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FRANCE:THE REIGN OF CHARLES VII AND THE END OF THE HUNDRED
                YEARS’ WAR (1422-1453)
                 
               The death of Charles VI on 2I October 1422 was an event of little significance in
                itself, but infinitely important in its consequences. The sovereign who thus
                disappeared from the stage had for a long time had no personal part to play.
                But the circumstances attending the succession to him upon the throne of France
                created an entirely novel situation. In this setting, a wholly gloomy one for
                France, the third act of the Hundred Years’ War opened; from 1422 to 1453 was
                to be unfolded, amid the changing fortunes of the great struggle, a sequence of
                events stirring and decisive for the destiny of the West. France was to be the
                prize of an intensely dramatic contest, in which its existence as a nation was
                at stake. In a most critical state at first, at one moment almost desperate,
                it made one of the most marvellous recoveries in history; and, finally, it came
                triumphant out of this terrible ordeal, the most formidable that it encountered
                throughout the ages, and emerged from so many misfortunes a new France, bruised
                and exhausted, but intact in all essentials, organically sound and
                convalescent, and ready to play in modern Europe an active and a preponderating
                part.
                
               It is interesting to note, at the moment when the wretched
                career of Charles VI came to an end, the impression produced by this event on
                his contemporaries. All the evidence is in agreement on this point. It was one
                of complete indifference among the princes and nobles; but, on the other hand,
                of sincere emotion and of dismay among the people. The princes and the lords
                regarded Charles VI as a useless creature, who had in some sort outlived
                himself and whose existence was a nuisance, an obstacle to the realisation of
                the political combinations they had devised. The Court was impatient to see
                upon the throne of the Valois the little Henry VI, already King of England and
                heir to France. In fact, “ heir to France” (haeres Franciae) had been
                the title borne by Henry V from the time of his marriage with Charles VI’s
                daughter Catherine of France until his death, and from him Henry VI had
                inherited the title, which gave him formal guarantee for his expectancy of the
                succession. The Dauphin Charles, son of Isabella of Bavaria and reputed
                illegitimate, excluded from all right to the crown, banned as the guilty author
                of the assassination of the Duke of Burgundy, John the Fearless, on the bridge
                of Montereau, was a wanderer in France, and the late king’s entourage
                considered his cause as adjudged, as lost. While Charles VI was alive, it might
                still be questioned whether article 6 of the Treaty of Troyes in 1420 was to be
                enforced. Now that Charles VI was dead, this extraordinary deviation from the
                true course of succession was realised with the greatest ease and without
                resistance. As soon as the funeral of Charles VI was over, the English king, in
                spite of his tender age, was immediately and solemnly proclaimed.
                
               Thus was accomplished the transference of the crown of France
                to the house of England. The union of the Lancastrian Henry V with Catherine
                cloaked this transference with a semblance of legality; but it was none the
                less a direct contradiction of the decision of the French barons in 1328, and
                the solemn function of 1422 testified, as the result of the English victory, to
                the military collapse of France.
                
               Now, while Court, princes, and grandees looked on unmoved at
                this presumptuous transference of the crown which went so directly counter to
                past history, it was quite otherwise with the people; the honest masses were
                strangely moved by the sadness of this grave occurrence. The people of France,
                of Paris above all, grieved bitterly on the news of the poor mad king’s death;
                at his funeral there were open manifestations of the popular feeling. This was
                very characteristic of their mood. It must not be looked upon as a mere
                outburst of emotion; it denoted the strain of apprehension, of anxiety, which
                gripped the minds of all true Frenchmen at this turning-point in their
                country’s history. What the man in the street at Paris was lamenting as the
                funeral cortege passed along its way was both the prince who was named “the
                Well-Beloved” and also the national cause which was felt to have died with him.
                
               There is, in fact, no more sombre date in the history of
                France than the year 1422. It was not merely defeat, misery, civil war
                oppressing men’s minds; the very soul of the country was in agony. The dread of
                the unknown hung over the future; there was no longer any certain constitution,
                any firm idea from which the hope of better things might spring. France, in the
                course of its monarchical evolution, had come to associate its sentiment of
                nationality with the tradition of kingship; and now, at this moment of complete
                change, when, “in spite of all efforts and all the blood that had been shed,”
                the crown of France was united to that of England, the bewildered Frenchman
                asked himself where he was to bestow that loyalty to a king which was so
                indispensable for the ease of the individual conscience. Was this English king,
                thus solemnly proclaimed, the king by right? Or did not the law of succession,
                standing above the caprice of policy and the chance of military or diplomatic
                encounters, rather summon to the throne him whom they had long known
                officially, and whom many still spoke of beneath their breath, as the dauphin,
                Isabella’s son, Charles? As against the answer officially given by the Court
                and dictated by the Treaty of Troyes, product of the coalition of the unworthy
                queen with the Burgundians and the Lancastrians, was there not also another
                answer, that of the Armagnacs, who abided by the fundamental principles of the “Salic
                Law” and the person of the dauphin, a prince forsaken, but become king now by
                his father’s death? Opposed to each other stood the partisans of Henry and the
                partisans of Charles, and among them, on both sides, there were some who were
                convinced of the legitimacy and right of their cause, others who were perplexed
                by doubts; while in between came the great multitude of the undecided, the
                indifferent, and the dispirited. The best minds were afflicted by a problem of
                conscience. Just as the Church had suffered and still was suffering from its
                schism, owing to the multiplicity of Popes, so now France was suffering from a
                duplication of royal authority.
                
               Then, as to the division of the country between Henry VI of
                England (who should have been Henry II of France) and Charles VII.
                Territorially, there was no comparison between them. The victories of Henry V,
                the part played by the house of Burgundy in alliance with that of Lancaster,
                the apparent validity of the Treaty of Troyes, the title of haeres Franciae borne in turn by the husband and the son of Catherine—all contributed to create
                a position of manifest preponderance for the English party. In 1422, indeed,
                the English’ controlled the greater part of French soil. They held Normandy and
                Guienne, the old Plantagenet fiefs re-won by Henry V; they held Picardy,
                Champagne, the Ile de France, also conquered by the same prince; they profited
                by the adhesion and support of the house of Burgundy, which possessed, in fief
                from the Crown of France, Flanders, Artois, and Burgundy proper, not to mention
                its imperial fiefs, the Low Countries and Franche Comté; they had the
                suzerainty over Brittany. Paris, at once the head and the heart of the French
                kingdom, was theirs. The great institutions of State, the Parlement, the
                University, recognised, like the Court, the authority of King Henry.
                
               On the other hand, the provinces in the centre—Berry, the
                Orleanais, Touraine, Poitou, Anjou—remained faithful to Charles; and there were
                others too, here and there, east, south, and west—Dauphiné and Provence in the
                Empire, Auvergne, Languedoc, and lastly La Rochelle and part of Saintonge.
                These scattered provinces, forming no coherent group, constituted the sum total
                that remained to the disinherited prince, who from 1422 onwards, however, may
                properly be called Charles VII.
                
               It was at Mehun-sur-Yevre, that noble castle built and
                beautified by his great-uncle the Duke of Berry, brother of Charles V, that he
                learnt on 24 October the news of his father’s death. At first he made no move.
                But on 30 October, on information that steps were being taken at Paris to
                settle the question of the succession to his prejudice, he followed the advice
                of those who were in his immediate entourage and assumed the title of king at
                Mehun. In the castle chapel he caused a funeral service to be conducted to the
                memory of the sovereign who had just passed away; All Saints Day came
                immediately afterwards, and he was careful to perform with royal pomp the
                duties prescribed for this great festival of the Church. Thus the new reign was
                inaugurated. “The king of Bourges,” as he was commonly known, stood in the
                lists against the king of Paris. And the chronicler Jouvenel des Ursins applies
                the term Francoys-Angloys to those who cried: “Long live Henry, King of France
                and England.” “Renegade Frenchmen” became the more usual name for them.
                
               So there were two kings and two obediences—two Frances.
                Leaving out of account the Burgundian territories, which were spared by the
                war, and apart from the losses and ravages wrought by physical violence or by
                the moral upheaval, it would be true to say that the same desolation afflicted
                the provinces administered from Paris as those administered from Bourges. In
                short, the two Frances were plunged, to the same depth, in anarchy. Bands of
                Armagnacs were still at large in the provinces of the English obedience;
                unemployed mercenaries, known as routiers or écorcheurs (a most
                expressive name, which tells its own tale), were coming and going, heedless of
                frontiers, robbing, massacring, torturing, and living on plunder. Ruined
                churches, a devastated countryside, terrorised towns, universal misery, famine,
                monetary disorder, high prices, unemployment, dislocation of the social
                framework, crime unpunished and multiplying, inhuman atrocities, a return to
                barbarism and the evil instincts of the most savage ages—these were the
                characteristic features of the crisis created by the Hundred Years’ War and the
                troubles which it brought in its train. At the moment when the most grievous
                stage of this period of prolonged ordeal began, all the causes of suffering
                were crowding upon one another and reaching the height of their effect; the
                constant tragedies of this awful time form the material for the stories of the
                chroniclers. The picture they give is one of the deepest gloom; and the
                unanimous agreement of all the contemporary literature makes it impossible to
                doubt that the colouring of the picture is absolutely realistic.
                
               Besides the accounts of the chroniclers there is also the
                evidence of the charters, which are even more eloquent for being impersonal.
                They reveal the ghastly intensity of the crisis: there are contracts which deal
                only with waste land; acts of a later date in which the lord enfranchises his
                serfs in order that after so many lost years they may have a bettei heart for
                work; an account-book in which the head of a family has noted down, in
                matter-of-fact language that is therefore the more impressive, the successive
                catastrophes which have befallen his home; wills in which the ruin of families
                can be seen and almost felt by the reader. The ferocity of the nomad bands has
                left its mark on the language, in that a detail of military equipment has owing
                to them become the source of the precise modern significance of the word “brigand”. Fortified towns stood out as islands amid the waves of armed men battering upon
                them, but even they suffered equally with the countryside. Overcrowded with
                refugees, each of them was transformed into a beleaguered city in which means
                of livelihood were scarce and precarious, the mortality was terrible, famine
                and disorder almost incessant. Even in Paris the documents reveal a lamentable
                situation. The Bourgeois de Paris gives us some of its features: “When the
                dog-killer killed any dogs, the poor folk followed him into the fields to
                obtain the flesh or the entrails for food...they ate what the swine disdained
                to eat”. And the same author sums up in these words the crisis of which he has
                been telling the story: “I do not believe that from the time of Clovis, the
                first Christian king, France has ever been so desolate and divided as it is
                today”. These are not the exaggerations of a pessimist, but the expression of
                one who is meticulously stating the facts. Never, in truth, since the beginning
                of the French monarchy, had the country undergone a crisis, both material and
                moral, of such a character.
                
               Exhausting as was the physical crisis, the moral crisis was
                even more severe a strain. For French patriotism, which had given new life to
                France at Bouvines, and had restored it to health after its constitution had
                been vitally impaired by the Treaty of Bretigny, might have been the salvation
                of the France of 1422. But on what was patriotism to depend in this hour of
                dismay? Patriotism was inconceivable unless founded upon kingship; loyalty to a
                prince was the inevitable form for national sentiment to take. Now two princes
                were at the same time claiming to be the lawful ruler, and between them
                everyone, before the bar of conscience at any rate, had to make up his mind.
                
               For the modem Frenchman no hesitation is possible. Charles
                VII, the son of Charles VI, was the true king. But for the men and women of the
                fifteenth century the situation was much more difficult to resolve. The
                Burgundian party had spread the report of the possible, or even probable,
                illegitimacy of the dauphin. Queen Isabella’s reputation provided only too good
                a basis for this, and she herself had justified it by accepting the Treaty of
                Troyes. Precision was given to the rumour by those who made out Charles to be
                the son of Louis of Orleans, lover of his sister-in-law the queen; this was
                affirmed, for instance, by the author of the Pastordiet. The act which removed
                Charles from the succession proceeded from Charles VI, the Well-Beloved. The
                exclusion of Isabella’s son was recognised by the constituent bodies at Paris,
                by the Parlement and the University; this had a natural effect upon men’s
                minds. Yet, was this action on the part of these venerable bodies the result of
                conviction and a clear conscience, or was it not rather due to constraint, to
                resignation, or to submission in the face of force?
                
               At any rate, the fact that he was recognised as king by the
                governing classes in Paris, by the Parlement, and by the University, gave Henry
                a presumptive right which made an impression upon the worthy provincial
                peasantry. Instinctively, however, they revolted against it. How many, then,
                were questioning their consciences, anxiously, in perplexity, having lost their
                bearings in face of this novel and distracting problem of the two kings who
                disputed the realm between them?
                
               So much for the material and moral picture of the France of
                1422. The next task is to show what sort of men they were who faced one another
                in the lists, to contrast the kingship of Paris with the kingship of Bourges.
                
               Henry VI personally did not count at all. He was an infant,
                and a sickly one. Born on 4 December 1421, he was not even a year old when the
                crown of France by inheritance from Charles VI was placed upon the frail head
                which already bore the crown of England by inheritance from Henry V. The
                guardianship had been offered, on Henry V’s death, to the Duke of Burgundy, but
                he had refused it; and it was the Duke of Bedford, Henry V’s brother, who took
                over on the accession of his nephew the regency of the kingdom of France.
                Bedford was a fine soldier and an able statesman, but in manner he was haughty,
                hard, and quick-tempered. He made, in truth, a serious and painstaking effort
                to remedy the evils from which the provinces subject to his authority were
                suffering; it was his deliberate policy to render the English occupation as
                mild as possible and not to injure the inhabitants; he laboured sincerely to
                assure the normal functioning of government, and even to improve it. He
                suppressed, to the best of his ability, brigandage in Normandy, the typical
                province of the English obedience; Thomas Basin speaks of 10,000 persons hanged
                in one year. This figure, however, is evidence both of the duke’s severity and
                of the intensity of the evil. As Basin also shews, the English regent’s care
                for the Normans did not prevent them from cordially detesting the English.
                
               Administratively, Bedford did what he could and deserves that
                credit should be given to him for the methods ho employed. He improved the
                coinage, simplified and purified the procedure at the Châtelet at Paris,
                created a faculty of law at Caen, and granted on a considerable scale
                remissions of taxes to impoverished towns. But his policy was everywhere
                confronted by a passive resistance; he was tricked by the psychological factor.
                Though in law subjects of the Lancastrian dynasty, the French served it against
                their will. Bedford had to exact a strict oath from ecclesiastics as well as
                from laymen. At every moment he learned of possible, even imminent, defections.
                He had to make use of threats to obtain the voting of supplies by the Estates
                of Normandy or Champagne. Now, his task did not consist only in giving life to
                the conquered provinces and keeping them in their allegiance; he had also to
                conquer for his nephew the provinces held by those who were called in his camp
                “the Dauphinois.”
                
               Dauphinois was the name given in the English North to the
                partisans of Charles, who were sometimes also dubbed by their adversaries with
                the old name of twenty years before, “Armagnacs.” Charles’ supporters had no
                objection to the former name, since, as he had not been crowned at Rheims, they
                still designated him by the title of “dauphin’’. Indeed, Joan of Arc was
                herself to greet him at Chinon as “gentle dauphin?’
                
               Charles had not the personality to thrill those who adopted
                his cause, and he displayed none of the attributes of a leader. He is among the
                least pleasing of historical personages. His character defies exact definition.
                He acted in a vague and colourless manner at first; though he declared himself
                king in 1422, it was rather, it would seem, in order to satisfy his entourage
                than because he had the consciousness of being cast for a great role. He was
                listless, and on the morrow of his proclamation at Mehun-sur-Yèvre, appeared to
                be sunk in a deep apathy. This young man of twenty, faced with so many
                difficulties, seemed to be unequal to the task of surmounting them. He was like
                a child, heedless, letting men and things go their own way; in the absence of a
                firm hand everything was being allowed to drift.
                
               What, then, is the explanation of this insensibility, which
                intensified the existing gravity of the situation and cast its gloom over the
                whole of the first period of the reign? Charles, though he was no man of distinction,
                was not without capacity. He proved himself, in the second half of his career,
                to be a capable administrator; and though a large share in this must be
                assigned to his ministers, he cannot be denied all credit. But he had failings
                which were very harmful to him, especially in the critical circumstances in
                which he commenced his reign. One personal characteristic was his lack of any
                soldierly instincts, in which he resembled his grandfather Charles V; this
                military defect was a serious matter for a prince whose kingdom was attacked,
                invaded, and in part occupied by the enemy, at a time when fighting was
                continuous and force seemed the only arbiter. Besides this, Charles was slow to
                develop; he was late in reaching maturity. At the age of twenty his character
                was still unformed; he was naive, timid, shallow, heedless of the seriousness
                of his circumstances and the grave duties they imposed upon him; living a
                hand-to-mouth existence, he was accessible to all comers and became subject to
                influences often of the most harmful kind. As ill luck would have it, around
                this inexperienced youth, deserted by his family, there prowled a troop of low
                adventurers, who were greedy after their own personal gain and unaffected by
                the vital issues of the day.
                
               Charles VII has often been accused of premature debauchery
                and dissipation at the beginning of his reign. It is necessary to make a stand
                against these unjust accusations, which were the inventions of his enemies. The
                sources studied by the Marquis du Fresne de Beaucourt give the lie to these
                malicious rumours. The king of Bourges appears in the sources as a pious and
                devout prince, much attached to his wife, Mary of Anjou, but somewhat under the
                thumb of his energetic and imperious mother-in- law, Yolande of Sicily. If we
                take the evidence of reliable documents only, we find neither luxury nor
                pleasure dominating his Court; the impression we get is rather of poverty and
                distress. In 1422, the year of his accession, he had to put his jewels in pawn
                and in particular his finest diamond, known as “the mirror'”; he had to borrow
                from one of his cooks (queux) in April 1423, and he was unable to pay
                the wages of his servants. Many other equally good examples could be cited to
                shew the wretchedness of his state.
                
               The most serious factor was the absence of a strong
                personality at the central point of resistance to Bedford. Charles VII was
                dominated at first by a triumvirate composed of the president Louvet, Tanguy du
                Chatel, and a petty nobleman named Frotier. Then it was the turn of Arthur de
                Richemont. Third in order came the too lengthy period of the egoistic La Tremouille.
                To all these men Charles was little more than a cipher. His protracted
                adolescence, his delayed manhood, was not the only reason for his apathy. There
                was a deeper psychological cause for his weakness and his repugnance to face
                responsibility and decision. He was doubtful about his birth, whether he was
                legitimate or no; this problem which disturbed his subjects was a torment to
                himself Besides, the crime of Montereau had broken his spirit; the crushing
                responsibility laid on his shoulders when he was declared to be the author of
                the assassination of John the Fearless had deeply impressed itself upon his
                mind. And the distress of his youth, when he had been renounced by his family,
                had added to his depression. In him had been extinguished the taste for living
                and reigning. It needed time to raise him from the depths again. And while he
                waited for a spark of hope or a ray of truth to lighten his darkness, the king
                who should have issued his call to France did nothing of any avail. So far from
                directing events, he let himself be led by them.
                
               It was, indeed, very difficult in the circumstances to react
                against the English occupation. However, if the impulse was to spring from
                another than the king, that impulse when it came was to be the more intense,
                spontaneous, and irresistible. But, in the meantime, the patriotism latent in
                the French, the national sentiment which was to save both king and kingdom, was
                displayed in a merely negative form; the only sign that revealed the popular
                instinct, hostile as always to a foreign occupation, was the stubborn passive
                resistance of those Frenchmen who inhabited the provinces that were in English
                hands. Renegade Frenchmen, wholeheartedly attached to the Lancastrians, were
                the exception; most of the inhabitants shut themselves up, as it were, in their
                shells, and without committing as a rule any overt act of rebellion, met the
                conciliatory and well-meaning policy of the energetic Bedford with a blank
                enmity, a heartfelt antipathy, which denoted afixed determination never to
                surrender.
                
               At times, too, the voice of loyalty was already to be heard
                in the north. Tournai, a Burgundian town, on Charles Vi’s death sent a
                deputation to Charles VII. This was a rare, if not a unique instance,
                but it was symptomatic; one would look in vain for an instance of the
                opposite, of a spontaneous rally to the English side “par de là la Loire.” It
                is a valuable point to note, for it helps one to understand why, in spite of
                appearances to the contrary, the future was better assured for the king of
                Bourges than for the king of Paris. It little profited the son of Henry V that
                he could boast the more regal state and that the constituent bodies were in his
                train. He was a usurper legitimised, and the officials were too fulsome in
                their recognition of him for their sentiments to be sincere. When they sought
                to give an appearance of reality to the rights of their king, these Parisians
                were trying to stifle their own doubts; many of them, however, kept thinking of
                the imprescriptible and inalienable rights of the lawful race of national
                kings, and it is to be noted that the line in the modern opera, “Never in
                France shall reign an English king,” was no fiction, but an actual utterance of
                the time. It is to be found in the trial of Guillaume Prieuse, Superior of the
                Carmelites at Rheims, who was brought to justice for using suspicious language:
                “he said...that never had Englishman been King of France, and never should be
                so.” What Tournai proclaimed and Rheims was whispering, many were thinking
                without daring to breathe it aloud, and in the Lancastrian provinces were
                looking forward to the day when they would have the right to give expression to
                it. Everywhere, in fact, a latent patriotism was working during the worst years
                for the king of Bourges, and it was he that already was virtually the true king
                of the whole of France.
                
               “At this date the English sometimes took a fortress from the
                Armagnacs in the morning, and then lost two again in the evening. Thus went on
                the war accursed of God”. This passage from the Journal d’un bourgeois de Paris,
                an invaluable source for the light it throws on contemporary opinion, admirably
                sums up the military history of the early years of Charles VII’s reign. They
                are confused years, years of bitter struggle between the two parties who were
                contesting the possession of France; years marked by trifling episodes which
                cancelled each other out: the capture and recapture of castles, a company here
                and there surprising a company of the enemy, warfare of a purely local
                character but taking place simultaneously everywhere, and with no other result
                than to increase the general misery and year by year to make the demoralisation
                more intense. From the accession of Charles VII to the coming of Joan of Arc, a
                war that lacked any pleasing or redeeming feature may be divided into three
                periods, all of them quite short. In the first, the English had the advantage;
                in the second, the cause of the king of Bourges seemed to be improving;
                finally, in the third period, this fleeting hope vanished and it appeared that
                the resumption of the initiative by the English must prove decisive.
                
               What gave the English their chief advantage in the first
                period was their close accord not only with the Duke of Burgundy in the east
                and north, but also with Duke John VI of Brittany in the west and with Count
                John I of Foix in the south. John VI of Brittany and his brother the Count of
                Richemont constituted an importtint and effective menace to the king of
                Bourges; and this was the more effective since Charles, though secure in the
                firm loyalty of the town of Toulouse as well as of Languedoc, had to protect
                himself in that region against John I of Foix, who was similarly aided by his
                brother, Count Matthew of Comminges. Dominating Bearn and the territories
                attaching to it, the house of Foix was a formidable power in the south-west;
                Charles’ partisans had difficulty in maintaining themselves at Bazas. On the
                other side, the Earl of Salisbury and John of Luxemburg ranged at will over
                Champagne and the region of the Ardennes. The Count of Aumale, with a small
                body of adherents of the house of Valois, did defeat the English leader Suffolk
                in Maine at La Gravelle on 26 September 1423. But this victory had no morrow.
                For the Count of Aumale was himself overwhelmed and slain at the battle of
                Verneuil on 17 August 1424.
                
               Verneuil was an unlucky day for the king of Bourges. The
                striking victory won by Bedford seemed to signalise the military triumph of the
                English party. It was the most important English success since Agincourt, and
                it makes a fourth in the series of great French disasters in the Hundred Years’
                War. Verneuil almost ranks as an equal with Agincourt, Poitiers, and Crecy.
                
               It was not any sudden outburst of energy on the part of
                Charles VII that originated the improvement which marks the succeeding period.
                The reasons were wholly external and fortuitous. The ambition of Bedford’s
                brother, the Duke of Gloucester, who wished to play a part on the Continent,
                provoked a coolness between the Courts of England and Burgundy. At the same
                moment, the house of Brittany and the house of Foix severed their ties with
                Bedford. These various events resulted in a revival, though of rather an
                artificial nature, in the fortunes of the king of Bourges. It was over Hainault
                that a difference arose between the Duke of Gloucester and the powerful Duke of
                Burgundy, Philip the Good. Philip in umbrage withdrew his support from the English
                and dissociated himself from their interests. A similar change of front took
                place in Brittany also. Richemont, the brother of Duke John VI, went to Chinon
                and on 7 March 1425 received from Charles VII the sword of the Constable of
                France. He immediately conducted an active campaign against the Lancastrians in
                Brittany, Normandy, and Maine. Finally, John I of Foix was won over by the
                office of Lieutenant-General of Languedoc and changed sides, passing with his
                brother the Count of Comminges into the camp of Charles VII.
                
               Richemont was now the most influential figure at Charles’
                Court; he appeared to be an acquisition of the first importance, and his
                successes were most encouraging for the future. But Bedford had succeeded in
                settling the dispute about Hainault, and in preventing Burgundy from abandoning
                the English alliance. The regent was skilful enough to set against Richemont
                the Earl of Warwick, who was given the high-sounding title of ‘‘Captain and
                Lieutenant-General of the king and the regentthroughout France and Normandy.”
                The Bearnais, in the service of the Count of Foix, reached the banks of the
                Loire; but they contented themselves merely with pillaging the countryside.
                
               Then came the third period, the period of disillusionment.
                Jealous of La Tremouille, Charles VII’s new favourite, Richemont confined his
                activities to Brittany. Warwick took heart again, and achieved the capture of
                Pontorson on 8 May 1427. Finally, the Earl of Salisbury arrived with an English
                army to lay siege to Orleans.
                
               It is essential to appreciate the full significance of this
                siege of Orleans. In the first place, the English were attacking a town whose
                overlord, Duke Charles of Orleans, had been a prisoner in their hands since
                Agincourt, his rights being expressly guarded by treaty; therefore the English
                government was committing a breach of signed agreements. At the same time, it
                was disregarding the customary practice of feudal and chivalric behaviour: in
                the fifteenth century it was regarded as a definite rule that no attack should
                be made upon the domain of a lord while he was a prisoner. Salisbury was
                perhaps attracted by the town’s importance as the key to the line of the Loire.
                At any rate, his attack upon it was looked on as a moral outrage, and not only
                the citizens of Orleans but the people of France also were infuriated by it.
                This explains both the heroic and impassioned resistance of the defenders, and
                also the stir that their resistance aroused. Orleans became in everybody’s eyes
                symbolic. Something was needed to quicken the latent patriotism in France into
                life; and that something was provided by the siege of Orleans.
                
               There were indeed other heroic exploits calculated to
                maintain the spirits of the Valois party; for instance, the magnificent defence
                of Mont-Saint-Michel, that proud fortress which never yielded to the English.
                But there was a great difference between the resistance of Mont-Saint-Michel
                and that of Orleans: the former excited the feudal element only; in the case of
                Orleans the emotions of a whole people were aroused. If the English triumphed
                over Orleans, if the gallantry of its inhabitants who had justice, as it
                seemed, and right on their side was proved to be vain and useless, then surely
                it was plain that the King of England was the true King of France and that
                resistance to him was a crime. In the simple minds of the perplexed Frenchmen
                the notion of a judgment of God took shape, and in an agony of suspense they
                looked for the signs of it in all the events that attended the siege of the
                devoted city. The English felt that the resistance they encountered had a
                special significance, an exceptional importance, and they redoubled their
                efforts. Even after Salisbury had been killed and Talbot had taken his place,
                though the assaults ordered by the new commander failed, as had those of his
                predecessor, against the invincible heroism of the defenders, the besiegers did
                not lose heart; they counted on famine to break the valiant resistance of the
                inhabitants. At the Court of Charles VII also, there was a confused idea of the
                gravity of the crisis, and that it might possibly be the deciding one. In a
                vague way they realised that something must be undertaken on behalf of the
                loyal town in its hour of danger; and a body of troops from Auvergne, under the
                command of Charles of Bourbon, Count of Clermont, was dispatched against the
                besiegers.
                
               Charles of Bourbon learnt that a convoy of provisions
                under the charge of Fastolfe was on its way to the English camp; and he
                .planned to intercept it. But the Auvergnats were defeated on 12 February
                1429; the battle is known in history as “the battle of the herrings,” because
                the provision-train attacked, which was saved by the English, consisted mainly
                of barrels of red herrings destined to feed the English camp during the season
                of Lent. After “the battle of the herrings” it appeared impossible to save
                Orleans, and it can be taken for granted that in spite of all the heroism
                displayed by the inhabitants and by their leader, Jean de Dunois,  the most valiant of Charles VII’s captains,
                the courageous town would finally have succumbed, had it not been for the
                intervention of Joan of Arc.
                
               
                 
               There is no more astounding or more moving story in history
                than that of Joan of Arc, the peasant girl who became the commander of an army,
                saved her country from mortal danger, and herself died a martyr for her
                religious and patriotic faith.
                
               Joan was born in the hamlet of Domremy in the duchy of Bar,
                on the borders of Champagne and Lorraine, a district over which the King of
                France claimed an absolute right, which, however, was disputed. Whether
                belonging to Lorraine or to Champagne, Joan regarded herself as a Frenchwoman.
                Her father, Jacques d’Arc, had by his wife Isabella Romée five children, two of
                whom were girls; Joan was the youngest, and was known in the family as
                Jeannette. She was probably born on 6 January 1412, though the actual year is
                uncertain as the heroine herself was not absolutely sure of her age. The child
                of lowly but comparatively well-to-do peasants, Joan received no education; she
                could neither read nor write, but was employed in household tasks, was expert
                at sewing and spinning, and as the youngest child of the house regularly took
                the animals to pasture. She was, to use her own description of herself, “a
                shepherdess.” Joan was most sincerely pious. In her environment the misfortunes
                of France and of its king made a profound impression. Situated on one of the
                main highways, Domremy caught the echo of all that was happening. The “great
                sorrow” of the kingdom was the subject of every conversation. Joan was
                evidently enveloped in this atmosphere of distress which tortured the soul of
                France, and naturally the hope of escaping from the haunting dread of
                irremediable defeat was present in every pious heart. The shepherdess of
                Domremy was about thirteen years old when, for the first time, a supernatural
                voice made itself heard to her in her father’s garden, coming from the right,
                from the direction of the church; the voice was accompanied by a bright light,
                and it told her to be of good conduct. The child was thoroughly frightened,
                until she realised that the voice came from Heaven. Afterwards the visions
                became more frequent, more definite, and more urgent: St Michael appeared to
                her, as a knight, surrounded by angels; and two saints, St Margaret and St
                Catherine. The celestial voices bade Joan set out for France, and when Orleans
                was besieged they revealed to her that she would deliver the town. Joan
                resisted, but for five years the visions continued, becoming more and more
                insistent, to dictate her mission to her. At last she acknowledged that the
                will of God was irresistible and that she must accomplish it.. She held out to
                her saints a ring given her by her parents which bore the inscription Jhesu
                Marian the saints touched it, and the young girl, her hands in theirs, took the
                vow of virginity. Henceforward, her mind was decided, to obey Heaven whatever
                might befall.
                
               But she was at a loss how to carry out the order of Heaven.
                She went to Burey, near Vaucouleurs, to a cousin of her mother, Durand Lassart,
                whom she called uncle, and with him she went, in the month of May 1428, to
                Vaucouleurs to visit the nearest royal captain, Robert de Baudricourt. He only
                laughed at her, and advised Lassart to box her ears and take her home to her
                parents.
                
               But meanwhile the war was coming nearer. Enemy scouts
                appeared in the district, and a panic seized upon Domremy. Joan went a second
                time to Baudricourt. The captain in his embarrassment sent her to Duke Charles
                of Lorraine, who questioned her and made her a small present. She returned to
                Baudricourt and spoke to him with such ardour and conviction that he decided to
                send her to the king. He gave her a letter for the king and a sword for
                herself; some of the people of Vaucouleurs bought her a man’s suit of clothes
                and a horse; an escort of four men-at-arms and two serving-men accompanied her,
                and she started for Chinon where Charles VII was then residing. This was
                towards the end of February 1429. The journey lasted eleven days, and at midday
                on 6 March the shepherdess of Domremy arrived at Chinon and dismounted at a
                modest hostelry in the town.
                
               From one of her halts, Sainte-Catherine de Fierbois, Joan had
                dispatched a letter to the king announcing her coming and notifying him that
                she “knew of several good things touching his business.” Already the rumour had
                spread in Orleans that a young shepherdess, called The Maid was coming to the
                king in order to raise the siege and conduct the king to Rheims. An attempt was
                made to question Joan before admitting her into the castle, but she refused to
                reveal anything until she had seen the king; and he at last consented to
                receive her. While she waited, full of anxiety, Joan prayed to God to send her
                “the sign of the king”. She came to the castle, and though the king, modestly
                clad, effaced himself among the lords who filled the vast hall, she went
                straight to him, saluted him familiarly with the title “gentle dauphin,” and at
                once made known to him the object of her mission: “I am come with a mission from
                God to give aid to you and to the kingdom, and the King of Heaven orders you,
                through me, to be anointed and crowned at Rheims, and to be the lieutenant of
                the King of Heaven who is the King of France.”
                
               After a private interview with Joan, the king returned to his
                courtiers, his face alight with joy. It has been suggested that Joan had shown
                him a “sign” of her mission, which has remained a secret. But this supposition
                does not seem necessary; the truth is no doubt much more simple. Joan had
                declared to the king, in the name of God, that he was the true son of Charles
                VI and the lawful heir. On the night of All Saints Day 1428, Charles VII,
                seeing his kingdom gradually passing away from him, had entered his oratory and
                had implored God to succour him if he was truly a king’s son. Joan gave the
                answer to the question put by the king to God; and one can imagine his feelings
                when they were alone together and he heard himself addressed by the inspired
                Maid in the following words: “I tell you on the part of Messire [Our Lord] that
                you are true heir of France and King’s Son”. Momentous words, indeed! For,
                humanly speaking, the problem of Charles’ birth was insoluble. Thanks to Joan
                of Arc, the problem was solved by divine aid. Mysticism came in as an essential
                agent in the making of history. To believe in Joan was to believe in the right
                of Charles VII, and so the paralysing doubt which clouded the minds of
                Frenchmen disappeared, and the spirit of loyalty, that is to say of patriotism
                in the only form conceivable in that age, was released from its prison. No
                longer were there two kings in France. The scaffolding of the Treaty of Troyes
                was falling down; did a prince of the Lancastrian house continue to call
                himself “King of France and England,” he was only repeating the empty formula
                of Edward III.
                
               Joan, too, gave formal expression to the political
                consequences which resulted from her revelation; she issued her famous letter
                to the King of England and his lieutenants, summoning them to evacuate the
                kingdom which belonged to the Valois heir. “Jhesu Maria. King of England, and
                you Duke of Bedford, who call yourself regent of the kingdom of France; William
                de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, John de Talbot, and you Thomas, Lord Scales, who
                call yourself lieutenant of the Duke of Bedford—give way to the King of Heaven
                over His royal lineage, render to the Maid sent by God, the King of Heaven, the
                keys of all the good towns which you have taken and ravaged in France. She is
                come, too, from God, the King of Heaven, to proclaim the royal lineage; she is
                full ready to make peace, if you will give way to her, so that you will restore
                and repay France for that you have had her in your hands. As for you, archers,
                squires, gentles, and others who stand before the good town of Orleans, go you
                away, in God’s name, to your own countries....King of England, if you do not so
                do, I am a leader in battle, and in whatever place I shall come upon your
                people in France, I will make them to go out, will they or will they not....And
                do not have it in your mind that you hold the kingdom of France from God, the
                King of Heaven, the son of Saint Mary, as King Charles, the true heir, will
                hold it; for God, the King of Heaven, wisheth it so, and He is revealed by the
                Maid”
                
               An ecclesiastical enquiry, conducted at Poitiers by a
                commission presided over by an archbishop, the Chancellor Regnault of Chartres,
                had decided in favour of the truth of Joan’s mission. She was then sent to
                Tours. There she formed her household, consisting of a chaplain, Jean Pasquerel,
                a squire, Jean d’Aulon, her own two brothers, two men-at-arms, Jean de Metz and
                Jean de Poulengy, two pages, Louis de Contes and Raymond, two heralds,
                Ambleville and Guyenne. She had a suit of armour made for her, sent to
                Sainte-Catherine de Fierbois for a miraculous sword, and commissioned a
                Scottish painter, James Power, to paint her a standard, a banner, and a pennon.
                Thus equipped and become, as she had said, “a leader in battle,” she took over
                the command of a relieving army, 7000 to 8000 men, the supreme effort of the
                king of Bourges. Joan succeeded in passing a convoy of provisions into Orleans
                on Wednesday 27 April, and immediately afterwards she herself entered the town.
                From this moment the Bastard of Orleans, Dunois, the valiant defender of the valiant
                city, believed in the Maid’s mission. She it was who directed the sorties. She
                electrified the defenders, spread discouragement among the besiegers, and with
                the moral and mystical factor on her side won success after success. Feeling
                that his troops were wavering, Talbot gave the order for retreat, after ninety
                days of siege. On Sunday 8 May Orleans was delivered.
                
               The deliverance of Orleans, by reason of the symbolic
                character of the siege, made a profound impression. Predicted and accomplished
                by the Maid, this liberation appeared as a decisive proof of her divine
                mission, and henceforward the truth of all that she announced followed
                logically. Charles VII himself notified the miracle to the towns in official
                manifestos, and a postcript to the letter preserved at Narbonne makes express
                mention of the part played by the Maid.
                
               Charles was still to Joan only the “gentle dauphin” so long
                as he was unconsecrated. To cause the heir of Charles VI to be consecrated at
                Rheims was to affirm triumphantly his royal right. For the Maid, Rheims, coming
                after Orleans, was the second and perhaps the last stage of her mission. But it
                looked like madness to traverse an immense stretch of territory and to go
                through Lancastrian France in order to accomplish a religious ceremony. Charles
                and his Court hesitated. Joan, by her resolute conviction and her tranquil
                assurance, overcame all resistance. The Duke of Alençon, one of the most ardent
                in her support, collected a royal army and put in train operations designed to
                “sweep the river Loire.” The French army carried the bridge-head of Meung on 15
                June, captured Beaugency, and thanks to a fiery charge by La Hire won the
                brilliant victory of Patay on 19 June; 2000 of the enemy were slain, and among
                the prisoners were Talbot, Scales, and other English nobles, while, according
                to the accounts, only three Frenchmen lost their lives. The march to Rheims
                became a triumphal progress, and on Sunday 17 July, in the cathedral for which
                this honour was reserved, was celebrated with all the traditional pomp the most
                moving coronation in history. Joan of Arc stationed herself with her standard
                at the foot of the altar during the ceremony. “When the Maid saw that the king
                was consecrated and crowned, she knelt down, all the lords being present before
                him, clasped him round the legs and said to him, shedding warm tears the while:
                ‘Gentle King, now is fulfilled the good pleasure of God, who willed that I
                should raise the siege of Orleans and should bring you to this city of Rheims
                to receive your holy anointing, showing that you are true king and he to whom
                the kingdom of France ought to belong’.” For the first time, Joan gave Charles
                the royal title; to every true believer he was henceforward King of France.
                
               It seems certain, in spite of what has been said to the
                contrary, that Joan of Arc at one time considered her mission as accomplished
                at Rheims. She said to Archbishop Regnault of Chartres: “God will that I may be
                able to retire, to go to serve my father and my mother, to look after their flocks
                with my sister and my brothers who would be so happy to see me again.” But she
                had aroused too much admiration, too much enthusiasm. Whether owing to pressure
                from her comrades-in-arms or to a fresh intervention of her voices—for on this
                the evidence is obscure—she decided to remain in Charles’ service. Then,
                however, her misfortunes began. Paris, which had been expected to rise to the
                occasion and to expel the English on its own initiative, made no move;
                doubtless Bedford’s precautions were too good. Negotiations entered into with
                the Duke of Burgundy achieved no positive result; his accession would have been
                decisive, but he held himself open to the best offer from either side.
                Meanwhile, the prestige of the king after his coronation at Rheims had risen so
                high that the towns on his route vied with one another in admitting
                him—Corbeny, Vailly, Laon, Soissons, Chateau-Thierry, Montmirail, Provins, La
                Ferte-Milon, Crepy-en-Valois, Lagny-le-Sec, Compiegne, Senlis, Saint-Denis.
                Bedford certainly was avoiding battle, which the French were offering. But the
                English cause was very much on the down grade, and Charles penetrated to the
                immediate approaches to Paris. To win the capital would have been the
                culmination of his triumph; Joan, backed by the Duke of Alençon and the Count
                of Clermont, wanted to make the attempt. But in the unsuccessful assault of 8
                September she was unluckily wounded in the thigh by a shot from a crossbow. In
                requital, Charles VII ennobled her, and included in the patent of nobility both
                her family and the descendants of her sister and brothers. The king, however,
                was beginning to waver. His strength was overtaxed by so rapid an effort; the
                acceleration of pace did not suit his temperament. Above all, he was lending
                too ready an ear to the insinuations of the ignoble courtier, La Tremouille,
                who was basely envious of the ascendancy of Joan. He refused to listen to her
                counsel of immediate action, and imposed upon her a rest of some days, thereby
                compromising the success of the campaign which had been so well conducted up to
                this point. What Joan had feared was coming about. On the way to Châlons,
                actually before the coronation, she had said to a ploughman from her village
                who had come to greet her: “I fear one thing only—treason”. She took up arms
                again, however, since she could not resign herself to idleness. She fought
                minor engagements at Melun and Lagny, and around Compiegne, which the Duke of
                Burgundy was trying to invest. It was under the walls of this town that, on the
                evening of 24 May, she was captured in the course of a sortie; she had been
                beaten back and found herself unable to re-enter within the walls, as the gate
                had been shut either of deliberate malice or merely thoughtlessly; she was
                thrown down and taken prisoner, and had to surrender to the bastard of
                Wandonne, a vassal of John of Luxemburg who was commanding on behalf of the
                Duke of Burgundy. Taken first to the castle of Beaulieu in Vermandois, and
                afterwards to John of Luxemburg’s castle of Beaurevoir, she was the object of a
                series of confused negotiations, the principal agent in which was the Bishop of
                Beauvais, Pierre Cauchon, a tool of Isabella of Bavaria ind a devoted adherent
                of Bedford. Finally, Joan was sold to the English for the sum of 10,000 gold crowns.
                
               An English escort conducted the prisoner by way of Arras, le
                Crotoy, Saint-Valery, Eu, and Dieppe to Rouen, where she was shut up in a tower
                of the fortress of Philip Augustus known as the Vieux-Château. The task of
                guarding her was entrusted to John Grey, a squire of Henry VI’s bodyguard, John
                Bemwoit, and William Talbot. The Earl of Warwick was in command at Rouen, and
                Henry VI was brought to the Norman capital as a precaution in case of a rising.
                
               The suit instituted against Joan of Arc was conducted by a
                tribunal of the Inquisition presided over by Cauchon, in whose diocese she had
                been taken prisoner. Driven from his see of Beauvais by the advance on Rheims
                and Paris, he pursued at the same time both his personal revenge and his
                political ends. The University of Paris, submissive to English and Burgundian
                interests and hostile to Joan through jealousy arising from the favourable
                judgment of the clergy of Poitiers, intervened in the suit. The procedure was
                probably correct in form, but was vitiated by the fixed determination of the
                court to arrive at a condemnation. The least that can be said is that some of
                the devices employed were mean and odious; for instance, the trick of restoring
                to the prisoner her masculine attire in her cell in order to accuse her of
                clothing herself again in it. Now, in spite of the one-sidedness and the
                cowardly complacency of the judges, in spite of the frequent duplicity and the
                insidious nature of the questions put to her, no document is more to the credit
                of the heroine than this moving record of her examination. Her answers provide
                the most striking evidence of her sincerity, her nobility of soul, her clear
                common sense, the purity of her faith, and the ardour of her patriotism; the
                report of the proceedings is full of those historic utterances on which has
                been sustained the cult devoted by France to the noblest figure in its annals.
                
               A year of cruel captivity did not break the courage of this
                choice spirit. That she had a moment of weakness on 24 May 1431, the day of the
                scene at the cemetery of Saint-Ouen, is very doubtful. She was ill at the time
                and probably did not understand at all the subtle formula which was read to her
                and to which she had to give her adhesion, couched as it was in deliberately
                equivocal language. Moreover, it was possibly a mere manoeuvre, to justify the
                ultimate condemnation. However that may be, on the morrow of the abjuration,
                real or pretended, Joan re-affirmed all her former statements and was then
                declared a heretic and relapsed, and was condemned to the stake. On hearing
                this iniquitous sentence, she said: “I appeal to God, the great Judge, on the
                grievous wrongs and injuries that have been done to me.” And she said to
                Cauchon: “Bishop, through you I am dying... You promised me to put me into the
                hands of the Church, and you have let me fall into the hands of my enemies”. On
                the pile erected in the old market-place at Rouen, on 30 May 1431, Joan was
                tied to the stake, bearing on her head a mitre with this inscription upon it:
                “heretic, relapsed, apostate, idolatress”. She endured the awful agony with
                fortitude, in a spirit of ecstatic exaltation, protesting to the last her
                innocence and proclaiming that her voices were veracious. She expired with the
                cry “Jhesu!”
                
               The remains of Joan of Arc were thrown into the Seine. Now,
                contrary to the expectation of those who had demanded her death, this tragic
                end did not annul her work; it consecrated it. Joan l’Angelique has had the
                same apotheosis as the saints, men and women, whose story the people heard in
                sermons, whose heroism they viewed with admiration above the doors and the
                columns of their churches, and whose adventures they read in the “Golden
                Legend.” To confess one’s faith and die a martyr’s death was to give the
                supreme proof of the Christian verity. The execution of Joan of Arc was the
                demonstration not, as her enemies imagined, of the falsity, but of the truth of
                her mission. The French people in their multitudes henceforward regarded Joan
                as a saint and all her words as prophecies.
                
               Charles VII might have taken advantage of this movement of
                the national conscience; he might have directed it and raised it to a higher
                plane. This his lethargy prevented him from doing. So long as Joan’s enemy, La
                Tremouille, was alive, Charles was little more than a figurehead, incapable of
                initiative. La Tremouille was assassinated in 1433 by a squire of the Constable
                Richemont. The latter then took charge of the government, supported by the
                king’s mother-in-law, Yolande of Sicily, and by her son, Charles of Anjou. The
                English by this time had recovered, and Richemont could only proceed by the
                laborious method of conquering bit by bit the provinces still held by the
                English. The story of this process, also, is disconnected, intricate, and
                confused. Further, the means employed were feeble; what the ardent faith of a
                Joan of Arc would have achieved in a few months, it took a mediocre king and
                his generals years to accomplish.
                
               The prime factor which decided the fate of the English
                domination in France was the reconciliation of Charles VII with Philip the
                Good. The very year of Joan’s death, whether or no he was affected by remorse,
                the Duke of Burgundy entered into negotiations with the king. They were
                protracted, but they culminated at last in the Treaty of Arras of 21 September
                1435. The duke devised an excuse for abandoning the English: he suggested papal
                mediation between the claims of the French and the English dynasties, and, on
                the refusal of the English to accept this arbitration, declared himself
                released from all obligation to the house of Lancaster. By the Treaty of Arras,
                Charles VII disavowed the crime of Montereau, offered reparation for the
                murder, and ceded to the duke Auxerre, the Auxerrois, Bar-sur-Seine, Luxeuil,
                the “Somme towns” (Peronne, Montdidier, Roye), Ponthieu, and Boulogne-sur-mer;
                a clause reserved to the Crown the right of repurchasing the “Somme towns”; but
                the duke was exempted for life from the obligation of homage to the king. The
                conditions were hard, but no price was too high to pay for such an accession of
                strength, which tilted the scales completely in favour of the Valois.
                
               From 1435 onwards everything went awry for the English. After
                the death of Bedford (15 September 1435) a breach arose between Henry VI’s
                surviving uncles, Gloucester and Beaufort. The subject population everywhere
                was seething with disquiet. No longer, as before the appearance of Joan of Arc,
                was it a matter of passive resistance; it was now a continual state of
                conspiracy. Paris was in agitation. Bands of Frenchmen penetrated everywhere.
                On all sides there were revolts and surprise attacks. Richemont, Dunois,
                Barbazan, Jean de Bueil, and others too, at the head of small forces, were
                assisting the inhabitants in each locality, ranging in every direction, even as
                far as Normandy. The Dauphin Louis went to the help of Dieppe, which was in
                revolt. Richemont entered Paris on 13 April 1436, and Charles VII could justly
                write that the Parisians themselves had turned the English “out of the town.”
                And now, as he became more and more convinced of his right and of the truth of
                the Maid’s mission, Charles’ courage grew. His mind, slow to mature, was
                achieving its balance. Possibly his mistresses, each in her turn, Agnes Sorel
                and then Antoinette de Maignelais, assisted in this evolution; in any case,
                royalty, gaining in strength and convinced of its ultimate triumph, was
                launching out upon a laborious task of administrative reform. The series of
                great Ordonnances, the full extent of which will be made evident later, had
                already commenced.
                
               The exhaustion on both sides was such that they agreed to
                accept papal mediation and to sign the truces of Tours on 16 April 1444; by
                successive extensions the truces lasted until 1449. It was arranged that King
                Henry VI should marry Margaret of Anjou, the niece of the Queen of France. The
                truces of Tours worked mainly to the advantage of France, where, as will be
                seen shortly, the work of reconstruction proceeded systematically. Hostilities
                were resumed in 1449 as a result of English intervention in Brittany against
                the new duke, Francis I, who after his accession in 1442 had done homage to
                Finance and taken up arms in its favour. Following on the capture and sack of
                Fougeres by Frantjois de Surienne, a captain in the English service, the king
                revived the tactics of Charles V, allowing his captains to operate against the
                English in Brittany while making no official breach of the truces. But Normandy
                was in a continually increasing state of ferment, and its population appealed
                to the French. An assembly held by the king on 17 July 1449 at the castle of
                Roches-Tranchelion, near Chinon, decided that this appeal must be answered and
                Normandy freed. In less than a year the province was conquered; the salient
                features in the campaign which effected this were the recapture of Rouen (the
                Duke of Somerset surrendered it on 29 October 1449, and the king made his
                solemn entry on 10 December), the victory of Formigny on 15 April 1450, and the
                fall of Cherbourg on 12 August 1450. The conquest of Guienne, the last province
                remaining to the English, proved to be a more troublesome undertaking. Bordeaux
                was recovered for the first time on 12 June 1451, and Bayonne opened its gates
                on 20 August following: but Talbot recaptured Bordeaux on 23 Octoberl452, and
                it was only the defeat and death of the valiant Englishman at the battle of
                Castillon on the 17 July 1453 which made possible the final acquisition by the
                king of Bordeaux (19 October) and with it the possession of the whole of the
                south-west. Henceforward, Calais alone remained to the English; and this was
                inaccessible to the French, because it was surrounded by Burgundian territory,
                which could not be violated by them.
                
               Now that he was definitely the victor, Charles VII caused commemorative
                medals to be struck in honour of his troops. These medals, struck at the Paris
                mint, perpetuate the memory of the reconquest of Normandy and Guienne and the
                expulsion of the English from France. But Charles did more than this. Once in
                possession, at Rouen in 1450, of the documents of Joan of Arc’s trial, he
                ordered an investigation, from which resulted the suit of rehabilitation. The
                verdict was given on 7 July 1456, and annulled the first trial as irregular in
                its constitution and its procedure; a tardy but a just reparation, and a
                splendid epilogue to the Hundred Years’ War which was now at last at an end.
                
               
                 
               The period occupied by the third phase of the Hundred Years’
                War is one of exceptional interest in the internal development of France and the
                elaboration of monarchical control. In the epoch of the decisive struggle which
                rescued it from the English, France came to see in the Valois monarchy the
                living and concrete personification of itself. Charles VII, to Joan of Arc and
                her contemporaries, stood for the country. “God wills it so”; and with this all
                the utterances of the heroine, through whose mouth the voice of France itself
                was speaking, were in accord. This national character of the legitimate
                monarchy was consecrated by military happenings and during a struggle for
                independence. It resulted, accordingly, that, in order to assure the triumph of
                the king, its champion, no sacrifice was too great for France to make. King and
                monarchy had the people behind them. There could be no serious question of
                discussing the respective rights of sovereign and nation, since the one was
                fighting for the other. There is no disputing the orders of the person to whom
                you look for salvation. Once Joan of Arc was gone, the Hundred Years’ War could
                only be brought to a conclusion completely favourable to France, provided that
                the country was willing to consent to a great military effort. So the needs of
                the war dictated the military reforms of Charles VII, and such reform at such a
                time must in the main be the expression of the aim of the body politic.
                
               The truces of 1444 are exceptionally important from this
                point of view. The English king signed them to avoid the loss of all his
                possessions; he obtained a breathing space for a few years. But Charles VII,
                who also needed a breathing space, profited by the respite to recover his
                strength and to prepare the definitive success of his arms. This was the
                occasion for the commencement of the noble series of Ordonnances which will be
                described in detail. But first it must be noted that the military effort
                implied financial resources; so financial reform was a necessary accompaniment
                of theeffort. Financial reform in its turn also brought the governmental
                system into play. In the result, therefore, the monarchy emerged from its great
                trial far more powerful than it had been at the beginning of the crisis. Such
                was the general notion underlying the work of internal reconstruction which was
                accomplished under Charles VII; it is necessary now to describe its essential
                features.
                
               The Constable Richemont appears to deserve the chief credit
                for the great military reform which marked the reign; at any rate, it was under
                his direction that it was put into execution. This reform may be regarded as
                having been accomplished in three stages: the first, which preceded the truces
                and occurred in 1439, aimed at the repression of the abuses committed by the
                military; the second, in the year 1445, consisted in the formation of compagnies
                  d’ordonnance, the third, in 1448, was marked by the creation of the
                Francs-Archers.
                
               The Ordonnance of 1439 had been tentatively
                anticipated by the Ordonnances of 1431 and 1438, which were limited,
                however, to a repetition of Charles V’s regulations on the same subject. The
                abuses committed by the military were one of the scourges of the time. But the
                Ordonnance of 1439 had a much wider range than any of its predecessors. It
                inaugurated, in fact, a regular military discipline. By it the regulations
                introduced by Charles V were revived and reinforced. The captains of Companies
                were forced to hand over to the ordinary justice any soldier under their
                command who was charged with an offence against the law. The right of levying
                troops or causing them to be levied was henceforward reserved to the king
                alone. Finally, companies of 100 men were reestablished; and, moreover, upon
                each of these companies was imposed a special garrison-duty, from which it was
                forbidden to move without royal authorisation. Such was the first stage of
                military reform. The object was to bar the employment of armed forces by
                private initiative, to prevent it from being, as it were, a private concern;
                it had the result of fixing the companies as garrisons in definite places, and
                so of bringing to an end the scourge of soldiery ranging at will.
                
               The second stage of reform followed upon the truces of 1444.
                At this date, since the truces were renewable, there was a temporary pause in
                the conflict between England and France. This fact gave rise to a serious
                problem—what was to become of the Companies in time of peace? Briefly, the
                problem with which the government of Charles VII was thus confronted was the
                same that Charles V and Du Guesclin had had to solve in the previous century;
                with this difference, however, that in the fifteenth century it was a question
                not only of preventing the excesses of the idle soldiery, but also of
                preserving for France an army in preparation for the day, for which due
                reckoning was being made in advance, when hostilities would be resumed. In
                these circumstances, it was the policy of the king and his Constable to
                eliminate the dangerous elements and to preserve those that were sound. In the
                first case, Charles VII essayed remedies analogous to the famous Spanish
                expedition of the fourteenth century. He dispatched a force of routlers, under
                the command of the dauphin, the future King Louis XI, with the avowed object of
                assisting the Emperor Frederick III against the Swiss; in the course of this
                campaign, the young prince’s troops won a victory which caused considerable
                stir, the victory of St Jakob (26 August 1444). The Swiss were definitely
                defeated, but on the French side many routiers lost their lives—in both
                respects a gain to the royal policy. In 1444 also, Charles VII laid siege to
                Metz, and though he failed to capture it, the Companies engaged in this
                Lorraine adventure were in the course of the campaign purged of their more
                inflammable elements.
                
               There remained the second of the two objectives—to find a
                means to preserve in the service of France, instead of sacrificing them in
                battle or disbanding them, the better elements in the Companies. First of all,
                in order to purge these heterogeneous troops, the government decided to remove
                the evil characters. A complete amnesty was granted to all those with a crime
                on their conscience who retired voluntarily from the profession of arms. Thus
                the undesirables were eliminated. The remainder— the better, or at any rate the
                less bad, elements—were retained and were incorporated in companies of a new
                formation.
                
               The organisation of these new companies—the third stage in
                the reform—was the object of the celebrated Ordonnance of 1445. It is most
                unfortunate to have to record that this document is lost; the exact date, even,
                is unknown. All that can be said is that it was published in February or March,
                at Nancy. It is possible, however, to reconstruct almost completely the text of
                it, by making use of the subsequent Ordonnances, which repeated it with some
                additions and amendments, and also by means of the information supplied by the
                chroniclers, notably by Mathieu d’Escouchy and Thomas Basin.
                
               In broad outline, the king appointed fifteen captains, each
                with the command of a hundred lances; there were in all, therefore, 1500
                lances. By “lance” was meant a tactical unit composed of six men and six
                horses. The personnel of the lance consisted of a man-at-arms, a coutilier,
                a page, two archers, and a page or valets in some Companies the last-named was
                replaced by a third archer. The captain recruited his men himself, but he had
                to exact from each of them an oath to be faithful to the king and to fulfil the
                terms of the Ordonnance.. Every member of the Company had to be present at the
                inspections (montres) held by royal officers. The companies thus organised were
                officially known as “Compagnies de l’Ordonnance du roi” or, more succinctly,
                “Compagnies d’Ordonnance.”
                
               The principle of the garrison, which had already been
                adopted, was maintained and in 1445 was put into definite operation. The
                “Compagnies de l’Ordonnance du roi” were assigned their stations and were
                distributed among the provinces. So, for example, Poitou received 130 lances,
                Saintonge 60. Later, changes were made in the original geographical
                distribution of the Companies, especially after 1453, that is to say, when the
                conflict with the English had come to an end. Now, though there were garrisons,
                there were of course no barracks. The soldiers were billeted on the
                inhabitants, who, however, could free themselves from this burdensome
                obligation by the payment of money instead, a sort of composition-tax; this was
                known as the taille des gens d’armes. Contemporary chroniclers are
                unanimous in praising the reform and recording its successful results. Thus
                Chastellain boasts of Charles VII’s work for peace. The reform, indeed, had the
                double effect of creating internal order and of forging an effective weapon for
                the purpose of a possible future war.
                
               The term “standing army” is usually employed to describe the
                military force which was created by the Ordonnances of Charles VII; it is
                necessary, however, to be clear as to the exact significance of this term. In
                enacting the regulations which have been described and the supplementary ones
                which followed, neither the king nor his Constable had in view the creation of
                permanent companies, properly so called. Their object was simply to keep
                mobilised the soundest troops of which they disposed at the time of the truces,
                so as to have them in readiness at the moment when hostilities should be
                resumed. But, as it happened, the Hundred Years’ War came to an end in 1453
                without the interposition of any treaty. No guarantee existed that the war
                would not be resumed; fresh outbreaks were always possible. That is why the
                Companies were retained. Henceforward they were to continue indefinitely. Thus
                the biographer of Richemont, M. Cosneau, could justly write that, if Charles
                VII did not actually create a standing army, he did at any rate create what
                became a standing army.
                
               The Ordonnance of 1445 only applied to a part of the kingdom,
                the country of Langue d’oil. It needed therefore to be completed, and
                this was done by the institution of 500 lances for Languedoc (Ordonnance of
                1446); consequently 500 lances in the South were added to the original 1500,
                bringing the total number of lances to 2000. There were also some additional
                companies, less well paid or at any rate less well equipped. Little is known as
                to their organisation; in the texts they are called “petites payes”, “mortes
                payes,” or “compagnies de la petite ordonnance”.
                
               So far only mounted corps had been instituted. Charles VII
                and Richemont wished to create an infantry as well. This object was attained
                in the third stage of reform. By an Ordonnance published at
                Montils-les-Tours on 28 April 1448, the Francs-Archers were instituted.
                The French monarchy already employed companies of archers or cross-bowmen,
                associations of which were formed in towns. In the fifteenth century the “noble
                art of shooting with the bow” was all the fashion. Undoubtedly the patriotic
                ardour aroused by “the English peril” had contributed greatly to the popularity
                of this pursuit, which became a favourite sport with the youth of the towns,
                whose example was followed by smaller places; a force available for use had
                thus come into being of its own accord. Naturally the successful employment of
                archers by Edward III of England could not be unfamiliar to Frenchmen. In 1425
                the Duke of Brittany had formed a body of infantry in this way, composed of
                “folk of the commonalty.” Charles VII determined to outdo this Breton experiment,
                which was of course familiar to Richemont. The king’s intention was to operate
                on a grand scale, and to establish a powerful infantry by mobilising the
                archers from the parishes. This was the source from which the Ordonnance of
                1448 drew to produce the Francs-Archers. The name of “Free Archers” was
                derived from the right attaching to them of exemption from taxation. The herald
                Berry says, in fact, that the king “freed them from paying any of the subsidies
                current in his kingdom”; and the same chronicler explains the method practised
                for the recruiting of these foot-soldiers: “it was ordered to all baillis in the kingdom, each in his own right, to choose in each bailliage and parish
                and to take therefrom the most skilful and suitable.” The Ordonnance of 1451
                introduced some modifications in the arrangements originally made for the
                levying of the archers. Instead of the uniform system of one archer from every
                parish whatever its size, it seemed to be more equitable and practical to fix
                one archer for every fifty hearths. The equipment of the archer was at his own
                expense, or, in cases of poverty, at the expense of the parish. The choosing of
                the archers was done by the élus or the prévôt. They took an
                oath, and their names were entered on a roll, a duplicate of which was sent
                from every bailliage to the central authority. At first posted among the
                feudal levies, the Francs-Archers were soon formed into a separate corps; and
                they were made up into companies, probably one for each bailliage. Each
                company-commander received a salary of 120 livres tournois, and was entitled
                further to 8 livres for expenses. The cross-bowmen of the town bands, which had
                been formed already in the time of Charles V, were united to the archers from
                the parishes. It is difficult to estimate the exact numbers of the infantry
                force that was raised in this way. The figure of 8000 men, divided into 16
                companies of 500 archers, has been suggested; but no contemporary document
                makes it possible to arrive at so precise a calculation.
                
               Several acts in Charles VII’s reign were designed towards the
                perfecting of the old, the feudal, army. The most characteristic of the
                Ordonnance issued with this object appeared shortly after the expiration of the
                Hundred Years’ War, dated 30 January 1455. The king instructed the nobles to
                inform him as to the following they maintained, and announced that he would
                assign to each a payment proportionate to the importance of his following. The
                sums fixed upon, which were not to differ appreciably from the average rates
                previously in force, were briefly as follows: per month, a man-at-arms received
                15 francs, a coutilier 5 francs, an archer or cross-bowman Genoese and Scottish
                archers reinforced, under Charles VII, the national troops of France. The
                brothers Bureau had particular charge of the artillery, which by the end of the
                reign had become a considerable and a formidable arm; there was both light
                artillery, with its characteristic weapon the piece known as couleuvrine or serpentine and heavy artillery, composed of bombardes. These
                pieces, especially the bombardes, were christened after the fashion of ships;
                some of them were of vast size, encircled with strong hoops of iron. The stone
                cannon-balls which they discharged weighed 100 to 150 lbs. Already in Charles
                VII's time the cannon were mounted on gun-carriages, and cannon mounted on
                wheels had also made an appearance. However, the rate of fire was still very
                slow, and scarcely more than two cannon-balls could be discharged per hour.
                
               The fleet under Charles VII was used to support the army and
                to protect the coasts. Though France relied in the main on the assistance of
                the Castilian fleet—there was a traditional friendship between the two
                countries and, since the accession of the Trastamara dynasty, an alliance which
                was renewed from reign to reign—Charles VII realised the necessity of having a
                naval force at his disposal. The French king had ships of war of his own, and
                he also employed merchant vessels, which he put into fighting trim, acquiring
                them from their owners in return for the payment of an indemnity.
                
               Jacques Coeur, the greatest man of business of the century,
                fitted out for the purpose of his own commercial ventures, of which something
                will be said later, a private flotilla; it was completely equipped, however,
                and consisted of seven vessels sailing under the flag of the Virgin. He
                obtained from Charles VII a license to raise crews by pressing vagrants as
                sailors; they were known as his caimans, and he was also allowed to hire
                convicts. In return for these advantages, Coeur put his fleet at the king’s
                disposal, much in the same way that the captains did with their Companies
                before the military reforms. Coeur’s nephew, Jean de Villages, was in command
                of his uncle’s vessels. Besides the ships belonging to the king or put at his
                disposal by their owners, the part played in naval matters in the fifteenth
                century by the corsairs must not be left out of account. Their operations,
                moreover, were not limited to wartime, although the king could make use of
                them. In practice, every time that a crime at sea remained unpunished and
                unrequited by the government responsible for the offender, the injured party
                received from his sovereign letters of marque authorising him to recoup himself
                at the expense of any of his aggressor’s compatriots, without being liable to
                an action of law in consequence.
                
               The military effort was, as has been seen, conditioned by the
                problem of finance. The monarchy could only meet the expenses of the national
                defence by instituting a reorganisation of its finances. So, side by side with
                the military Ordonnance of Charles VII’s reign there went a noble series of
                financial Ordonnances.
                
               In the course of the civil war in Charles VI’s time, the
                monarchy had surrendered its right to impose taxes; this was the evil fruit of
                the policy of competition for popular favour which had followed the death of
                Charles V. Charles VII was not content merely to re-establish the old royal
                right. He went farther, made royal taxation permanent, and effected a complete
                remodelling of the financial regime. By tradition a distinction was made in the
                royal revenues between the “ordinary finances,” derived from the domain, and
                the “extraordinary finances,” derived from taxes, dues, and subsidies. Now, war
                had affected the domain to such an extent that the “ordinary finances,” of
                which it was the source, were almost exhausted. Clearly, in order to bring
                these ruinous wars to a favourable conclusion, money must be found. It was to
                the “extraordinary finances,” therefore, that recourse had to be made. For this
                a new financial organisation was indispensable, and it came about as the
                result of a series of financial Ordonnance following one another in succession
                from 1443 onwards, of which the most important was the Ordonnance of Nancy of
                10 February 1445. This remodelling leftintactthefundamental distinction between
                the “ordinary finances” of the domain and the “extraordinary finances”
                consisting of impositions (gaieties, aides, tailies), This distinction
                is clearly marked, and there were two separate budgets, as there were also two
                financial administrations. The domain itself was composed of two parts, the
                mutable and the immutable domain; the return from the former was irregular
                (sealing dues, cutting of woods etc.), that from the latter was fixed
                (perpetual quit-rents, for instance). To the receipts from the domain were
                charged not only the costs of the upkeep of the domain, but also general
                expenses of government, such as the pay of the baillis and of other
                officials of the bailliages. The “extraordinary finances” comprised
                three essential classes of revenue. The gabelle was a tax on salt, which
                was almost analogous to the employment by the modern French State of the
                monopoly of tobacco, but with this difference, that the Frenchman of today is
                at liberty to refrain from the consumption of tobacco while the purchase of a
                definite amount of salt was obligatory under the monarchical regime. Aide is a generic term to denote dues levied on the sale of commodities. Taille implies a direct tax assessed on the basis of landed property. It was in regard
                to tailles that Charles VII made his chief innovations.
                
               It can be asserted that mainly by virtue of tailles the kingdom raised the sums necessary for victory. The taille, which
                hitherto had retained its exceptional character, was converted into a regular
                and permanent tax; it was now, in fact, levied every year. Formerly the
                monarchy had had to assemble the States in order to obtain a vote for what was
                held to be an extraordinary imposition. Under the cover of one-sided and
                ambiguous votes, obtained, for the purpose of the war, from assemblies mainly
                of notables and of local Estates, the annual levy of the taille came at
                last to be made purely and simply by virtue of the royal authority. This
                usurpation, which brought into being a new right, was accomplished without any
                difficulty, because the sacrifice imposed by the sovereign upon his subjects
                had its justification in the public welfare. The point has already been made,
                that no Frenchman could dispute his gold or his blood when the king, the
                incarnation of the country, claimed it manifestly for the great cause of the
                liberation of the realm. So, the formality of a vote from the States General
                fell into oblivion. The king fixed each year the rate of the tailles simply by letters patent decided on in his Council; and it came about that, as
                the practice went on, he even augmented the rate by “increases of taille”.
                Towards the end of Charles VIPs reign, the revenue from the taille reached
                the sum of 1,200,000 livres tournois while the maximum amount provided by the
                total of the royal impositions, though it had already grown considerably, never
                exceeded the figure of 1,800,000.
                
               Even more than taxation, the financial administration underwent
                important reorganisation under Charles VII. Two parallel services functioned
                side by side, the one for the domain, the other for the “extraordinary
                finances.” The revenue from the domain was known as the trésor and its
                administration was entrusted to four trésoriers de France, each of whom
                was at the head of a district entitled his charge (Langue d’oil with Paris as
                the headquarters, Languedoc with Montpellier, Normandy with Rouen, Outre-Seine
                with Tours); there were also territories lying outside these charges, the
                administration of which will be described later. The trésoriers de France were overseers or administrators, but with no responsibility for the accounts;
                they handled none of the receipts and they made no disbursements. These duties
                were entrusted to receveurs ordinaires and to the changeur du trésor,
                this official, with his seat at Paris, acted as a centre for the revenue which
                came in from the provinces and was assisted by a controleur du tresor. In the
                provinces lying outside these charges, that is to say, the provinces reunited
                to the domain after Charles VII’s reorganisation, the regime prior to the
                reunion was allowed to continue; in practice, however, this regime differed
                little in its method of functioning from that of the charges described above.
                
               For the administration of what were still known as the
                “extraordinary finances” France was divided into generalites. The generaux
                  des finances corresponded to the trésoriers de France in the domain,
                and like them were managers and administrators; they also were four in number,
                and the four generalites had the same name and the same areas as the charges.
                The functionaries, however, who corresponded to the receveurs ordinaires bore
                various different names. For the receipt of tailies and aides the ghieralite
                was divided into elections, each with two elus at its head, assisted by a procureur
                  royal, a greffier, a receveur de la taille, and a receveur
                    des aides. Further, some provinces had neither elus nor elections. Those
                were the ones in which the Estates had survived, as will be shown later; in
                these provinces the Estates themselves continued to assess the taxes which in
                theory it still rested with them to vote. Thus was settled the classic division
                of France into “pays diktats” and “pays d’elections.” The service of the
                gabelles was particularly complicated. As a rule the two principal agents of
                this administration were known as grenetier and controleur; in
                Languedoc there was at the head of the service an official with the title of wisiteur
                  general des gabelles. The returns from the “extraordinary finances” were
                rendered to the headquarters of each généralité, into the care of the receveur
                  general (or general), who was assisted by a staff similar to that which
                handled the receipts from the domain.
                
               This financial regime with its duplicated machinery was
                obviously cumbersome to manage. Actually, from 1450 at any rate, there was an état
                  general des finances, and so a measure of co-ordination between the two
                financial services. This état was under the supervision of “le roy et
                messieurs de ses finances,” which meant a kind of superior commission
                consisting of the trésoriers and the généraux, from this was to
                evolve at a later date the unification of the financial system.
                
               There remained the regulation of disputes. Charles VII
                created a chambre du trésor and a chambre des aides; finally, he
                instituted a chambre des comptes (Ordonnance of Mehun-sur-Yevre of 23
                December 1454), which had the duty of checking and overhauling all parts of the
                financial machinery. From this sketch it will be seen that Charles VII endowed
                France with a new and a coherent financial system, just as he also endowed her
                with an army worthy of the name.
                
               
                 
               The ecclesiastical organisation was also subjected during
                this reign to extensive and bold changes, thanks to a celebrated and important
                act, the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges (1438). The abuses of the fiscal system
                of the Papacy, aggravated by the Great Schism, aroused in fifteenthcentury
                France a wide-spread revival of Gallicanism. The Schism at an end, a concordat
                had been concluded between the French Court and Pope Martin V in 1418, to last
                for five years. The five years expired in 1423, and as no arrangement had been
                concluded in the interval, Martin made a one-sided settlement of the problems
                in suspense by a constitution of 13 April 1425. The chief difficulty arose over
                the collation to benefices, owing to the rights associated with a vacancy and
                the choice of a new incumbent; the Pope disposed of vacant benefices during
                eight months of the year. In spite of the protests of the clergy, Henry VI and
                the Duke of Burgundy accepted this arrangement. Charles VII was more inclined
                to Gallican ideas, but, fearing to put Rome on the side of his enemies, he dissembled
                for some time. Negotiations entered into with Martin V led in 1426 to the
                signature of the Concordat of Genzano, which was almost identical with the bull
                of 1425. As soon as Martin was dead, Charles VII reopened negotiations with his
                successor Eugenius IV. After the recovery of Paris in 1436 the French Court was
                able to take a firmer line, while Eugenius IV, on the other hand, was in a
                weaker position owing to his conflict with the Council of Basle. Charles
                convoked a great assembly of the French Church to meet at Orleans on 1 May
                1438; on 5 June its sessions were transferred to Bourges. The Bishop of
                Castres, Gerard Machet, the king's confessor, played the leading role at the
                sittings, at which twenty-five bishops and numerous other dignitaries were
                present; the Archbishop of Tours, Philippe de Coetquis, distinguished himself
                by his attacks on the abuses of the Curia. The assembly adopted most of the
                decrees of the Council of Basle, while amending some of them, and a Statute of
                the French Church was passed in the form of a “Pragmatic” issuing
                from Bourges and dated 7 July 1438.
                
               The term “Pragmatic”, borrowed from the phraseology of the
                old imperial rescripts, was used in an entirely specialised sense, of a solemn
                settlement of ecclesiastical affairs by the civil government. No precedent
                could legally be invoked; the so-called Pragmatic of St Louis was a forgery. By
                virtue of this statute, the Pope was to have the right only to nominate to
                those benefices in which a vacancy was created at the Roman Court. Most of the
                sources of papal revenues from France were abolished; the monarchy established
                under its aegis a Gallican Church. Eugenius IV naturally resisted, and his
                successor Nicholas V did the same. But further assemblies of the clergy in 1450
                and 1452 confirmed the statute of 1438. It was not until after the death of
                Charles VII that the Papacy was able to obtain from the French Court the
                renunciation of the “Pragmatic”, which had introduced a system so completely to
                the advantage of the monarchy.
                
               
                 
               The other institutions of medieval France did not bear so
                deeply the impress of the reign of Charles VII as those which have already been
                passed under review. Their development, however, in the period covered by the
                third phase of the Hundred Years’ War, is of definite importance, and it is
                essential to outline the changes which took place.
                
               In judicial matters, only one innovation marks the reign, but
                that was of considerable importance: the creation of the first provincial
                Parlement of Toulouse. This was the successor to the ephemeral Parlement of
                Poitiers, which was the actual Parlement of the kingdom with its seat
                transferred to the provinces by the king of Bourges since he was dispossessed
                of Paris. The continued existence of the Parlement of Toulouse definitely
                brought to an end the old concentration of judicial competence in the hands of
                a single Parlement.
                
               It was during the period covered by this chapter that the
                monarchy was freed from the tutelage of the States, a fact of extreme
                significance, since thereby vanished the possibility, which had appeared for a
                time, of a constitutional monarchy more or less on the English pattern. The
                States, the assemblies of the three orders of nobles, clergy, and third estate,
                remained a vague institution. By this vagueness Charles profited to escape from
                the control which he might well have had reason to fear. Only once after the
                death of his father did Charles summon an assembly of a general character—the
                States of Chinon in 1428; at this meeting the deputies from Languedoc expressed
                the hope that no tax would be levied without a vote. Generally in Charles VII’s
                reign there were separate meetings of the States of Langue d’oil and of
                Languedoc. Fifteen sessions of the former have been noted, and four of the
                latter; so the provincial Estates took the chief place and pushed the States
                General into the background. In actual fact, Languedoc, Normandy, and Champagne
                were the only parts of the France of Charles VII’s day which were to preserve
                their Estates. Moreover, as has been seen, the king had everywhere assumed the
                right of levying subsidies on his own authority.
                
               Thus strengthened, and released from any effective limitation
                or control, the power of the sovereign was far stronger at the end of the
                crisis than on the accession of the Valois line. The feudal nobility was
                bridled. The military reforms of the reign made the king irresistible. Wars
                between baron and baron were no longer possible: the Dauphin Louis prohibited
                all private warfare in Dauphiné; Charles VII forbade his vassals to construct
                or repair any stronghold without his permission. At the same time that he
                increased the royal taxes, he prohibited the raising of excessive impositions
                by the lords. The performance of homage, the recognition and enumeration of fiefs,
                were strictly enforced. In 1435 caused a careful list to be made of fiefs
                acquired in the last sixty years. Well-served by his baillis and seneschals, he
                exacted respect for royal justice and furthered its development, and he
                affirmed his exclusive right to tolls from fairs and markets, and his right of
                granting patents of nobility and of legitimation. More and more the petty
                nobility tended to develop into a Court aristocracy. In 1440 there was a vain
                attempt at a feudal reaction, the Praguerie, so-called in memory of recent
                outbreaks in Bohemia; Duke Charles of Bourbon was at its head, the Dauphin
                Louis took part in it, and even Dunois was compromised. Vigorous action by the
                king in Auvergne stifled the movement.
                
               The military effort which decided the conclusion of the
                Hundred Years’ War had rendered the monarchy safe from internal dangers; but it
                did not allow Charles VII to advance the economic prosperity of his kingdom, a
                task reserved for his successor. There was one figure in the king’s entourage,
                however, who impressed his personality upon French commerce. Born at Bourges
                about 1395, Jacques Coeur was a typical pioneer of industry. He combined
                commercial activity with official duties. He was the king’s silversmith, royal
                commissioner in the States of Languedoc, and a member of the Great Council. He
                enjoyed a practical monopoly of French trade in the Mediterranean and, as we
                have seen, he had a fleet at his disposal. The principal seat of his business
                was at Montpellier, where he owned a magnificent mansion; but he also had
                houses in several towns and his residence at Bourges was a dwelling fit for a
                prince. Charles VII ennobled his silversmith, but later, in 1451, he lent an
                ear to Coeur’s enemies, and accused him not only of granting monopolies, of
                which he was certainly not innocent, but in particular of having poisoned Agnes
                Sorel, who had died in childbirth the previous year (9 February 1450). Finally,
                he banished him on this trumped-up charge and confiscated his goods. Coeur
                died in exile at Chio, where he had taken refuge, in the service of the Pope,
                on 25 November 1456. The great expansion of French maritime commerce in the
                second half of the century derived from the bold impulse given to economic
                activity by Jacques Coeur.
                
               So, at the close of the age-long war, there dawned an era of
                restoration for devastated and ruined France. Already in the last years of
                Charles VII, even before the final victory of his arms, the renewal of
                agriculture and the revival of normal activities gave promise of a speedy
                recovery. The France of the middle of the century that set itself so
                courageously to work with the intention of repairing its fortunes was a France
                that was clearly monarchical, loyal and bound by ties henceforward
                indestructible to the royal dynasty.
                
               One menace alone remained: the power, confronting the France
                that was the king’s, of some great feudal States. Out of the duel between
                France and England, a few favoured lordly houses were able to make their
                profit, and emerged from the war with added strength. Of these, in the front
                rank were Burgundy and Brittany; behind them at varying distances came some
                princes of the centre—Anjou, Bourbon; or of the south—Foix, Armagnac, Albret.
                These were the feudal dynasties which were to make the supreme attack upon
                Louis XI; and to this monarch it was left to break those formidable powers and
                to assure the definitive domination of the Crown over the united country.
                
               
                 
               The last years of Charles VII’s reign are not merely
                characterised by the economic and social revival of France after her release
                from the great war. The monarchy profited by the regaining of its freedom and
                the strengthening of its authority; it started again upon its traditional
                policy abroad, at the same time that it caused what remained of the French
                feudality to feel more and more the weight of the new power of the king upon
                them.
                
               Actually, France had never ceased, even in its worst days, to
                look abroad; even before the end of the struggle with England, as soon as the
                truces of Tours gave the king a breathing space and the prospect of an end to
                the crisis—in fact, it might be said, from the time of the Treaty of Arras and
                the recovery of Paris—the monarchy had begun to make its presence felt outside
                the country and to assume again the role of a great power. The manifestations
                of this activity in the east, in Italy, and in Spain can be clearly detected.
                
               On his eastern frontiers, Charles VII strove to restrict the
                area of Burgundian expansion. Burgundy, indeed, under Philip the Good had become
                a powerful and a formidable State. It had been indeed the true beneficiary of
                the Hundred Years’ War, and had grown out of all proportion. Skilful
                marriage-alliances rounded off an adroit policy, which was continually
                encroaching and was pursued without pause under cover of the conflict between
                the houses of Lancaster and Valois. The duke possessed what at the present day
                is represented by almost the whole of the kingdoms of Holland and Belgium, the
                departments of the Nord and the Pas de Calais and a part of the Somme, and in
                ducal Burgundy and Franche Comte and theirdependencies the equivalent of twelve
                modern departments. Wealthy and powerful, the house of Burgundy was the most
                splendid in Europe; the life of its Court, its art, and its literature were on
                the same level, and Philip the Good, haughty and magnificent, was already
                aspiring to the royal crown which Charles the Bold, in the time of Louis XI,
                was so obstinately to pursue. Charles VII realised the danger to the French
                State from this other State in process of formation on its very flanks. His
                eastern policy, then, was first and foremost a defensive policy. The expedition
                against the Swiss and the siege of Metz were not only designed as a means of
                employing the routiers, but also with the secret intention of interposing a
                barrier to Burgundian ambitions. In this roundabout way the Valois monarchy was
                returning to the ideas of Philip the Fair, to the French tradition expressed in
                the mystic saying of “natural frontiers,” to the attraction of the Rhine. Metz
                resisted, but Epinal, Toul, and Verdun recognised the authority of Charles VII;
                the king even took the Rhenish domains of Sigismund of Austria under his
                protection on the occasion of the marriage of that prince with Eleanor of
                Scotland; and he completed the encirclement of Burgundy by purchasing her claim
                to Luxemburg from the Duchess of Saxony. The reception given at Tours in 1457
                to a Hungarian embassy had the same end in view. Philip the Good had sworn,
                with great pomp and circumstance, at a banquet at Lille, to go to
                reconquer Constantinople from the Turks,thus representing himself as the leader
                of the future crusade. The Franco-Hungarian agreement was a step towards the
                transference to the French monarchy of the direction of Christian policy against
                the Sultan, and up to the end of his reign Charles VII, the heir of
                the great crusading kings, was appealed to by Rome and by the East, to the
                great vexation of the Court of Burgundy.
                
               In Italy, too, Charles VII revived a policy which came to him
                from old tradition; the aspirations of the house of Orleans to Milan, the
                claims of Anjou to Naples, and the French protectorate over Genoa, created
                manifold duties for the Valois monarchy. Among the repercussions of the Hundred
                Years’ War must certainly be reckoned the failure of René of Anjou in South
                Italy and the establishment at Naples of Alfonso V the Magnanimous of Aragon.
                On the death of the latter in 1458, the house of Anjou hoped for its revenge,
                and Rene’s headstrong son John of Anjou, the Duke of Calabria, attempted a
                vigorous counter-offensive against the Aragonese dynasty, represented now by
                Ferrante, Alfonso’s illegitimate son. This counter-offensive received support,
                both diplomatic and financial, from Charles VII.
                
               It was the Hundred Years’ War also that prevented France from
                giving help when it was most needed to Charles of Orleans, son of Valentine Visconti,
                at Milan, in his rivalry with Francesco Sforza for the domination of Lombardy.
                The war which began on the death of Filippo Maria Visconti in 1447 ended in
                1450 with the triumph of Sforza, who won both the admiration and the support of
                the Dauphin Louis; the county of Asti, Valentine’s dowry, alone remained to the
                house of Orleans to provide an opening for future claims.
                
               As for Genoa, which was temporarily re-won by John of
                Calabria at the outset of his campaign in 1458, it was again lost to France
                while the champion of Angevin rights was performing dazzling but useless
                exploits in South Italy; the foolish enterprise of Rent’s son ended in the
                disaster of Troja at the beginning of Louis XI’s reign.
                
               Finally, Spain, where once again Charles VII outlined the
                future policy of expansion which was to be pursued in detail by his successor.
                Two questions forced themselves on the attention of the French monarchy—the
                problem of Navarre and the problem of the eastern Pyrenees. In Navarre, which
                was a meeting-ground of French, Castilian, and Aragonese influences, a
                particularly difficult situation was created on the death of Queen Blanche,
                daughter of Charles the Noble and grand-daughter of Charles the Bad. John of
                Aragon, the husband of the dead queen, asserted a claim to the throne,
                interpreting his wife’s will in his own sense, and disregarding the rights of
                their only son, Charles, Prince of Viana. So the little kingdom, rent by
                factions, was bitterly disputed between father and son. The Count of Foix,
                Gaston IV, the husband of Leonora, one of Charles of Viana’s sisters, acted as
                intermediary between John of Aragon and Charles VII, who, with an eye to
                advantage to himself in the future, favoured the aims of the house of Foix upon
                Navarre.
                
               At the other end of the Pyrenees, Charles VII, who inherited
                through his wife, Mary of Anjou, a somewhat dubious claim to the crown of
                Aragon, was planning a revision of the treaty of Corbeil, which had fixed in
                1258 the Franco-Aragonese frontier at the Pas-de-Salses. A French embassy went
                to Barcelona in 1447 to claim the payment of the dowry of Yolande of Sicily, to
                whom the Queen of France was heiress. On their return, having obtained nothing
                more than vague promises from the regent Maria, the wife of Alfonso the
                Magnificent, the ambassadors took a significant step. When they came to
                Perpignan, they demanded an audience from the consuls of the town, and after describing
                the purpose and the ill-success of their mission, declared that they would hold
                their hearers responsible for the debt. Roussillon was virtually treated as a
                pledge. This was the first indication of the intention to push the frontier up
                to the eastern Pyrenees, the historic boundary which Louis XI was to reach and
                which he was even tempted to overstep.
                
               While these schemes were maturing, Charles VII continued to
                give his attention as much to Barcelona as to Pampeluna. The death of Alfonso
                the Magnificent on 25 June 1458, by putting his brother John II on the throne,
                brought about a definite modification of the political equilibrium in Spain.
                Charles of Viana became primogènit of the principality of Catalonia, and
                the Catalans were already using this title as an excuse for manifesting their
                separatist tendencies, which were soon to develop into a tragic revolution. For
                some time Gaston of Foix had been working unceasingly to bring together his
                suzerain and his father-in-law, and his policy had resulted in the treaty of
                Valencia (17 June 1457), actually a defensive alliance between the two
                monarchies. Moreover, on his accession John II had dispatched to France his
                Constable of Navarre, Pedro de Peralta, to bind still closer this alliance;
                while the Prince of Viana, for his part, formed a league with the Dauphin
                Louis.
                
               To impose obedience on the feudality was the domestic task
                which Charles VII, delivered from his preoccupation with England, had to bring
                to a successful conclusion, simultaneously with his conduct of affairs abroad.
                In this direction, the administrative measures which have been detailed, as
                well as the consequences of the Hundred Years’ War, automatically worked most
                effectively to the great advantage of the monarchy. During the last years of
                his reign, the liberator-king had to take serious action practically against
                only two of his vassals, the one in the north, the Duke of Alencon, the other
                in the south, the Count of Armagnac.
                
               The Duke of Alencon, John II, handsome, affable, and
                free-handed, had preserved close relations with the English, whose side he
                favoured during their domination of Normandy. In 1455, he wrote to the Duke of
                York inviting him to descend upon the Cotentin. One of his messengers revealed
                the plot, and John was arrested by Dunois on 31 May 1456. The Court of Peers
                condemned him to death, but the king contented himself with confiscating the
                duchy and with imprisoning the traitor at Loehes; from this prison he obtained
                his release on the accession of Louis XI.
                
               Graver still was the case of the Count of Armagnac, John V,
                who had succeeded his father John IV on 5 November 1450. A turbulent feudal
                baron, ruddy, stout, and short of stature, John V, like Gaston of Foix, was as
                much interested in Spanish affairs as in French. Like the Dauphin Louis, he had
                formed an alliance with Charles of Viana. His designs on the county of
                Comminges and his actions at Auch, where he tried to effect the nomination of
                an archbishop of his own choosing, brought him into violent opposition to
                Charles VII. Further, John V had displayed a keen and most untimely regret for
                the defeat and death of Talbot. To this offence of a political character was
                soon added the intolerable scandal caused by his cynical immorality. He was in
                love with his young sister Isabella, by whom he had two children, and after
                their birth he had the effrontery to apply at Rome for a dispensation to enable
                him to marry the partner of his guilt. Pope Nicholas V replied with an
                excommunication. John promised amendment, but the scandal continued and a third
                child was bom of this incestuous union. When all means of conciliation had
                failed, Charles VII dispatched against him a punitive expedition under John of Bourbon.
                The count took refuge first in his stronghold of Lectoure, which capitulated on
                24 June 1455; he had escaped thence, and by way of Sarrancolin arrived in
                Spain, whither his sister Isabella had preceded him. Summoned to appear before
                the Parlement of Paris, he had the audacity to present himself; but after
                having exhausted every conceivable trick to stay proceedings, he again made
                good his escape by flight, and was found guilty by default of treason, incest,
                and rebellion. Like the Duke of Alencon, John V was rehabilitated by Louis XI.
                
               So, at every turn in the policy of Charles VII there appeared
                the disturbing figure of the son who was to succeed him on the throne, the Dauphin
                Louis. It was the terror inspired by his heir, so little loved and so unlovable,
                that darkened the last days of the king whose youth had been so unhappy and
                whose old age was even more unhappy.
                
               The king and the dauphin had from early days been in
                opposition to one another. Charles had not forgiven his son for his
                participation in the Praguerie, still less did he forgive his unpleasant
                behaviour towards the favourite, Agnes Sorel, then at the height of her
                influence. If Louis did not actually strike his father’s mistress, as one story
                has it, he did at any rate revile her to her face. In 1447 he was sent off to
                Dauphine, and there he set up his court at Grenoble and took up an attitude of
                independence. While towards the local nobility he displayed an autocratic
                tendency, at the same time he endowed Grenoble with a Parlement in 1453, gave
                his support to industry, improved the communications, founded fairs, protected
                agriculture by a duty on French corn, and provided facilities for the Jews to
                practise banking; in a word, he devised an economic policy which he was to
                develop later as king, and he simultaneously pursued with great energy an
                expansive foreign policy, which took no account of French interests and in fact
                was usually quite contrary to them.
                
               With Savoy he had a secret treaty, and he plotted with this
                power a partition of Milanese territory. Left a widower by the death of his
                first wife, the unhappy Margaret of Scotland, he contracted a second marriage
                with Charlotte of Savoy, daughter of the Duke Louis, on 9 March 1451, and this
                marriage, which he carried out in the face of his father’s express prohibition,
                showed both his ambitions in the direction of the Alps and his growing
                opposition to his father. And when Charles VII reacted against this by forcing
                Louis of Savoy into an alliance with himself (treaty of Clappe, 27 October
                1452), the dauphin took his revenge on his father-in-law in the following year
                by laying waste the district of Bugey.
                
               Everywhere the young prince seemed to delight in taking the
                opposite side to his father. He was now on terms of close friendship with Francesco
                Sforza, whom he took as his model, while Charles VII, as has been said,
                supported the Orleanist aims; in Spain, he exchanged messages and presents with
                the Prince of Viana. Suspecting a punitive expedition, since he was fully
                conscious of the offence he had given, the dauphin took fright when he learnt
                that the king was advancing on Lyons in 1456, and on 30 August he abandoned his
                appanage to take refuge at the Burgundian Court.
                
               While Charles VII took possession of Dauphiné, Louis put
                himself under the protection of Philip the Good. Philip installed him at
                Genappes in Brabant, and, in spite of the king’s effort to prevent it, granted
                him a pension of 36,000 livres, from this asylum the dispossessed dauphin
                tenaciously carried on in all directions the policy that he had previously
                pursued. Beyond the Alps he continued his intrigues, adapting himself in a
                remarkable way to the practices of Italian diplomacy, in which subtle art he
                shewed himself to be already a past master; he supported Ferrante of Naples
                against John of Anjou; he kept in closer touch than ever with Sforza; and he
                pushed his agreement with the primogénit Charles of Viana so far as to
                conclude an alliance with him, opposing to the league of the fathers a league
                of the sons. In England also the same opposition manifested itself. Charles VII
                supported his niece Margaret of Anjou, and in August 1457 the Grand Seneschal
                of Normandy, Pierre de Breze, took and sacked Sandwich; in retaliation the
                English threatened La Rochelle and plundered the island of Ré. When Edward IV
                was victorious over the Lancastrians, Charles tried to raise Wales against him.
                The dauphin for his part associated himself with the Yorkists, and so closely
                that his soldiers were seen fighting at Towton and his standard was flown in
                the battle, under the charge of Philippe de Melun, lord of La Barde. On the
                very eve of Charles VII’s death, his son’s emissaries were encouraging Edward
                to make an attack upon France.
                
               This last episode reveals the intensity of mutual fear and
                hatred that existed between father and son. These sentiments cannot be doubted
                in either of them. Impatience to reign had reached such a pitch with the heir
                to the throne that he had lost all sense of French interests.
                
               In Charles VII, now at the end of his days, this bitter and
                unnatural struggle had bred imaginative terrors: a sick man, he suspected his
                son of wishing to poison him. However, Charles VII died on 22 July 1461 not of
                voluntary starvation but as the result of a necrosis of the jaw which made it impossible
                for him to take any nourishment. It was in this culmination of moral and
                physical ill-being that came to its painful end the career of him “who had done
                so many fine things in France: in his reign, the kingdom of France had not
                merely escaped from the immense danger of English dominance; it had acquired
                the definite conception of its independence, its dignity, and its strength; it
                had linked its destiny with that of the national dynasty; finally, it had made
                its choice in favour of the monarchical regime and of institutions which, with
                their solid framework, were to remain as the foundation of the centralised
                government of modern times.
                
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