his Councell runne presently to the Iewes Lombards and such other Marchants houses as had beene accustomed to gather all publike exactions they breake vp their shopps and counting houses they take away what was good and ill intreate all such as they meete of that profession yet they kill no man in this first tumult The Regent winking at this insolencie and fearing least it should encrease by moouing the people alreadie in choller thinks it best to referre the matter to an other time vntill the fume of this bitter discontent were blowen ouer adu●rtisments comming from all parts of the realme that the Citties grewe into the like humour But all this disswads him not from his enterprise he imployes all such as he thinks fit to winne the people Iohn of Marais Peter de la Riuiere Iames Andelle and such like Tribuns who seemed to be in credit with the people in shewing themselues affected to the common good And to loose no time he prepars his armie being resolute to leuie this imposition byforce whatsoeuer it cost The farmors of this leuie haue charge to beegin it A Col●ector at the Hales requiring a denier from a poore gardiner for a basket of herbes she crying out a great troupe flocke about this Collector and teare him in peeces But this is not all in this tumult all runne to gither on heaps Porters Pedlers The Parisi●●● in 〈◊〉 Cart●rs Butche●s Tauerners and such like the scumme of the baser sort they goe in troupes to the Towne house they breake open the doores and take such armes as they finde By the Constables command they had made beetles or axes to arme their men withall they take them and so vse them as this sedition was afterwards called by the name of Maillotins Being thus armed they goe to the Farmers Lodgings beat downe the doores breake open cofers cubberds and coumpting houses they drawe forth their books and papers they teare and bu●ne them they take away money and mouables and in the ende they kill and massaker all the farmers they can finde searching all corners of their houses They crie that one had saued himselfe in Saint Iames Church at the Butchery they runne the●her and murther him holding the image of the blessed virgin in his armes The cruel●●nsolency of th● Parisi●ns Some saue themselues in Saint Germains Abbay where they are presently beseeged But whilest that some labour after this seege the rest runne to the prisons of the Chastelet and Fourl'Euesque where they release the prisoners and arme them They bethinke themselues of a head there was a very sufficient man in prison named Hugh Aubriot who in former times had beene Prouost of the Marchants and had with honour executed great charges both in the Treasorie and State but
he would not accept of this gouernment without the good liking of the Duke of Berry so as all the punishment fell vpon Betizac his chiefe Treasurer who 〈◊〉 burnt at Beziers Betizac the Dukes treasurer burnt purging in the fire the extorsions he had committed vnder his maister● authoritie At that time Charles King of Nauarre died so often blemished in the truth of this historie we haue noted how he had retired himselfe from Court into his realme of Nauarre As this retreat was vnto him a reprochfull banishment so this shamefull solitarinesse was a ciuill death But the Catastrophe of his tragicall life was a famous proofe that God doth often reuenge notable sinnes by notable punishments euen in this life He was much broken by the excesse of venery and all sorts of dissolutions the which he had exceedinglie vsed with his wonderfull tyrannie and crueltie As they did anoint him with medicines fit to warme and comfort his benummed members some say they had chafed him with Aqua-vitae The tragicall 〈◊〉 of the Nauarro● and wrapt him in a sheete but behold fire takes hold of this sheete with such violence as being vnable to quench it he was consumed by degrees liuing some daies as suruiuing his paine and that which encreased the horror of Gods iudgement his death made both great and small to reioyce and was receiued in France with as great content as the winning of a great and famous battaile Great robbing during the truce There was a generall truce betwixt the French and English so as the garrisons lying st●ll the Souldiars bred vp and nourished in armes fighting no more by order vnder their e●s●gnes sought now their prey by disorder vpon the labourer and marchant The countries of Rouergue Perigort Limosin Auuergne and La Marche had English garrisons who spoiled these countries and did runne vp into the neerest parts of Languedoc Velai Geuaudan Viuarez and Suenes where the villages are for the most part walled in to preuent these sodaine incursions There were many theeues amongst them Teste noire or Black-pate in the Castell of Ventador Amerigor Marcel at Ro●h-Vandais who breaking the truce sought to be supported by the King of England but in the end they all fell into the hang-mans hands or perished miserably by some strange death an Image of our late confusions Libertie had bred vp these warriours with so great aboundance as the English passed the sea to make Turneys and to fight at Barriers as they vse at great Triumphes There was a Tilt set vp betwixt Calais and Saint Iaquelvuert where the Nobilitie made triall of their valour as in a Schoole of Fence To take away this troublesome aboundance they tooke occasions to make long voyages into Castille and Italie but in the end there was a very famous one offred against the miscrea●ts of Barbarie at the Geneuois request who suffred many discommodites in their traffick by these barbarous Affricans Charles granted them succours willingly and gaue the charge of this warre to Peter duke of Burbon assisted with the Earles of Auuergne and Foix the Lords of Coucy Guy of Tremouille A voyage into Aff●●●ke by ●he Fren●h English together Iohn of Vienne Admirall of France Philip of Arthois Earle of Eu Philip of Bar Harcourt Antoing Linge Pyquiny and many other great men from all parts of the Realme which ranne to so famous an action vnder so worthy a commander and at so great leysure more painfull then the toyle of warre to men that desired nothing but imployment Richard King of England to imitate Charles granted succours to the Geneuois vnder the command of the Earle of Salisburie accompanied with many Noble men and Eng●●sh Gentlemen moued with desire like vnto the French in the enterprise of this pleasing paine The Deputies of the Kings of France and England assembled to treate of a generall peace but not able to effect it they continue a truce for foure yeares with goodly p●ouisions against robberies for the safetie and quiet of their Estates Charles gaue free passage to the English by the Countries of Lang●ed●● and Daulphiné to passe the Alpes safelie All come to Genes to the great ioy of the Geneuois Being shipt they land within fewe dayes in Barbarie Presently they beseege the Citty of Affricke So our histore termes it as bearing the name of all the vast and barbarous coun●ry They call the Af●ricanic commanders Agadinquor of Oliferne and Brahadist of Thunes But our Argonautes found them which stayed their fu●y The Barbarians defended themselues with an obstinate resolution But their fo●ce did them lesse harme then the ayre and diet beeing very contrary to thei● complexions so as our armie decreased dayly especially of men of accompt This siege con●inued six weekes with much losse no hope to preuaile The 〈◊〉 noated alwa●es to be ●aithl●sse The Geneuois hauing conceiued a hope of a sodaine victorie began to grow cold and slacke in furnishing of the armie The Duke of Bourbon foreseeing the difficulties which might grow in continuing obstina●e at this siege fearing the winter and not trusting the Geneuois who are famous for that they haue no faith remembring the example of the King S. Lewis resolued to returne wi●hout any greater losse He trusseth vp his baggage bringes backe his troupes into France cōtinuing the example to al such as are capable of reasō how difficult it is for Christ●ans to performe these strange attempts after the experience of many ages The ●rench and the English hauing liued louingly together in this voyage returned to their houses without doing of any memorable act but to haue endeauored to doe somet●ing worthy of memory to auoide idlenesse during so peacefull a time ●rit●aine did then conceiue and afterwards bring forth more preiudiciall effects then B●rbary i● sel●● and the way was made by light occasions to horrible and monstrous ef●ects to the great preiudic● both of the King and Realme for a notable tes●imonie to posterity what Councellors Enuye and ambition be in a state we like wretches seeke for peace and when God g●ues it we flie from it we maligne an other mans good and dep●●ue our selues of our owne But alas it were a small matter for a great personage to hur● himselfe by his owne passions if this poison did not spred abroad to the preiudice of ●he common weale We haue said that Iohn of Montfort remained peaceably Duke of Brittaine by the death of Charles of Blois and the agreement he made with his widow Hatred betwixt the duke of Bri●●●ine the Constable Clisson whose eldest sonne Iohn of Britt●ine Earle of Ponthieure was redeemed from prison out of England by the constable Clisson who gaue him his daughter in marriage payed his ●ansome The constable was a Bri●ton and so a subiect to Iohn of Montfort Duke of Brittaine his ancient and capitall ●nimy and yet by this newe succession was become his Lord. Doubtlesse in this quality Clisson could not
men which chanced in the beginning of the yeare 1394 shal burne farther and kindle a greater fire betwixt the vncle and the Nephewe fo● the space often yeares vntill the death of Philip Duke of Bourgongne leauing this hatred hereditary to his posterity There is no meanes which the Bourguignon doth not attempt to wrong his Nephewe of Orleans Certaine Augustin Fryars vndertake to cure the King by incisions in his head whe●by he was in great danger of his life These counterfets were brought forth publikely in their habits and beheaded but the scarres of these wounds will remaine in Lewis his ●ace who recommended them vnto the King The women are dealers in these actions The Duchesse of Bourgongne perswades Queene Isabel that Lewis his meaning was to kill the King her husband his children These impressions are confirmed by the graue and sweet discou●ses of the duke her husband who by degrees setled a hatred in the Queenes minde agai●st her brother in-law Thus this faction is much fortified by the authority of Queene Isabel and by her with her husbands name whom she makes to speake what she pleaseth sometimes as her will directed him but not alwa●●● Yet this weake braine is the checker of all these cour●ly pollic●es by the meanes o● women who are continually about his bedde or his chaire to distemper his braine with variety of newes springing from their wretched passions and this poore Prince is sometimes won sometimes lost and alwaies tormented w●th these impor●un● disco●r●es V●len●ine to the Duke of Orleans an I●a●●an and daughter to Iohn Galeaz one of the cunningest and most subtill witts of her time which subtilty some held she increased by coniuring would not yeeld to the brauadoes of these two Princesses against whom she opposed her selfe not only by her husbands degree but also by a politike courage bred in her selfe visiting the sicke king with such ciuill entertainment as her greatest enemies could not finde any honest colour to deny her the dore So as the King did not onely willingly see her but did call for her and in his greatest fits did know her onely among all the rest refusing to take any thing but from the hands of his good Sister of Orleans The more the Kings loue kindled a iealousie in these two Princesses her enemies the more it raysed vp the mind of Valentine and by hir meanes of her husband who remēbring too hatefully the degree whereunto he was borne and the wrong done him in reiecting him yet hauing neither dexterity nor meanes to win many seruants he gaue the Duke of Bourgongne all aduantages being graue cold pleasing and modest so as by his wise tēper he disolued the heate of the Duke of Orleans immoderate vehemencie who tyring himself with the shew of his greatnesse makes it known by effects that all the authority was in the Duke of Bourgongne for whosoeuer had neede of any publike helpe he must pas●e through his hands what busines soeuer chanced either within or without the realme the true rendez-uous was at his lodging Thus the Vncle made his Nephew towalke horses as they say although he chafed and stamped beyond all measure These diuisions troubled the whole court making them to neglect the affaires of state and what can we obserue more famous in so disordered an estate Al businesses are done in the Kings name yet without the King vnlesse the parties would haue him to countenance some great passion I do purposely omit all that which passed in this raigne touching the schisme of the Church and the house of Aniou in the realmes of Naples and Arragon not to breake off the course of my intent meaning to represent in due place all that concernes this forrain history Richard King of England sends his Ambassadors to Charles to congratulate his recouery offring him a generall peace and demanding his daughter in marriage The Kings relapse delayed the conclusion for a time Richard king of England marrieth with Isabell of France but soone after by the care of the Duke of Bourgongne who had a great interest in this alliance by reasō of his country of Flanders it was concluded in the yeare 1395. Charles had some intermissions by meanes whereof he could ride Richard repayres to Calais and Charles to Ardres whether Richard came to ratifie the peace concluded betwixt their Ambassadors and to receiue his new spouse The Kings encountred one another with loue and kindnesse making shewes of great good will but it was a short ioy for either of them For as it seemed that the quiet of these two realmes had beene setled by this generall peace sealed by this marriage and seasoned with so many reciprocall shewes of cordial affection betwixt these two great Kings behold a great combustion in England which intangles both these Kings in this common calamity Richard being of himselfe effeminate carelesse voluptuous and idle grew more delicate by this profound rest built vpon the alliance of his enimy who alone might haue quickned him He is alwayes with his yong wife imbracing her dallying with her and atti●ing her with such contempt of his authority abassing himselfe too much to his subiects so as he grew contemptible vnto his enimies who pres●med to attempt against his person The ordinary warres of England against France had caused many necessary impositions without any grudging of the subiects but when as necessity ceased by this generall peace the people require to bee relieued William More makes an oration vnto the king in the name of all the English in generall Richard hauing no meanes in these infinite exactions to supply the charges of his idle voluptuous life contemned his subiects request and in the ende pressed vpon the same matter by the Duke of Glocester the Earle of Arondel in the name of them all he puts them vniustly to death The English madde with rage for the death of their deputies flie to such remedies as despaire giues to necessitie From this general discontent sprong a strange Tragedie against Richard for the English seeing themselues thus despised by their King they cast their eyes vpon Henry of Lancaster his cousine and hauing called a Parliament they put Richard into prison and crowne Henry of Lancaster in his place Richard King of England put from the Crowne Richard being forced in open assembly to resigne the Crowne and to condemne himselfe to perpetuall prison as hauing abused his royall authoritie and his subiects But this t●agicke change concernes the Histo●ie of England This may b●ieflie suffice for ours in the conference of our estate with theirs Charles did greatly grieue at this deiection of Richard his sonne in lawe from whom he expected great loue and quiet for his subiects But who seeth not the vanitie of this world both in great and small to feare a shower euen when the Sunne is hottest Hee sends for Isabell his daughter of twelue yeares old whom Richard had not yet toucht being content to behold her
but we sought our owne decay The Constable Albret comanded ●he foreward that day and with him were the Dukes of Orleans Bourbon the Earles of Eu and of Richemont the Lord of Bouciquault Marshal of France the Lord of Dampierre Admiral The Battaile was led by the Duke of Bar and the Earles of Alenson Vaudemont Neuers Blamon Salines Grandpre and Roussy The Reerward by the Earles of Marle Dampmartin and Fouquembergue The King of England forced ●o fight Henry being denied pas●age by the Constable resolues to fight pu●ting his trust in God and in his owne valour determining to vanquish or to die He made choise of a place of hard accesse and the better to fortifie his archers euery one had a sharpe stake planted before him The French ordered as before attended their enemies either looking who should begin the game Impatiencye forceth the weaker like desperate men the English Archers being in fight with such a furie as the French foreward cannot endure the violent fal of this furious storme the Cōstable Albret was slaine fighting in the foremost ranke The Duke Anthony of Brabant brother to Iohn Duke of Bourgongne seeing this disorder leaues his troupe to redresse it but he was also slaine by the English bowe men And gets the victorie with his b●other Philip Earle of Neuers The battaile was likewise fo●ced after a great fight The reerward fled and saued them selues in the neerest places of retreate So as the losse was not so great as the shame and ouerthrow They number ten thousand men slaine but their rashenes was inexcusable The head smar●ed for it and the Bourguignons brethrē had there an honorable tombe Charles Duke of Orleans Lewis of Bourbon the Ea●ls of Eu Richemont Vendos●e the strongest pillers of the Orlean faction with many Noblemen and Gentlemen were taken and led into England This de●eat chanc●d the 20. of Oc●ober in the yeare The Battaile of Agincourt 1415. called the euill Battaile of Agincourt And as one mischief comes neuer alone the bodies at this defeat were scarce buried before Lewis the Daulphin dies This Lewis eldest Sonne to our Charles Sonne in Law Lewis the Daulp●in dies and a terror to the Bourguignon was little lamented of the people and lesse o● his father in Law who hated him to the death A Prince of little valour and much to●le more busied with himselfe then with the affaires he managed the which he made troublesome by his insufficiencie presumptiō to know much His disposition vnwilling to learne f●om others what he vnderstood not for the good of the State and his owne duty Iohn Duke of Touraine his brother succeded him in the first degree of the Prince of the bloud The Duke of Berry dies and the Earle of Armagna● was made Constable in the place of Charles of Albret who shall minister good occasion to speake both of his life and death Iohn Duke of Berry brother to our Charles the 5. augmented these losses A wise Prince and louing Learning cōmendable in al things but for his couetousnes the which made his vertues of lesse fame A blemish very il beeseming a generous and heroicke spirit These great losses should haue made the Bourguignon humble but he became more insolent making new practises to raise him selfe hauing no competitor Imbracing this ocasion he gathe●s togither what troupes he can with an intent to go to Paris The Queene and Constable of Armagnac vnwilling he shoud come armed comand him in the Kings name not to aproch The Parisiens were not then so well conceited of the Bourguignon being restrained by the court vn●uersitie but especially by the Kings autho●ity being present who spake whatsoeuer his wife the Constable would haue him being then alone in authority in the Kings Councell The Bourguignons troupes kept the field 1416. committing all kinde of insolencies and spoyles against whom the King made Edicts as against common theeues The Bourguignon renewes the warre giuing the people liberty to kill them But this did nothing mollify the heart of this reuengefull Prince borne for his Countries misery hauing no other intent but to afflict it w●th new calamityes To this ende as in the Kings sicknesse the Daulphin had the name and authority of the State he sought to winne the fauour of Iohn succeeding in the right of his brother deceased This occasion was offered but the issue was contrary to his desseine The misery of our France was such as the common duty of humanity moued forraine nations to pitty foreseeing our ruine if the warre betwixt France and England continued In this common desire The Emperor Sigismond comes into Franc● the Emperour Sigismond by the consent of the Germans came into France His traine and the good worke he vndertooke dese●ued an imperiall Maiestie but the ende will shew h●s intent to be other then he protested Being ar●iued in France to the great content of all the French he findes our Charles at his deuo●ion who receiued him with all the pompe he could giue to so great a Monarch making shewe of the great desire hee had to make a peace betwixt the French and the English for the generall good of both estates But this accord was but halfe made The Emperour hauing remained some time with Charles goes into England where he findes Henry of an other humour puft vp with the happy successe of his affaires the weakenesse of ours and in trueth the measure of our miseries was not yet full So Sigismond hauing perswaded Henry in vaine returnes into France Charles to honour him sends his sonne Iohn Duke of Touraine and Daulphin of Viennois into Picardie to meete him hauing married the daughter of the Earle of Hainault as great a friend to the Bourguignon as ill affected to the French The Emperour seeing his labour lost in seeking this reconciliation takes his shortest course into Germany leauing a reasonable subiect to the cleare-sighted The Daulphin Iohn fauours the Bourguignon to iudge that he had an other intent then to settle a peace in France by countenancing of the Bourguignon the instrument of her miseries for after this yong p●●nce had spoken with the Emperour he is wholy changed in fauour of the Duke of Bourgongne and resolues to ●andy with him against the Duke of Orleans This foundation beeing laid by the Emperours pollicy it was fortified by the Earle of Hainault father-in-law to Iohn the Daulphin Nowe he imbraceth the greatest and most dangerous enemie of all true Frenchmen with a wonderfull affection But the subtill is taken in his own snate the end doth often bewray the intent As all things tended to a manifest change by meanes of this yong Prince inchaunted by his charmes hauing a spirit like vnto waxe apt to receiue any impressions from so subtill an artisan as the Bourguignon behold death cuts off all these hopes The Daulphin Iohn dies cast in the mould of
restore this estate was not amazed nor daunted but hauing commonly in his mouth this Oracle We must haue God and reason on our side He hath recourse vnto God and falles couragiously to worke Hee flies to Roche●l to assure it vnder his obedience Beeing in the Towne there happens a notable accident as he was in councell a part of the chamber sunke and Iames of Bourbon with diuer others were slaine in this ruine The King was but hurt From this danger he passeth on to the chiefe of his affaires He sends into Scotland Milan and Castile to summon his friends to succour him who speedily will send him notable aides He prouides for all the passages vnder his obedience He assures himselfe of Languedoc from whence hedrew his chiefe helpes by the Earle of Clermont from Daulphné by the Lord of Gaucourt from Lions Lyonnois Forrest Beauie●lois and M●sconois by Imbert of 〈◊〉 Seneshall of Lions from Gascogne and other countries of high Guienne where he was acknowledged by the Vicont of Narbonne and the maister of Oruall He sende● Iames of Harcourt into Picardy accompanied with Pothon of Xintrailles or S. Treille Stephen Vignoles called la Hire the flower of his captaines And likewise the Bourguignon sent thither the greatest part of his forces Ambrose de Lore goes into Maine ●●rc●e Pregene of Coitiuy into Champagne The Earle of Dunois a bastard of the house of O●le●ns ● keepes Orleans The townes lying vpon the riuer of Loire aboue beneath Orleans ●ere vnder the obedience of the French La Charité Gyan Iargeau Meung Baugency 〈◊〉 Ambo●s● Tours Samour diuerse small townes in Beausse La Fer●é of ●aules Ianuille Es●ern●y Pluuiers And in the countries of Gastenois Vrepois Montargis Chastillon Mill● Neerer vnto Paris Mont-lehery Orsay Marcoussy very strong places then but now desolate kept Paris in alarme Thus the Cardes were shufled but the English had the better part keeping the great citties and the Kings purse and as the stronger he begins the game which had this issue for the remainder of that yeare The English besiege and take Bazas and the French 〈◊〉 in Meulan vpō Seine with great slaughter of the English but the Duke of Bedford loth to indure suce a thorne in the sides of Paris doth presently besiege it Charles sends thē succors vnder the command of the Earle of Aumale the Constable Boucqham Tanneguv of Chastel Too many cōmanders to do any great exploit Iealousie of command bred ●uch a confusion as all these troupes marched in disorder no man acknowledging but his priuate cōmander Herevpon the English army arriues who had an e●sie cōquest of these disordered troupes then Meulan yeelds to the Duke of Bedford The sharpnes of winter could not temper the heat of these warriours as the fortune of the warre is variable one wins another looseth Ambrose de Lore Iohn of B●l●y thinking to take Fresnoy le Conte lost a notable troupe of their men The Lord of Fontaines hath his reuenge vpon the English defeates eight hundred of them at Nea●uille and Iohn of Luxembourg a Bourguignon defeates the Lords of Cam●sches and Amaulry with their troupes The Earle of Salisbury takes the Townes of Vertus and Espe●nay and the strong places of Montaguillon and Osny neere vnto Paris The composition is strange the souldiers yeelding at the Regents discretion are brought to Paris bare-headed halters about their necks and swords at their breasts This miserable troupe thus tyed and ledde in triumph passeth through S. Iames street to go to the Tournelles where the Regent was lodged and from thence to bee drawne to the place of execution if the Duchesse of Bedford moued with the pitty of a French woman at so pittifull a spectacle had not begged the liues of these poore condemned men of hir husband Thus that yeare passed wherein Charles the 6. and Henry the 5 died but God to restore our Monarchie beganne in the same yeare to lay a leuaine against the attempts of Strangers The cause of diuision betwixt the Dukes of Bedford and Bourgongne who sought to ruine it Iaqueline of Bauiere Countesse of Hainault and Holland the onely heire of those two states had married with Iohn Duke of Brabant who by a blind and ambitious auarice gaue her selfe to Humfry Duke of Glocester vncle to the King of England and married with him reiecting her lawfull husband Her excuse was that the Brabantin was her cousin germaine but this shal be a meanes to dissolue the alliance so cunningly conioined by the dukes of Bedford Bourgongne Charles hath diuers losses who shall breake vpon this occasion The yeare begins while that losses came by heaps vpon Charles as the current of an vnauoidable ruine whatsoeuer he vndertooke succeeded not Iames of Harcourt was Gouernour of Picardy placed there ouer some remainders of the ship wrack of that country In Picardie he surpriseth Dommart in Ponthieu from the Bourguignon and spoiles the neighbour Abbaies and the country Hauing ruined these poore disarmed men he is charged by Ralfe Butler an English Captaine looseth all his conquest and escapes hardly with his life sees Crotoy taken before his face the chiefe dungeon of his desseines Rue S. Valery and in the ende the goodly Cittie of Abbeuille sufficient to s●ay the English forces if it had bin garded by good men After these shamfull losses he comes to Charles to excuse himselfe hee pardons him but GOD made him soone paye the interest of his thefts beeing the cause of his owne ruine Hauing no place of aboad he retires to Parthenay to his vncle who entertained him courteously but Harcourt not content with this kind vsage would be maister of the Castle his practise fell vppon his owne head beeing slaine by the gardes suffring the punishment of his treachery as he had done of his couetousnesse cowardise A lesson for bad seruants to their Princes detestable either for their robberies or for their treacherous cowardises whom God payes in due season In Maine The entrance of this yeare was also infamous in two shamefull losses happened to two great Captaines To Ambrose of Lore who looseth the Castle of Tennuye in the country of Maine and to Oliuer of Magny beaten by the English at the Bishops parke nere Auranches but from small accidents we must come to great actions Champagne was in no better case then Mayne In Champagne The Earle of Salisbury made warre with all violence against Pregent of Coytiuy who defended the Kings party the best he could but not able to beare so great a burthen he flies to Charles who sends him his Constable with forces Bourgongne the which were imployed both in an other cause and with other successe then hee had desseined for behold the towne of Creuant in Bourgongne situated vppon the riuer of Yonne vpon the frontiers of Champagne is surprised by the bastard of Baume for the King The Constable flies thither
King of England had a lawefull 〈◊〉 G●i●●ne bends all his forces to driue the English out of Guienne the which hee had inioyed by a lawefull title aboue a hundred yeares Charles assembles his great Councell with the chiefe of his Prouinces at Tours 1451. for the performance of this voiage of Guienne and to finde meanes how to maintayne his army This done he giues the gouernment of Normandie to his Constable and setled Peter of Brezay at Rouen for the well preseruing of that which he had happily gotten And to bee the neerer to his affaires he resolues to remaine at Tailbourg for all occurrents He had then a small army in Guienne vnder the commande of the Earle of Foix who had not onely kept the enemie in breath during the warres of Normandie but also had wonne part of the Country by the taking of Mauleon in Sole and Guisans Three French armies in Guienne Charles giues the commande of the army to the Earle of Dunois and Longueuille a bastard of Orleans but the Earle of Ponthieure and Perigort haue an other part to molest the English in diuers quartes yet these three armies shall make but one bodie vnder this lieutenant general to his Maister when the necessity of his seruice shall winne them all in one The Earle of Ponthieure did happily begin the conquest of Guienne in taking of Bergerac the which was well defended and then Gensac Saint Poy and Montferrand with their dependances by the terror of his victorious armes Our braue Gascons did no lesse on their side About the same time Amalon d' Albret Lord of Oru●ll was in garrison at Tartas a Towne of good presage being the beginning of many blessings which God gaue vnto France Hee had scarse six hundred men at armes and some good footemen of the Countrie but he was well accompanied with Toleresse Robin and Epinasse wise and valiant Captaines and with his generous resolution the hereditarie ornament of his noble house He shewed by the effects that we must not number the men but weigh their valour for with this small troup he presumes to braue Bourdeaux euen at their gates and giues a Lawe vnto the Country of Medoe making not onely the whole Country to contribute but also to bring their commodities to Tartas The ●ourdelois to free themselues not onely from these brauadoes but from their ordinarie toyle and charge thrust on by the authority and commande of the E●g●i●● who were then their superiors leauie eight thousand men vnder their Ma●ors commande The Cittizens promise themselues an assured victorie but this troupe incounters them defeats them kills and takes them prisoners The neere retreate preserued many but there remayned two thousand vpon the place and the victor led two thousand two hondred prisoners to Tartas the which were taken like s●ares in a nett from whome he drewe great ransomes with the honor to haue vanquished a great multitude with fewe men This onely was memorable during that yeare The next shall bring vs in an absolute victorie of all that held in Guienne for the English Charles hauing giuen some respit to his Nobility and men of warre 1452. appoints the first day of May to go to field The army was verie faire the Earle of Dunois had the chiefe commande as we haue sayed the which did not hinder Iohn Earle of Angoul●●me brother to the Duke of Orleans from ioyning with the army with a goodly troupe of the Nobility as the Lords of Taillebourg Pons Rochefoucault Rochechouard and ●●●terre Duke Cha●les was then in Italie for his priuate affaires whence he shall returne with an other traine when he shal be King Philip Duke o● Bou●gongne was much troubled in pacifying a mutinie of Ganto●s who molested 〈◊〉 when he had most neede to succour France in the conquest of the two Prouinces whereof we nowe speake To auo●de ted●ou●n●sse in the priuate relating of all these seeges the Kings army did first attempt Montguy●● and takes it then the Earle of Ponthieure arriues with his troupes and ioynes with the Earle of Dunois the generall and so the army being increased both in men and courage beseegeth Blair one of the goodliest fortresses of Guienne a Towne seated at the mouth of Dordonne Blaie taken and enriched with a goodly hauen of the sea the which was well assayled and well defended but in the ende the Towne is taken by force and the Castell by composition although the Cittizens of Bourdeaux labored to releeue it with a fleete of fiue armed shippes Bourg was added to this victorie of Charles and in this amazement Liborne being summoned to yeeld vnto the King obeyes without any contradiction Bourg and Liborne yeeld But their chiefe force was prepared against Frons●c and in the meanes time the Earle of Ponthieure beseegeth Castillon a Towne in Perigort seated vpon Dordone the whi●h shal be famous in the warres of our time and takes it by composition Saint Million by their example yeelds obedience In the meane time all march to Fronsac a place renowned since Charlemagne and one of the strongest forts of Europe being belaeguered of all sides Fronsac beseeged demands a truce as all prepare for some great force they within demaunded a parle Their request was to haue a truce vntill Midsommer if they were not succored by that day they would yeeld the place and submit themselues to the Kings seruice and imploy all their meanes to draw Burdeaux to obedience These offers pleased the Princes and the Earle of Dunois being generall The daie being come no succors appeere It yeelds and so Fronsac is yeelded vnto the King to the incredible content of the whole armie which expected great resistance from this inuicible fort If the Earle of Dunois preuailed wel on this side the riuer of Garonne on the other side the Earles of Foix and of Armagnac failed in no point of their duties hauing taken Rion they ioyntly beseege Acqs a towne of importance in that Countrie These happy exploits performed in lesse then two monethes did as much incourage the French as it did daunt the English who could not keepe the Townes which yet held for them from affecting of the French and much more in the champion Countrie hauing more libertie So as the Nobilitie together with the Townes resolue to expell the rest of the English that the King might bee wholy obeyed Bourdeaux makes a composition and yeelds Onely Bourdeaux and Bayone remained the most important Townes of that Prouince whether the whole force of this royall army doth march but the Cittizens of Burdeaux loth to bee forced resolue to obey Beeing thus affected they treate and make a profitable accord as it is set downe at large in the Originall Their fredomes and priuileges were confirmed vnto them by Iohn Iuuenall of Vrsins Chancellor of France they brought their keyes to the Earle of Dunois as Lieutenant generall to the King in his armie and receyued the French into
forty Lances to draw forth the Townsemen who sallying out as an assured victorie are compassed in like partriges in a net defeated chased and slaine to the number of foureteene or fifeteene hundred many are taken prisoners and of the better sort Iames of S. Paul the Constables brother the Lords of Centay Carency and others At that time the King did set the Prince of Orange at liberty being of the house and bearing the armes of Chalon taken in warre being set at thirty thousand Crownes ransome the which the King did moderate to ten thousand and caused it to be presently payed to the gentleman that held him by meanes whereof he became the K●ngs Liege man and did him homage for the sayd Principality So as the King gaue him power to intitle him●e●fe by the grace of God Prince of Orange Priuileges granted to the Prince of Orange by Lewis and to coyne money of gold and siluer of as high a standard as that of Daulphiné to grant all graces remissions and pardons but for heresie and treason This transaction with the former prises did wonderfully discontent the Constable iealous of the Kings good successe and fearing likewise some checke by so mightie an army which the Admirall and the Earle of Dammartin had at his gate The Constables malice For the auoyding whereof he giues the King a false intelligence that the English were at sea re●die land at Calais he perswades the King to prouide for the places of Normandie he promiseth faithfully to defend the marches of Picardie and in his Masters absence to reduce Abbeuille and Peronne to his obedience But let vs heare an other notable part of trechery hee seekes by all meanes to weaken the King 1475. and yet would he not fortifie the Bourguignon but that the English should crosse both their Estats that his owne might stand firme in the mi●est of their confusions With this desseine he procures the Duke of Bourgongne to send Philip Bouton and Philip Pot Knights to the Duke of Bourbon and he for his part sends Hector of Escluse The Constable seek●s to suborne the Duke of Bourbon to signifie vnto him that the English would soone land that the Duke of Bourgongne and he the Constable ioyning all their powers togither would easily conquer the Realme exhor●i●g him for the auoiding of his owne ruine and his Countries to ioyne with them the which if he refuse and that it fall out ill for him he was not to be pittied The Duke of Bourbon sends the King two letters of this tenor brought to him at diuers times by Escluse who makes answer to the Duke and Constable that neyther promises nor threats should drawe him from the obedience and faithfull seruice hee did owe vnto his maiesty Lewis will produce these letters to the Constables confusion in the end of the next yeare For the present hee must assure his frontiers There is no newes yet of the English Lewis markes well this chase and will cause the Constable who supposed himselfe to haue the aduantage of the game to loose the partie Poore Nobleman Mourn●ul presages to the Constable howe many misfortunes foretell they approching ruine Thy Brother prisoner Thy wife dead at the same instant one of the chiefest pillers of thy house who as sister to the Queene might at neede haue preserued thy head Thy Nephewe Scales prisoner with the instructions he brought from England to the Bourguignon And to fill vp the measure thy sonne the Earle of Roussy defeated at Grey in Bourgongne and prisoner with the Duke of Bourbon who shall not leaue him vntill the end of the yeare for fortie thousand Crownes ransom with the losse of two hundred men at armes Lombards the Baron of Couches and many others The Marshall of Bourgongne sonne to the Earle of Saint Martin two sonnes of the house of Viteaux whereof the one was Earle of Io●gny the Lords of Longey Lisle Digoine Montmartin Ragny Chaligny the Bayliffe of Auxerre the Enseigne bearer to the Lord of Beauchamp and many others escaped death but not imprisonment Sufficient warrnings to amaze a resolute minde Hereafter the Constable is afflicted with strange distemperatures fed with the neighbourhood of the Earle of Dammartin being lodged neere S. Quentin whome he knewe to be none of his friends And fearing least the King should assault him he sends to take assurance of the Duke of Bourgongne intreating him to send him his brother Iames of Saint Paul the Lord of Fiennes and some other his kinsmen and friends to put them into Saint Quentin and to keepe the Towne at the Dukes deuotōi without bearing the Saint Andrewes crosse the which he promised to restore vnto him within a prefixed time They come they present themselues within viewe of Saint Quentin once twise and thrice The Constable seekes to the Duke of Bourgongne deceiues him but the Constable suspects them and sends them backe They came still eyther too soone or too late so as at the bruit of these forces the Admirall casts himselfe into Arras whereof followed the taking of Iames of Saint Paul who being brought before the King hauing liberty to speake he confessed that at the two first iourneyes hee came onely with an intent to comfort his brother but at the third time seeing the Constable had deceyued both his Master and him if he had beene the stronger hee would haue kept the place for his Master without offering any violence to his brother wherevpon his maiestie set him at libertie very well appointed seruing him vnto his death Lewis dissem●les with the Constable And although the Constable had lately done a notable disgrace vnto the King yet his maiesty dissembled it wisely and to take from him all cause of iealousie he willes him to go and make warre in Hainault and to beseege Auennes whilest that the Admirall was busied in Artois He goes but very loath and with exceeding feare and staies but little he retyres betimes being aduertised as he informed the King of two men in his army whome he described by apparent signes suborned to kill him He accuseth 〈◊〉 that he ●ought to kill him This newe feare accompained with distrust bred a terrible distemperature in the Constables head who hauing lost his credit both with the King and Duke will yet entertayne himselfe by both and perswade them that he is seruant but to one He sent often to the Bourguignons campe to drawe him from the seege of Nuz that he might ioyne fitly with the English at cōming on land then vpon the returne of his messengers he gaue the King some plausible intelligence to cause him to like of his conference with the Duke sometimes disgracing his affaires to winne the credit of an affectionate seruant with Lewis sometimes extolling the Duke to terrifie the King But oh policie simply shadowed On the other side hee knewe well that he had greatly offended the King by his last action He sees
would not suffer Saint Quentin to bee yeelded vnto him and if hee would continue the warre against the sayd Duke hee would returne the next spring and ioyne his forces with the Kings so as hee would recompence him for the losse hee should sustaine by the customes of wooll at Calais which would be of no value being estimated at fifty thousand Crownes and pay halfe his army The King to satisfie Edward answers that it is the same truce they had made togither and for the same terme but the Duke would haue letters apart hee thankes him for his good offers and returnes him home his Ambassador and hostages Lewis had lately learned that the French the English do easily quarrel when they are togither and a small matter would reconcile them with the Bourguignons As for the Britton the King could not well digest the answere which Edward had made to Bouchage and Saint Pierre whereby he easily discouered the strict allyance betwixt them but ●eeing he could not diuide them beeing in the Abbie of Victorie neere to Se●lis where he had a priuate deuotion the peace was absolutely confirmed whereby the King renounced all rights pretended by him to the Duchie of Brittain reseruing the souerainty and homage according to the ancient Custome A peace confirmed with the Duke of Brittain Hee promised to keepe the Dukes person in safety and to maintaine his priuileges and prerogatiues 〈◊〉 forcing him to follow him out of his Duchie but with his owne good liking moreouer he should cause to be giuen vnto the Duke of Brittain the hands seales of all the Princes of his bloud and of the Noblemen of the Realme both spirituall and te●porall with reuocation of all alliances or former promises and restitutions to be made of all things takenduring the warre The patent hath the same date with that of the Duke of Bourgongne Let vs nowe bring the Constable into open veiwe to play the last acte of his Tragedy finding that all these shifts and deuises The 〈◊〉 act of the Constables Tragedie could not breake the reconciliation of the 〈◊〉 Kings the next day after their enterviewe he writes very humbly to the King by a seruant of his named Rapine That he was well informed howe his enemies labored to bri●g him in disgrace charging him with many things whero● he had shewed contrary effects for that during all the forepassed confusions hee had faithfully kept all those places which his maiesty had committed vnto him and beate backe the enemie whensoeuer hee presented himselfe And to purchase some credit hee offers to deale with the Duke of Bourgongne who if the King please shall helpe to defeate Edward and all his army Lewis dissembles and writes to the Constable what was concluded the day before that at this time hee was busied with many affaires Lewis disembles with him and had neede of such a head as his A captious word but well vnderstood by Rapine who takes it for a beginning of fauour for his maister But alas howe easily doth man deceiue himse●fe in his vaine imaginations and what can a perplexed soule produce but trouble and confusion The truce is no sooner confirmed with the Bourguignon but the conclusion of Bouuines is renued whereof wee haue made mention Nowe this poore Constable knowes not to whom to flie And as euery man runnes as farre as hee can from an imminent shipwracke his best friends his most affectionate seruants The Constables piteous estate and his most confident sold●ars abandon him What shall hee then do Whome shall hee implore What Sanctuary What succors Hee knowes well hee hath equally dipleased Lewis Edward and Charles his Lands are on all sides inuironed by his enemies He is too farre from any 〈◊〉 re●●eat He holds strong places yea almost impregnable but who shall defend them Hee inioyes great treasure but they violently hunt after it What refuge 〈…〉 choose Shall he go to the King but by what meanes shall hee purchase g●ace hee is too farre incensed and is seized of the letters which the Constable hath w●●●ten to the King of England and the Dukes of Bourbon and Bourgongne May he re●ie vpon Lewis his word but he would not sweare vpon the crosse of Saint Lau. The Frenchmen beleeued that whosoeuer brake that oath died violently within a yeare Shall 〈◊〉 the seas he gaue Edward too vnkind a welcome neere S. Quintin Shall he cast ●●●selfe into Charles of Bourgongnes armes but he hath spo●led his Country of Hain●ult ●e would haue forced him to marry his daughter with the Duke of Guienne decea●ed and hath often treacherously deceiued him being aduanced by his meanes to th●t g●eat at dignity of Constable To conclude hee alone hath more then all others maintayned these Princes in hatred 〈◊〉 as what partie soeuer he takes hee is vndoone Yet must hee needes vnmaske ●●●selfe and flie to one The Constable in a despe●rate estate for what meanes hath he to warrant himselfe alone against so ●●ghty enemies which shall he choose Poore ●oule beaten with distrust feare and 〈◊〉 for yeelding to the one he incensed the other Moreouer there is lesse danger for him to be beseeged by two then by one alone being impossible for two armies 〈◊〉 accord long togither and contrariwise being charged but by one there is some hope to make his peace Sometimes he resolues to flie into Germany and to buy a place there vntill he be reconciled to the one sometimes to kepe his strong Castell of Han the which hee had well fortified to serue him at neede But he is so amazed as he dares not discouer himselfe to those fewe seruants that are left him Moreouer they are all subiects to some one of these Princes Yet he must resolue and better is it to fall once then stagger alwayes But they haue both ioyntly conspired his death he is well informed thereof and hath seene a coppie of their mutuall seales Yet when once he hath passed his word he will make a conscience to breake it But there is no faith in the Court of France he hath offended the King too much and hath too great aduersaries and no man might safely loue him whome Lewis hated The Duke of Bourgongne is more moderate more easie to pacifie and if he giue his faith he wil be ashamed to deliuer him who had thrust him selfe vnder his protection He gaped after Saint Quentin he must yeeld it vp vnto him redeeme his head with the price of this good place He stands firme in this resolution The Constable yeelds to the Bourguignon and beseecheth Charles to send him a safe conduct to go and treat with him of matters concerning his estate and person At the first Charles makes some difficulty but in the end he thinkes he may well dispense with his conscience for Saint Quentin So the Constable accompained onely with fifteene or twentie horse goes towards Mons in Hainault to Esmeriez great Bayliffe
Arras Boulongne Hedin and so many other Townes and to be lodged many dayes before S. Omer In truth our Lewis had a quick conceit and very watchfull He knew well that the English in generall were wonderfully inclined to warre against this realme as well vnder colour of their ancient pretensions as for the hope of gaine inticed by many high deeds of armes wherein they haue often had the aduantage and of that long possession both in Normandie and Guienne where they had commanded three hundred and fiftie yeares vntill that Charles the 7. dispossessed them That this baite might well perswade them to crosse his desseignes These two mighty Princes neighbours cannot see without iealousie the one to growe great by new conquests and the other to be at quiet He therefore entertaines Edward with sundrie Ambassages The politike liberalitie of Lewis presents and goodly speeches causeth the pension of fiftie thousand Crownes to be duely payed at London and some sixteene thousand distributed among such as were in credit about him so as the profit they drew from the iudicious bountie of Lewis tyed their tongues and blinded their eyes Money was muck to him in regard of a man of seruice and he was pleased to vaunt that the great Chamberlaine whereof there is but one in England the Chancellor Admirall Maister of the horse and other great Officers of England were his Pensiooners So he gaue vnto Howard foure and twenty thousand Crownes in money and plate besides his pension in lesse then two yeares and to Hastings great Chamberlaine a thousand markes of siluer in plate at one time as appeares by their quittances in the chamber of accoumpts at Paris Lewis had great need to vse this policie and bountie for this yong Princesse did infinitly presse Edward who for her cause did often send to the King to demand a peace or at the least a truce and in the Court of England there wanted not some to incense Edward that seeing the terme was expired by the which Lewis should send for the Infanta of England whom they called Madame the Daulphine hee would deceiue him Yet no respect neither priuate nor publick could moue Edward he was pursie louing his delight vnable to suffer paine glorious of nine famous victories The disposition of Edward King of England and fraught with home-bred enemies and aboue all the loue of fiftie thousand Crownes so well paide in his Tower of London kept him at home Moreouer the Ambassadors that came from him returned laden with rich presents and alwayes with irresolute answers to winne time promising speedily to resolue the points of their demands to their maisters satisfactions But let vs obserue another ingenious policie Lewis neuer sent one Ambassador twise vnto Edward to the end that if the former had happily treated of any thing that tooke not effect the latter knew not what to answer and so ignorance serued him for an excuse with delay of time Moreouer he instructed his Ambassadors so well as the assurance of the marriage they gaue to the King and Queene of England the accomplishment whereof they both greatly desired made them take hope for paiment Lewis feeds Edward with dilatorie hopes Yet the King had neuer any such meaning there was too great an inequalitie of age and thus getting a moneth or two by mutuall Ambassages he kept his enemy from doing him any harme who without the baite of this marriage would neuer haue suffred the house of Bourgongne to be so oppressed An other reason disswaded Edward from imbracing of Maries quarrell The reason why Edward neglects Ma●● of Bourgongne She had refused to marry with the Lord Riuers brother to the Queene of England The which match was not equall hee being but a poore Baron and she the greatest heire of her time And the better to keepe Edward quiet the King inuited him to ioyne with him and consented that he should haue for his part the Prouinces of Flanders and Brabant offring him to conquer for him at his owne charge foure of the greatest Townes in Brabant to entertaine him ten thousand English men for foure moneths and to furnish him with Artillerie and carriages so as Edward would come in person and seize vpon Flanders whilest that hee imployed his forces else-where But Edward found that Flanders and Brabant were hard to conquer and painefull to keepe and also the English by reason of the commoditie of their trafficke had no will to this warre Yet said hee since it pleaseth you to make mee partaker of your victories giue mee of those places you haue conquered in Picardie Boulongne and some others then will I declare my selfe for you and assist you with men at your charge A wise and discreet demand but those places were no lesse conuenient for Lewis who was loth to beat the bush for an other to get the birds It appeares that Edward did wonderfully affect the alliance of France Edward greatly affects the alliance with France and feared to ●iue the King any occasion to inf●inge it so as some say hee caused his brother the Duke of Clarence to be put in prison vpon colour that hee would passe the seas to succour the Dowager of Bourgongne for the which crime he was condemned to haue his head cut off and his body to be quarte●ed a punishment inflicted vpon traitors in England But at the entreaty of their mother Looke the Chronicles of England Edward did moderate this sentence and gaue him the choise of what death he would wherevpon he was drowned in a Pipe of Malmesey But this Duke was sonne in lawe to the Earle of Warwicke whome Edward had slaine in battaile as wee haue sayde and it seemes the greatest crime they could obiect against him was the priuate hatred which vsurpers commonly beare to those whome they doubt might but erosse their tyranicall vsurpations And as wee haue recreated our selues beyond the Seas let vs now passe the Alpes and see what is done there suffering our warriours to enioy a truce vntill the next yeare There were at that time two mighty families at Florence the one of Med●●●s the other of ●acis These were supported by Pope Sixtus the fourth Trouble● as Florence and by Fer●inand King of Naples to ouerthrowe the absolute gouernement of the Citties they attempt to murther Laurence de Medicis and all his followers and gaue for watch-word to the murtherers when as the Priest celebrating the high Masse should say Sanctus in the Church of S. Raparee where they should assist at a certaine day A treacherous attempt against the house of Medicis Laurence escaped but being maymed of many of his members he saued himselfe in the vestry Iulian his brother was slaine and some of their followers Then runne they to the Pallace to murther all those which had the gouernement of the Citty but being mounted they see that some of their men had abandoned them so as they were not aboue foure or
not personally performed to preuent the miseries that growe by warre Maximilian was farre of vnacquainted with these practises no man sought to preuent it and these perswasions did ring dayly in the eares of Anne so as in the ende shee yeelds to follow the resolution of her states They were wonderfully toyled and wearied with the warre the people turmoyled the Nobility impouerished the Clergy oppressed some Townes taken and some wa●ering and moreouer they did see a great Prince demand their allyance with force and the chiefe Noblemen inclyned to the French faction These reasons made it seeme more conuenient and to be preferred before the slowe succors of Maximilian A finall peace in Brittaine by a treaty of marriage Thus was Anne Duchesse of Brittain perswaded and a peace concluded and ratified by a happy and agreable treaty of marriage by the which to maintayne the subiects of the Country in peace that were armed for eyther side it was sayd That all exploits and offences committed and done vpon assurance or otherwise during the warres on eyther side should be forgotten and remayne without reproch to any as remitted abolished and recompenced euery man should returne to his home and all soldiars depart the Countrie A wise aduice to mainetaine these two Countries in loue and concord The Cittie of Rennes yeelds at this happie composition where the King entred in Nouember vpon the assurance and conduct of the Duke of Orleans with his simple traine and without any men at armes for so it was agreed to see the Duchesse and to ratifie the treaty making the Prince of Orange for that he had beene a chiefe instrument in this busines his Lieutenant generall in Brittaine then he tooke the way to Langeais in Touraine whether Anne was conducted by the Chancellor Montaubon Coetquen Lord Steward and by the Lord of Chasteaubriant and the marriage was consumated the 16. day of December The articles of the contract are to be seene in the Originalls The marriage to Cha●ls with Anne If this marriage were pleasing to God or not let vs leaue it to the iudicious reader so it is that of three sonnes they could not bring vp one Soone after Francis of Orleans Earle of Dunois died the chiefe fierbrand of this warre and likewise the principall motiue of 〈◊〉 peace From him are issued the Dukes of Longueuille and a littile before Iohn the second Duke of Bourbon was deceased without Children to whome succeeded Peter Earle of Beauieu who hereafter shal be Duke of Bourbon the eleuenth of that name This yeare was borne Gaston of Foixe Duke of Nemours sonne to Iohn of Foix The practises of the English vpon Brittain Vicont o● Narbone and of Mary of Orleans one of the greatest Captaines of his age who sha●l giue ample testymonie of himselfe in the warres of Italie which nowe approch There died also at Rome Peter of Foix Cardinall brother to the sayd Iohn and Vncle to Queene Katherin of Nauarre Henry of England wonderfully incensed at this marriage sought by all secret practises to surprize some of the chiefe places of the Prouince and at the first retreate of his army out of Brittaine hee caused it to make an offer at Port-blans and some other ports but they were still repulsed by the faithfull care of the Noblemen of the Country namely by the Chancellor of Montauban of Bertrand d'Acig●é and other sea Captaines Thus the Englishmen seeing their attempts like to take none effect bent their course to go towards Calais in the company of their King who was making warre in the Countie of Guines whilest that Maximilian should enter the Realme with forces on the other side then they beseeged Boullen by sea 1492. beeing kept from landing by the Lord of Cordes and the bastard of Cardonne Captaine of Arras with such small forces as they could sodenly oppose But oh Bastard whilest thou repellest this common enemie how preiudiciall shall they absence be from Arras Arras betrayed to Maximilian Foure young gallants saieth the history make false keyes to the gates and giue Maximilian intelligence bringing him by night into the Towne vnknowne to Carqueleuant Lieutenant to Cardonne Some write that one of those in whome he trusted for the opening of the gates made this Stratagem But howsoeuer he was taken in his bed sleeping at his ease and for a second token of base cowardise he yeelded vp the Castell without attending the succors that came vnto him The Towne was spoiled without sparing of the Churches or the traitors houses A worthy reward of their treachery Thus can we preserue our Conquests A while after they attempted Amiens A shame to soldiars that a woman should heare the first report that by her aduertisement to the watch in ringing the great bel of Beffroy should put the Towne in armes And as the first aduice came from a woman so are they honorablie qualified in the history To haue borne weapons and armes with their husbands who by the care and command of Rubempré and of Anthonie Clabault Maire of the Towne did their duties so well euery one repayring to the quarter which had beene formerly assigned him as the enemie returned amazed A duty which made them as famous as their descendants infamous by the notable trechery they committed in our dayes Henry loued peace and was imbarked more at the instance of his subiects least they should thinke him more gratious to the French then the ancient quarrells of both nations required then for any desire he had to haue the King his en●my to whom he had a great and strict bond as we haue heard The chiefe cause of his grudge was a great sum of money Peace with Henry which he sayd he had lent to the deceased Duke of Brittaine The King hauing discouered it cōmands the Lord of Cordes to treat with him and payes him the money and so sends him home satisfied into England This peace made Maximilian willing to bee reconciled Moreouer the Princes of Germanie laboured in this pacification and the affaires of the Empire in the which his father had associated him since the yeare 1486. began to call him The Suisses laboured it And with Maximilian and the people especially those of the Lowe Countryey as well through the French warres as by their owne priuate diuisions were so toiled as they detested the warres In the end a peace was concluded for foure yeares onely by the meanes of the D●ke of Bourbon the Prince of Orange and the Lord of Cordes So he receiued his daughter Marguerit againe with the Counties of Artois and Bourgongne receiuing the reuenues and homages and the King keeping the Castles to place garrisons in them vntill the end of foure yeares Behold this estate doth now enioy a happy rest by the vnion of this goodly and great Duchie to the Crowne of France and by a peace confirmed with Henry and Maximilian But as Charles had inlarged his Diadem with
peeces Hereupon the English arriue at Calais The English land in France and at their first entry they become maisters of the Castle of Comtes betwixt Monstreuil and Hedin To preuent these incursions the Duke sent the foresaid Earles into the trench of Bologne Ardres was then ruined and desert who by the recouery of the said Castle put all to the sword they found within it except the Captaine and afterwards ouerthrew many other troupes that were dispersed in the land of Oye while the two armies English and Bourguignons assembled betwixt Ardres and S. Omer consulting vppon the first obiect of their forces Hedin seemed the easiest to be attempted yet it must needes cost blowes Hedin beseeged by the Imperialls and English The Lord of Biez commanded there with thirty men at armes and thirty Dead-paies Sercu with a thousand foote and La Lande with fiue hundred The battery continued fifteene dayes and a breach was made of forty fadome but no assault giuen the enemy beeing diuerted by continuall alar●●es The Earles of Guise and Pont-dormy vnderstanding one day amongst others that foure hundred English were gone towards Biez and the Commander of Oison they part from Monstrueil with their companies and some of the Duke of Vendosmes they ouertake them charge them and kill or take them all Some fewe dayes after Pont-dormy incountring some other troupes which had burnt Fressin a house of his elder brothers Exploits of war he put them al to the sword Thus kept within their lodgings by continuall enterprises and afflicted with a generall flux which went through their army proceeding in part by the continuall ●aine after six weekes seege they raised their Campe with shame to march towards Dourlans which was not defensible At that time there was no Castle and from the mountaine where it is now built they discouered the towne on all sides The Earle of S. Paul preuented the enemy and least the enemy should make vse thereof hee spoyled the victualls and tooke off the gates then hee retyred to Corby to withstand the attempts of the English Then arriued the Marshall of Montmorency bringing with him the two hundred Gentlemen of the Kings Chamber with authoritye from his Maiestie to rule and commaund at Corby if the enemy did beseege it But there was too great resolution in Corby the wayes were too foule the infirmities were many in the English and Bourguignons armies and winter approching it was about all Saints inuited thē to set saile Being able to do no worse they burnt Dourlans and the Villages about and retyred into Arthois putting the Bourguignons into Garrison and the English tooke their way for England Let vs conclude this yeare with an ignominious and fatall losse for the Christians The English turne ho●e Soliman did not forget to make his profit of these horrible confusions who by the painefull and constant siege for the space of eight moneths brought the Isle of Rhodes vnder his obedience Rhodes taken by the Turke where to the great contempt of our Religion he made his entrie the day of the birth of our Lord and Sauiour 1123. In the beginning of the following yeare The Caste●l of M●ielan y●e●ded the Castell of Milan prest with diseases and want of all things compounded to depart with bag and baggage if they were not releeued by the fourth of Aprill But death preuenting most part of the garrison hindred them from enioying any benefit of the Capitulation At the same time Liuet a soldiar of the garrison of Guise treated with the Duke of Ascot to deliuer him the Towne but not according to the buyers intent by the consent of Nicholas of Bussu Lord of Longueuall Captaine of the Castell The party was well made and the plot cunningly layed to take the marchants when they should come for their possession The Lord of Fleuranges with three hundred men at armes and foure or fiue thousand foote should lie betwixt Auennes and Guise to stoppe the enemies retreat The Duke of Vendosme with fiue hundred men at armes foure thousand Germains and foure thousand French should cut off their way betwixt the Abby of Bonhourie and Guise so as the enemy seeking to retire had the one before him and the other behind The chiefe of all their troupes would be partakers of this enterprise When as newes comes vnto them that the King who would countenance this exploite with his presence was come in post to Genlis neere vnto Chaunis This made them turne head without any effect giuing him the strappadoe that sold it was their guide the which Longueual requited with the like to the hostages which the Duke of Arescot had giuen him for the performance of couenants His maiestie to make vse of these troupes which hee had assembled commanded them to victuall Terouenne the which ●iennes beseeged with fifteene thousand Flemings and sixe hundred English the King had a little before repayred it Bailleul vpon the hill a strong place betwixt Arras and Dourlans and defended by three hundred Spaniards Bailleul beseeged by t●e Fr●nc● was a hinderance to this desseine The Duke of Vendosme tooke charge of the armie whereof the Duke of Norfolke led the Germains the Lords of Sercu Bournonuille la Hergerie Font●ins and Heilli commanded the French Brion had foure hundred archers of the Kings gard and la Fayete commanded the artillery he made his approches at noone day without any trenches but with the losse of three gunners that were slaine and the Lord of Piennes shot into the arme hee battred it the same day gaue them their liues that were within it and razed the Castell The enemy lodged in Andincton and Dellente halfe a League from Therouenne and le Lude Marshall of the Campe hauing lodged his army at Fouquemberg to haue victualls more commodiously from Montreuil and to keepe them from the enemy did cut off the way to Saint Omer and the garrison of Terouenne that of Aire ●iennes seeing them approch so neere dislodged in the night and went to campe at Elfaut The Duke of Vendosme followed with an intent to fight whilest that Brion marcking directly to Terouenne releeued it with such victualls as were brought from Montreuil The Earle of Dammartin and the Lord of Esguilly began the skirmish when a soden feare surprising the Flemings puts them in route towards the riuer of Coldes where many were drowned in the passage not able to be stayed although no man followed them for that Brion returning from Terouenne The Fleming● put to ●ou● brought commandement from the King to the Duke of Vendosme not to hazard a battayle but to keepe his forces whole for the voiage of Italie which his maiesty pretended to make in person But he must likewise prouide for the frontier especially for Terouenne being onely refresht for some dayes The victuall and carriages being ready and the troupes camping before Andincton vpon the riuer of Lis the foreward led by the Marshall of Montmorency was
battaile Strossy entertaynes it and with a bloudie fight giues testimony of the valour of his courage But Bighet an Italian being enseigne Colonnell of the army turnes his backe cowardly and the French sauing their liues after him by the nimblenesse of their legges leaue the horse the Gascons and the Suisses to endure the charge who had rather die with their armes in their hands then turne their backs Bighet and the Earle of Alte were afterwards beheaded the first as being the principall cause of this defeate the other for that he had cowardly yeelded Lusignan a place impregnable They reckon two thousand fiue hundred slaine some say foure thousād besides a great number wounded to the death and fiue or six hundred prisoners Strossy saued himselfe in Montalein the Marquis recouered Foyan Martian Lucignan some other places which euen then began to force the Sienois to obey the Conquerours command who camped before their towne with all his forces Montluc comforts them and confirmes their resolutions but the comming of Strossy with two enseigns of foot and two companies of men at armes saued in this ship wrake reuiued them more the which he did hazard in fauour of the beseeged vpon a report of the death of Montluc Montluc foreseeing that bread would sooner faile the beseeged then courage had alreadie set an order for euery mans diet The Marquis repulsed by the losse of six hundred men at a s●alado giuen in the night to the Cittadell and the fort of Camollia and finding that by skirmishes batteries assaults intelligences nor other stratagems he should neuer bee maister of Siene he re●olues vpon the longer but the more easie expedient so as the watches the toyles the di●eases and worst of all famine and dispaire of succours forced Montluc the twentie one of Aprill this yeare to saue the rest of his men by an honorable composition which is read at large in the historie of the warres of Italie Siene fell afterwards into the hands of the Duke of Florence· and the Marquis for that he had prolonged the warre of Siene contrary to the Emperours liking and wasted a mightie armie before it died in disgrace in the end of the same yeare Now the Emperour whose humour wee haue sufficiently learned by the discourse of the historie shrinking vnder the burthen of the affaires of this world wearied with the toyles of warre toucht with some remorse for the bloud spilt in those long and mournefull wars of Christendome being perswaded that his discords with our Kings had made the Turke to preuaile much in diuers parts of Europe his coming of late in fauour of the French to the Isle of Corse to assist them at the seege of Calui and Saint Boniface to ayd them to conquer the Island then in their retreat to spoyle the coast of Tuscane to beseege Plombin and the Isle of Elbe of the territorie of Florence to afflict the estates of Naples Sicile and Calabria with infinite miseries and being laden with great spooles to carrie away without controule and to sell infinite numbers of Christian soules at Constaneinople and other places These considerations caused him to call Philippe his sonne from England to Bruxelles The Emperour resignes his Kingdome to his sonne where by autentike letters of the fiue and twentith of October hee resigned al his realmes vnto him commaunding all his estates and subiects to acknowledge him as their true and lawfull King aduising him particularly among other exhortations To make a peace and entertaine loue with the King of France vniting their common forces rathet for the defence then oppression of Christendome Philip was inclyned to peace and his wife Mary Q●eene of England more who desired to hold him by her to raise vp an heire for the Realme and by the confirmation of the old religion to restore the Clergie to the possession of their lands held by the Nobilitie So as a truce was concluded for fiue yeeres but it was as soone broken as made Paul the fourth was enemie to the Spaniards and the Colonnes suspecting him to be of the French faction as in trueth the house of Caraffes had of old time fauoured the title of our Kings to the realme of Naples sought to assure their estates and persons To this end they held some secret assemblies within Rome in the houses of Marc Anthony Colonne and the Cardinall of Saint Fior enemies to the house of France The Pope to crosse them imprisons this Cardinall in the Castle of Saint Angelo with Camille Colonne Iulian Cesarin and the Abbot of Bres●gue he summons Marc Anthonie and plants gards and sentinels throughout all the Cittie The Colonnes and their adherents flie to the Castillian He commaunds the Duke of Alua to succour them The Duke marcheth with that desseine and takes from the Pope about Rome Anagne Pilastine Segne Tiuoli and by the seege and taking of Ostia cuts off the victuals f●om Rome and the Colonnois fortifying themselues about Rome kept the Pope mewed vp within compasse of his wals The Pope appeales to the King for ayd and sends him by his nephew the Cardinall Caraffe a triumphant hatt with a stately sword Our two Kings did not greatly loue their ancient hatred and discontents were yet fresh and their houshold flatterers to whome common confusions did serue as a ladder to adua●ce their estats and to inrich their houses whereas peace sends the most of them home to line priuately 1557 were glad that Rome kindled the coales of newe quarrells betwixt their maisters So the French meaning to crosse the Castillian in fauour of the Pope sent Strossy Marshall of France in the place of the Lord of Sedan lately deceased after his returne from prison out of the Lowe Countries to oppose against the Spaniards attending the succors led by the Duke of Guise The Duke of Guise arriued at Turin with about fifteene thousand foote eight hundred men at armes and twelue hundred light horse being assured of supplies so soone as the warres should begin hauing ioyned his fo●ces with those of the Marshall of Brissac he marcheth directly to Valence making this his colour that the garrison had shot at the French going to succour the Pope and for that it was secretly giuen out that the French had taken Pauia hee amazeth Spoluerin who kept the Towne with two thousand men summons him to yeeld threatning him to put all to fire and sword if he enter by force Thus Spoluerin being terr fied departs with bagge and baggage Valen●e taken and looseth his head at Pauia for a reward of his base cowardise O● the other side Strossy Montluc and others which were in Rome With Ostia and other places issue forth with sixe hundred horse and fi●e thousand foote recouer Os●ia by composition and expell the Spaniards from Velitres Tuscule Marin Groteferrate Palesan Saint Angelo Saint Paul Vico Valerio and other small places in the territories of Rome The Duke of 〈◊〉 retreat had opened the way
of riuers These grudgings were openly published when as an other occasion makes them both speake alo●d and to take armes Practises to surprize the Prince and Adm●ra●l In a maner all the Duke of Anious horse staid about Paris with fi●e or six thousand foot vnder colour to fortifie the gardes of the King the Q●eene mother his bretheren the capitall Citty and Tauannes sent towards Bourgongne with many companies made them suspect that it was to beset and surprize the prince at Noyers a little weake towne of his owne the Admirall at Tanlay a Cast●e belonging to his brother d' Andelot Some acquainted with this practise giue them ad●ice they complaine to the King of the iniustice is done them beseeching his maiestie to quench the fires kindled in his realme by the factions of the Guisiens to free themselues they take Rochel for their sanctuary This braue prey being thus escaped Katherin and the faction ●end forth comissions and appoint the rendezuous for the troupes in Guyenne and Poi●ou The Duke of An●ou prepares and for a reuenge of Meaux he chaseth away the Protestants The Q●eene of Nauarre accompanied with three regiments of foote and eight Cornets o● light horse nothwithstanding the endeuours of Escars and Mon●luc retires to Rochell with the Prince her sonne at this day our most Christian King Hen●y the fourth and the Princesse her Daughter The Cardinall of Chasti●lon is forced to leaue Bea●●oi●in and to saue himselfe in a small Barke in England The Nobilitie of Poi●ou arme with the first and repaire to Rochell The Earle of Rochefoucault was armed some dayes before D'Andelot marched with a thousand good horse and two thousand shot gathered together in the confines of Maine and Brittaine The ●rotes●a●t●●●me The Duke of Martigues gouernour of Brittaine going with three hundred Lances and fiue hundred braue shot to Saumur to the Duke M●ntpensier he is aduerti●ed that many of the enemies troupes are lodged in his way He ●ends to discouer them and finding them lodged at large after the French manner passeth brauely through them with the losse but of twenty men and with the gaine of an Enseigne and the slaughter of aboue foure score of his enemies and recouers Saumur whilest that D' Andelot la None and other Commanders ioyned with the Prince If the Dukes of Aniou Montpensier and Martigues who assembled men from all parts to oppose a mighty armie against the Protestants had in time foreseene that those which di●lodged in so great hast went to seeke their fortunes a farre off and had sought to crosse their desseignes the Prince all his part had in all shewes bin coopt vp in Rochell But behold of poore vagabonds in two moneths they become maisters of Niort Fontenay S. Maixent Xaint●s S. Iead d' Angely Pons Cognac Blay Angoul●sme and are strong enough for the continuance of a long war While the Dukes arme the King begins the warre against the Protestants by the Pen. He declares by his proclamation that the Edict of Ianuarie had beene but prouisionall vntill he were of full age The King makes a Proclamation against the P●otes●an●s that now he forbids all exercise of the pretended reformed religion in all the territories of his obedience forfaits both the bodies and goods of them that shall breake it commands all Ministers vpon penalties to depart the realme within fifteene dayes And by another he suspends all officers making profession thereof from their offices and charges commanding them to resigne them into his hands within fifteene dayes The Protestants make their profit of these Edicts and send them into Germany England and to the Suisses of their religion to proue That they are not pursued as rebels affecting the Crowne crimes by the which their enemies would make them odious And in truth these Edicts were spurres to hasten the League which the Duke of Deuxponts shall bring the next yeare and for the heads of Daulphiné Prouence and Languedoc to go and oppose the forces of the sayd Prouinces against the Kings armie which was ready to fall vpon the prince To this end Acier Mouuans Pierre Gourde and others draw forth sixteene of seuenteene thousand shot but few horse seeming with this multitude of men to haue vnpeopled all that climate But as they did fortifie the princes affaires on the one side they did weaken them on the other for after their departure the Catholickes seized vpon many places the which they might well haue held lodging halfe their forces in them then marching in troupe close and speedily they might haue arriued safe where their presence was most profitable and necessary But the presumption of equalitie doth commonly ingender a pernitious iealousie among great men and the opinion one conceiues of his forces and of his owne valour with an obstinacie not to yeeld vnto another is a dangerous plague in an armie Monuans and Pierre Gourd defeated and slaine Mou●ans Pierre Gourde finding themselues annoied by straight lodging as they had done till they came neere to Perigueux they meane to lye more at large at Mensignac not discouering that the Duke of Montpensien approched who at his arriuall puts in route two regiments and kils a thousand ●ouldiars at their Colonels feete who selling their liues deerely so tyre the Dukes troupes as they could not charge Acier yet they were amazed by the fearefull report of such as were escaped who made the Dukes forces exceeding great beyond all truth who retiring to Chasteleraud made the way ope● for Aciers troupes which remai●ed of this sh●pwrack to fortifie the 〈◊〉 a●mie and to make it able not one●y to end●re t●e shocke but to attempt 〈◊〉 thing ●gainst the Catholikes The Prince did m●ster in h●s armie aboue 〈◊〉 thousand Harguebuziers and t●●●e t●ousand good horse The D●ke had ten t●●●sand foote beside Suisses and ●oure thousand Lances the Souldiars of both a●mi●s were well expe●ienced in war●e Hee that takes not the French 〈◊〉 their first heat they are easily broken the 〈◊〉 ●●news of warre failing mig●t greatly coole this new vigour and Winter app●oc●ing withdra● the greatest pa●t of them The Prince therefore seekes to fig●t t●e number and courage of his men inuit●● him He comes within two League● o● C●●stelleraud and by his app●och annoyes the Duke of Aniou The Duke moued wit● t●e like desire and greeued to see so many men at the Princes deuotion knowing a●so that the forces of German●e would be ready to M●●che in their fauour in the S●ring seekes to diuide his enimies power and to ouercome them by peecemeale 〈…〉 m●tions are sodaine but they doe not alwayes bring forth effects premedi●at●d To come to a battaile was properly to cutt away the sinews of the realme 〈…〉 mutuall weakening to inuite t●e fo●raine enemie to the in●●sion of this estate T●e soueraigne commander of ba●tailes did shew at this tim● a signe of his 〈◊〉 fa●our to this Crowne taki●g f●om b●th the G●ner●lls the sharpn●sse of
it vpon his owne head But these men had diuided it amongst them giuing the rest to vnderstand that they fedde themselues with vaine hopes To cast more wood and oyle into the flames of their diuision and to ruine one by another matters were so handled as the 15. of August The Duke of Guise escapes the yong Duke of Guise escaped out of prison from Tours and not farre from the riuer found a troupe of horse appointed by the Lord of La Chastre to conduct him This escape caused many bonfires and greatly reuiued their hearts who held this Prince fitte to make a King of the Vnion But the cleere sighted thought with reason that his arriuall at Paris would rather ruine then aduance their partye and the deuises and practises of other pretendants must needs soone kindle an extreame and common ielousie amongst them Whilest these consult with their most trustie friends and seruants Noyon taken by the King what effects might grow by this new accident the King in the same moneth besieged Noyon in Picardie defeated the succours sent by the League foure times killed their most resolute men at armes tooke many prisoners put the rest to flight and at the Duke of Mayennes nose who to auoyde this check which the League was like to receiue attempted vpon Mante sought to force his Maiesties Suisses lodged at Houdan and approched neere to Noyon but would not fight heaping shame vpon his enemies hee forced the besieged to yeeld to his obedience and moreouer went and dared him to fight before Han. Let vs returne into Daulphiné to behold the most memorable and most fatall defeate for the enemies of this Crowne the most vertuous expedition of armes which for these many yeares hath most broken their desseignes vpon Prouence and Daulphiné The 〈◊〉 of Sauoy defeated and most weakened the League in those Prouinces which the Sauoisien affected Don Amedeo bastard brother to the Duke of Sauoy Don Oliuares chiefe of the Spaniards whom the Duke had lately obtained of King Philip his father in lawe the Marquis of Treui● and others conducted twelue or thirteene thousand men by the plaine of Pontcharra neere to the Castle of Bayard in the vallee of Graisi●odan Doubtlesse the place should reuiue the memory of that incomparable Knight who by the valour of his armes hath in former times wonderfully tyed the realme to recommend his merits the Lord Les Diguieres meetes them chargeth and ouercomes them leauing two thousand fiue hundred slaine vpon the place carries away many prisoners and most of the Commanders takes eighteene Enseignes with Red Crosses and makes bootie of all their baggage which amounts to aboue two hundred thousand Crownes in Chaines Iewels plate money both golde and siluer horse and armes Two thousand Romaines and Milanois which had saued themselues with Conte Galeas of Bel Ioyeuse their Commander in the Castle of Aualon were the next day at the Victors discretion sixe or seuen hundred were cut in peeces the rest were sent to a place of safetie with white wands in their hands and then sent home into Italy with an oth neuer to carry armes against France The King seeing that neither by the taking of Noyon nor by any other baite hee could draw his enemies to fight doth presse them yet more neerely To this end hee commands that Paris should bee restrained on all sides both by water and land and should enioy no commodities but by the mercie of the neighbour garrisons the which he entertained vpon the tributes and customes imposed vpon victuals which they suffered to passe to Paris and by this meanes emptied the inhabitants purses stript them and drew out of the Citty necessary commodities for his troopes then with one part of his army hee marcheth into Normandie surpriseth Louuiers approcheth to Rouan to tire the inhabitants Rouan besieged who seemed no lesse obstinate then the Parisiens He is no sooner arriued but they crie out for succors and his Maiestie sees them neere their ruine or at the least ready to yeeld to some reason So the King of Spaine sollicited from many partes Succoured by the Duke of Parma and thrust on by the consideration of his owne priuate interest and satisfaction sends to the Duke of Parma commands him to leaue the gouernment of the Lowe Countries in his absence 1591. to the Cont Mansfield to go and free Rouan and to imbrace such occasions as should be offered The Kings happy successe and his enemies miseries drawes the Prince of Parma the second time into France hee parts from Bruxelles with foure thousand foote and three thousand horse and fortified with the succours of Italy and three thousand Suisses hee marcheth by small iourneys for hee wisely conceiued that his Maister sent him into France for the same considerations that hee would haue giuen him the conduct of his armie by sea into England and vnder this shew of armes hee practised an other desseigne To cause the Estates of the League whereof they purposed a conuocation the next yeare to giue the Crowne of France to the Infanta of Spaine whom the father promised to marry with one of the heads of the partie whome the Estates should name This tended greatly to the preiudice of the Duke of Mayenne for hee was marryed Diuision bewixt the Duke of Mayenne and the sixteene and the eldest sonne of Lorraine the Dukes of Guise and Nemours were to marry Hee is therefore now resolutely determined to crosse the sixteene Tribunes of Paris who with their Champions carried away the peoples voyces and aboue all others did feed the Spaniards hopes in this realme to whome inticed by the gold of Peru and his prodigall promises they had already solde the Capitall Cittie The sixteene growne hatefull through their tyranous authoritie feare to be soone suppressed they resolue to preuent it and rather to vnhorse the Duke the better to aduance their affaires according to King Phillips intentions One thing seemed to aduance their desseigne they held prisoner one named Brigard a Proctor of the Towne-house accused to haue had intelligence with the King and of letters written to his Maiestie Brigard escapes out of prison They suspect the President Brisson and the Councellors Larcher and Tardife to haue fauoured his escape In this furie the 15. of Nouember they seize vpon these three venerable persons hale them to the Chastelet cause them to bee strangled in the close prison and the next day hang vp their bodyes at the Greue with infamous writings on their brests This execrable fact might haue extended farther and made the like spectacle of any one that should in any thing haue controuled the actions of these homicides The Duke of Mayenne who treated with Parma posts to appease this tumult hee caused Louchart Auroux Hameline and Emonnot the chiefe authors of this cursed attempt to bee apprehended and executed in the open view of all the people who bowed their backes mournefully at the damnable commands of