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Amende honorable, what, note, ii, |

285

Amiennois, the, great disorders are
committed by the French in, i,
608

Amiens, the inhabitants of, refuse to
attach themselves to the Orleans
faction, i, 163; the king's pro-
clamation to, 195; the people of,
rise against the levying of some
taxes which were intended to be
laid on them, ii, 21

Amont, the lord d', offers his ser-
vices to the duke of Bedford, i,
605

Ampulla, the holy, brought to
Louis XI. when sick at Plessis-
le-parc, ii, 454
Angers, bishop of, extraordinary
event at a trial between him and
a burgher of Paris, ii, 300
Anglure, the castle of, besieged by
the lord de Barbasan, i, 588
Angora, battle of, between Tamer-
lane and Bajazet, i, 30
Angoulême, the count of, pledged to
the English, i, 228
Angoulême, Madame d', mother of
Francis I., is present at his coro-
nation, ii, 515

Anjou is invaded by the earl of
Somerset, ii, 129

Anne, duchess of Bedford, dies at
Paris, i, 610

Anne, duchess of Brittany, married
to Charles VIII., ii, 459; is
crowned, and makes her public
entry into Paris, 460; dies, 512
Anthony, duke of Limbourg, takes
possession of that duchy, and
Maestricht, i, 50
Anthony of Brabant marries Eliza-
beth, daughter of John duke of
Luxembourg, i, 144; slain at the
battle of Azincourt, 343
Anthony de Bethune, sir, is captured

in his castle of Auchel, i, 584
Anthony de Vienne, is killed at
Compiègne, i, 583

Armagnac, the count, loses his ter-
ritories for rebellion, ii, 238; joins
the duke of Guienne against Louis
XI., 397; regains his city of
Lectoure, 405; killed, ib.
Armagnacs-See Orleans faction.
Arragon, a doctor of, preaches ve-
hemently at the council of Pisa,
against the rival popes, i, 140;
the king of, is made prisoner by
the duke of Milan, ii, 7; flies
from Perpignan, 405; sends an
embassy to Louis XI., 409
Arras, the inhabitants of, fortify it,
and destroy several edifices which
were around it, i, 307; is com-
pletely surrounded by the king's
army, 309; account of various
skirmishes during the siege of,
ib., et seq.; a treaty of peace
is
concluded before, 311; the peace
of, is sworn to in sundry places,
312, 314; meeting of the com-
monalty and clergy of Amiens to
swear to the peace of, ib.; con-
vention at, ii, 1; peace of, between
Charles VII. and the duke of
Burgundy, 8; the cardinals, &c.,
leave, who had attended the con-
vention, 19; punishment of many
persons at, for sorcery, 270; the
men of, suffer another considerable
defeat from the king's army, 416;
submit to the king, 432
Arthur, count de Richemont, being

delivered from imprisonment, as-
sists at the siege of Meaux, i,
472; joins the dauphin, 505;
makes war on the heir of Com-
mercy, ii, 30; succeeds to the
dukedom of Brittany, 253; dies,
and is succeeded by the count
d'Estampes, 262

Artisans of Ghent excite the people
to take up arms, ii, 62
Artois is overrun by some French
captains, i, 610; heavy taxes are
imposed upon it to support the
war, i, 629; all sorts of crimes
committed there with impunity,
ii, 283

Anthony, bastard of Burgundy, his
expedition against the infidels, ii,
299; returns, 307; goes to Eng-Asti, the county of, is yielded up to
land to tilt with the lord Scales, the duke of Orleans, ii, 146; ho-
345
nourable reception of Chas. VIII.
at, 465

Apostolical letter from Benedict
XIII. to Charles king of France,
i, 82
Ardres, town of, attacked by the
English from Calais, i, 36
Argentan, is taken by the count de
Dunois, ii, 163

Argueil, the lord d', son to the
prince of Orange, quits the duke
of Burgundy's service, and joins
the king, ii, 393
Arkembarc, a Burgundy gentleman,

takes the town of Peronne, ii, 330
Armagnac, the count, refuses to
sign the treaty of peace between
the princes of the blood, i, 393;
is taken prisoner at Paris, 396;
is murdered and mangled by the
mob at Paris, 398

Athalia, queen of Jerusalem, fell
through covetousness, i, 70
Athol, the earl of, murders James I.

in his bedchamber, ii, 47; is put
to death in a very cruel manner,
ib.; supposed reason for his
putting the king to death, ib.
Aubert de Canny, sir, suspected of

being the murderer of the duke
of Orleans, i, 55
Aubert, sir, lord of Canny, is sent
by the king of France ambassador
to the duke of Burgundy, i, 371;
copy
of the instructions given to
him, 372; on his return from his
embassy, is accused by the royal
council, 377

Aubigny, the lord d', wins the town

of Naples for Louis XII., ii, 491;
taken prisoner in Roussillon, 497
Aubusson, the cardinal of, grand
master of Rhodes, dies, ii, 495
Audeboeuf, Pierre, is quartered and
hung, i, 600

Auffremont, the lord of, has the
castle of Clermont delivered up
to him, i, 601
Augsbourg, a virgin at, lives forty
years without eating, drinking, or
sleeping, ii, 504

Augustins, the general of the order
of, preaches before the council of
Pisa, i, 140

Auvergne, Marcial d', a notary.
leaps from a window in a fit of
frenzy, ii, 374

Aumale, destruction of the town of,
i, 368

Aumale castle is conquered from
the English by the lord de Lon-
gueval, i, 561; retaken by the
English, 566

Auxerre, treaty of peace at, i, 225;
the inhabitants of, take part with
the duke of Burgundy, ii, 395;
make a sally, and are defeated,
401

Aviemie, count de, i, 26
Azincourt, battle of, i, 340; Eng-
lish lords at the battle, 341; king
Henry's complete victory at,
343; names of the princes and
other lords who perished or were
made prisoners at this unfortunate
battle, ib., et seq.; many French-
men seek their relatives on the
field of battle, 347
Azincourt, the lord d', slain at the
battle of Azincourt, i, 344

B.

BABYLON, the treaty of peace be-
tween the king of, and the king of
Cyprus, is broken, i, 507; the
sultan of, writes letters to the
princes in Christendom, i, 539
Bacqueville, the lord de, i, 334
Baguay, battle of, i, 458
Bahin castle taken by Sir John de
Luxembourg, i, 599
Bajazet, his kingdom invaded by
Tamerlane, i, 29; is taken pri-
soner, 30
Balthazar, cardinal of Bologna,
elected pope, i, 156.—See John
XXIII.

Balue, Nicholas, his marriage with
the daughter of sir John Bureau,
ii, 379
Balue, John, cardinal of Angers,
employed in various commissions
by Louis XI., ii, 381; his treason
and imprisonment, 389; set at
liberty by the king, 447
Banelinghen, the fortress of, taken
by the English, i, 215
Bapaume surrendered to the king
and the duke of Acquitaine, i,
307

Bar, the duchess, funeral of, i, 30
Bar and Lorraine, the war is re-
newed between the dukes of, i,
44

Bar, master John de, burned as a
sorcerer, i, 107

Bar, the cardinal de, attends the
council of Pisa, i, 131
Bar, Henry, duke of, dies, i, 174
Bar, the cardinal duke' of, besieges
the town and castle of Ligny-en-
Barrois, i, 444; the duke of,
enters Vaudemont to conquer it
by force, i, 592; is combated and
defeated by the count de Vaude-
mont, 594; is made prisoner,
595; his soldiers leave Vaude-
mont, 598; a peace is concluded
between him and the count de
Vaudemont, 611; peace between
him and the counts de St. Pol
and de Loigny, 612
Bar, war recommences between the
duchy of, and the county of Vau-
demont, ii, 67

Bar, the lady of, wife to the count
of St. Pol, dies, ii, 283
Barbasan, the lord de, lays siege to
the castle of Anglure, held by the
Burgundians, i, 588
Barrois and Lorrainers overrun the
county of Vaudemont, ii, 98
Basil, general council at, i, 591; a
council is held at, to procure
peace between France and Eng-
land, 625; council of, a quarrel
arises between the council and
the pope, ii, 70
Bassuel, Aussiel, master, beheaded,
i, 304

Battaile, Nicolle, dies of grief for

the infidelity of his wife, ii, 450
Battailler, sir William, and sir John

Carmien, combat between, i, 135
Batiller, Guillaume, killed at the
siege of Bourges, i, 220
Battle between the Saracen and
Spanish fleets, i, 87; between the
dukes of Burgundy and Hainault
and the Liegeois, i, 121; of Azin-
court, 340; of Herrings, 550;
of Pataye, 555; of Rupelmonde,
ii, 206; of,Gaveren, 218; of Hex-
ham, 300; of Montlehery, 320,
322, note; of the duke of Bur-
gundy and the duke of Lorraine
before Nancy, 429; of Guinegate,
445; of St. Aubin, 458; of Foro-
neuvo, 479; of Ravenna, 505; of
Spurs, 510; of Flodden, 511; of
Marignano, 518

Bavaria, Louis of, is presented with
the castle of Marcoussi and ap-
purtenances, i, 149; espouses the
daughter of the king of Navarre,
150; is driven out of Paris, and
his people robbed, 210; surren-
ders himself to the Parisians,
245; marries the widow of the
lord de Navarre, 267
Bavaria, John of, declares war
against his niece, daughter to the
late duke William, i, 362; resigns

his bishopric of Liege, and marries
the duchess of Luxembourg, ib.;
makes war on his niece in Hol-
land, 388

Bayard, the captain, taken prisoner,

and carried to England, ii, 510
Bayeux, siege of, by Charles VII.,
ii, 181

Bayonne, siege of, by the counts de
Foix and de Dunois, ii, 196; sur-
renders, 197

Beaujeu, the lord of, betrayed to
the count d'Armagnac, ii, 404;
marries the eldest daughter of
Louis XI., 408; makes prisoner
the duke of Nemours in the king's
name, 424; arrives at Paris to
receive the dauphiness from the
hands of the Flemings, 453
Beaumont, the lord, dies of the
bowel complaint, i, 334
Beaumont, the castle of, taken by
the Burgundians, i, 355
Beaumont, in Argonne, siege of, i,

542

Beauvais, the duke of Burgundy is
admitted into, i, 378; besieged
and attacked by the duke of Bur-
gundy, ii, 401

Beaurain, John de, is put to flight
by William de Coroam, i, 622
Bedford, the duke of, made regent

of France, i, 487; is married to
Anne, daughter of the duke of
Burgundy, 497; marches a large
army to keep his appointment
before Ivry, 510; combats the
French, and gains a complete
victory before Verneuil, 511; he
and the duke of Burgundy endea-
vour to make up the quarrel be-
tween the dukes of Gloucester
and Brabant, 515; meets the
duke of Burgundy in the town of
Dourlens, 525; prevents the com-
bat between the dukes of Bur-
gundy and Gloucester, 529; after
a residence of eight months in
England, returns to Calais, 531;
lays siege to Montargis, 536; his
forces in France are reinforced by
the earl of Salisbury, 543; wants
to lay hands on the revenues of
the church, 544; he and the duke
of Burgundy renew their alliances,
556; assembles a large army to
combat king Charles, 558; sends
a letter to the king, ib. ; his army
meets that of the king's, 559;
marches a large force to support
the English and Burgundians at
Lagny-sur-Marne, 605; marries
the daughter of the count de
St. Pol, 614; goes to St. Omer to
meet the duke of Burgundy, 615
Bedford, duchess of, re-marries an
English knight called sir Richard
Woodville, ii, 46
Belle-mocte, the castle of, remains
firm to the Burgundians, i, 309
Bellême, siege of, 306
Bellême castle is taken by the duke
d'Alençon, ii, 173

|

Belleville, siege of, by the Burgun-
dians, i, 630

Benedict XIII. imposes a tax on
his clergy, i, 34; disclaimed
throughout France, 46; his reply
to the French king's embassy, 81;
excommunicates the king and his
adherents, 82; the university of
Paris declares against him, 85;
a renowned doctor in theology
preaches against him at Paris, ib.;
is condemned at the council of
Pisa, 138, 142; causes a schism,
318; dies, 506

Bergerac, siege of, ii, 189
Berry, the duke of, for himself and
the rest of the princes of the
blood, promises to relinquish his
taxes, i, 152; retires from the
court, 154; is remanded to Paris,
155; again quits Paris, 160;
unites with the duke of Orleans
and his party, ib.; he and the
rest of the dukes in the Orleans
faction send letters to the king,
the university of Paris, and the
principal towns in France, 161;
their letter to the town of Amiens,
162; appointed guardian of the
duke of Acquitaine, 167; is re-
fused his request to reside in the
hôtel de Nesle, 187; is banished
the realm, 195; he and the duke
of Orleans send an embassy
to the king of England, 207; is
closely besieged in Bourges, 218;
negotiates for peace, 221; his
interview with the duke of Bur-
gundy, 222; delivers up the keys
of the city of Bourges, 224; is
taken dangerously ill, but re-
covers, 229; is waited upon by
the Parisians relative to the treaty
of peace at Arras, 314; offended
at the appointment of the duke
of Acquitaine to the sole manage-
ment of the finances, he harangues
the Parisians, 317; dies, and his
duchy and county revert to the
crown, 353

Berry, Mesnil, carver to the duke of

Acquitaine, beheaded, i, 250
Bretagne, Gilles de, dies of a dy-

sentery, i, 224

Bertrand de Chaumont beheaded,
i, 450

Bertrand, Jean de, is put to death,
i, 400
Birengueville, sir Robert de, killed
at the siege of Mercq castle, i,
35

Blanc, the chevalier, supposed to
be the great Huniades, dies, ii,
240.-See Noyelle, the lord de.
Blaumont, the count de, slain at
the battle of Azincourt, i, 344
Blaye, siege of, i, 46-ii, 192
Blond, sir John le, i, 337
Blondell, sir John, takes the castle
of Malmaison, i, 537; surrenders
the castle, 538
Bocquiaux, the lord de, retakes the
town of Compiègne, i, 401

Bordeaux submits to the French, |

ii, 194; is retaken by the earl of
Shrewsbury, 201; the men of,
are defeated by the lord d'Orval,
190

Bosqueaux, the lord de, is beheaded,
i, 491

Boucicaut, the marshal, i, 136; the
town of Genoa rebels against him,
146; slain at the battle of Azin-
court, 343
Boufillé, sir, a knight, challenged
by an Arragonian knight, who
fails to keep his engagement,
appeals to the count de Dam-
martin, ii, 423
Boulogne-sur-mer, castle of, sold by

the governor to the English, ii,
329; the plot betrayed and frus-
trated, ib.

Boulonois, the constable of France

marches into the, i, 217; con-
tinuation of the war in the, 228;
are overrun by the French, 639
Bourbon, sir James de, is sent from
France to the succour of the
Welch against the English, i, 24;
takes the English fleet, and de-
stroys Plymouth harbour, ib. ; his
war with Amé de Viry, a Savoy-
ard, 135

Bourbon, duke of, annuls the con-
federation with the duke of Bur-
gundy, and attaches himself to
the duke of Orleans, i, 184;
strengthens his town of Clermont,
185; is personally banished the
realm, 195; fiercely attacked near
Villefranche, 205; his children
liberated, 207; made prisoner at
the battle of Azincourt, 346; is
attacked at Villefranche, 630;
terms of peace between him and
the duke of Burgundy, 634; he
and others form a design against
the government of Charles VII.,
ii, 90; is reprimanded and par-
doned by the king, 92; corres-
pondence between him and Louis
XI., 313; joins the count de
Charolois, 324; takes the town
of Rouen, 329; Bourbon, duke
Peter of, is appointed regent of
France during the absence of
Charles VIII. in Italy, 462; dies,
494

Bourbon, duke of, declares war
against the king, and seizes all his
finances in the Bourbonnois, ii,
353; his great successes against
the Burgundians and Lombards,
415; the king issues a commission
against him, 446

Bourbon, the bastard of, takes the
town of la Mothe in Lorraine, ii,
88; is drowned by order of the
king of France, 106
Bourbon, the widow duchess of,

comes to reside with her brother
the duke of Burgundy, ii, 288
Bourbon, the lady Agnes of, dies,
ii, 428

Bourbon, Louis de, bishop of Liege,

against England, and is slain,
28

killed by sir William de la Mark,
ii, 451
Bourbon, the constable of, lieute-Brittany, the duke of, carries on
nant-general for Francis I. in
a sharp war against the old coun-
Italy, marches against the em- tess of Penthievre, 145; comes
peror Maximilian, ii, 522
to Paris, 264; his quarrel with
Bourdon, sir Louis, his castle be- the duke of Orleans, 267; quar-
sieged by the duke of Acquitaine, rels also with the count d'Alen-
i, 204; is taken prisoner, ib.; çon, ib.; arrives at Paris to treat
is arrested and executed, 365 with the king concerning the duke
Bourges, siege of, i, 218; the wells of Burgundy, 350; is made pri-
of, poisoned by the Armagnacs, soner by the count de Penthievre,
219; the besieged break the 454; after an imprisonment of
truce, but are defeated, 220; the some months, he is liberated,
besiegers decamp and lay siege to 456
it on the opposite side, 221; the
princes and lords within the city
wait on the king and the duke of
Acquitaine, 223; the keys of, pre-
sented to the duke of Acquitaine,
224; the archbishop of, harangues
relative to the object of an em-
bassy to the English, 329
Bournecte, M. fights a combat with
Solsier Bunaige, i, 34
Bournonville, Robinet de, i, 342
Boursier, Alexander, i, 234
Boussac, the marshal de, lays siege
to the castle of Clermont, i, 582
Bouteiller, sir Guy de, deserts to
the English, i, 411

Boys, the lord du, attacks the Eng-

lish fleet near Brest harbour, i, 25
Brabant, duke of, his quarrel with
duke William, i, 132; assembles
a large force at Paris, 163; his
army quarrel with the army of
the count Waleran de St. Pol,
164; slain at the battle of Azin-
court, 343

Brabant, John, espouses his cousin-
german Jacquelina, countess of
Bavaria, who was his godmother,
i, 401; quarrels with his duchess,
who leaves him and goes to Eng-
land, 454; his wife is married to
the duke of Gloucester, 495; his
allies take the town of Braine,
521; receives the bull of pope
Martin, 523; dies, 537
Braine, the town of, taken by the
allies of the duke of Brabant, i,
521

Brescia, the inhabitants of, put
themselves under the dominion of
Venice, ii, 503; taken by the
duke of Nemours with great
slaughter, ib.

Bretons, the, issue in arms from
their country, and spread over
Normandy, ii, 383; take Merville,
385

Bresse, the countess of, lady Mar-

garet of Bourbon, dies, ii, 453
Brezé, sir Pierre de, sails from Hon-

fleur, and lands at Sandwich, and
takes it by storm, ii, 248
Bridoul, Raoul, the king's secretary,

struck with a battle-axe, and
killed, i, 242

Brittany, the admiral of, attacks the

English fleet near Brest harbour,
i, 25; undertakes an expedition

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Brittany is invaded by the English,
i, 540

Brittany, Francis, duke of, puts his
brother the lord Giles to death,
ii, 143; makes complaint against
the English on the loss of his
town and castle of Fougeres,
148; takes Avranches and many
other places, 181; dies, 253,
458; succeeded by his brother
Arthur, count de Richemont, ib.
Brittany, Arthur, duke of, decision
of the three estates respecting
him, ii, 384; is reconciled to the
king, 386; refuses to wear the
king's order, 391; makes peace
with the king, 393; armour
which he had ordered from Milan
seized by the king's officers, 448
Broye castle is taken by the English,
ii, 43

Bruges, sends deputies to the cap-
tain-general of Ghent, ii, 64;
peace between the town and the
duke of Burgundy, 65; the town
of, rebels, 49; the populace attack
the duke of Burgundy, 50; the
men of, lay the Low Countries
under contribution, 53; begin to
subside in their rebellion, 57;
the dukes of Burgundy and
Orleans visit it, 103; jousts are
held at, ib.; a tournament per-
formed at, before the duke of
Burgundy, 385

Brussels, a grand tournament at, i.
548

Bruyeres, the town of, is won from
the French by sir John de Lux-
embourg, i, 619
Buchan, earl of, defeated and killed
by the duke of Bedford at Ver-
neuil, i, 511

Bucy, Oudart de, attorney-general
of Arras is beheaded, ii, 431
Budé, William, i, 231

Bull of the pope della Luna, by
which he excommunicates the
king of France and others, i, 83
Bull of pope Alexander V., on his
election, i, 142

Burdet, sir Nicholas, is killed at St.
Denis, ii, 117
Burdon de Salligny, sir, arrested by
orders of the duke of Burgundy,
i, 229
Burgundians, the king's party and
they, after the death of duke

John, form acquaintances with
the English, i, 433; and the Dau-
phinois draw up in battle-array
against each other at Mons in
Vimeu, 465; the lords assemble
in arms to conduct thither their
lord from Picardy, 470; march
to meet the Dauphinois at
d'Airaines, 474; enter into a
strict alliance with the English,
before the battle of Crevant, 499;
are defeated by the French under
Charles VII., in Dauphiny, 578;
decamp in disgrace from before
Compiègne, 581; are conquered
by the French during their march
to Guerbigny, 582; are assisted
at Lagny-sur-Marne by the duke
of Bedford, 605; under pretence
of being English, gain the castle
of La Bone, 609; conquer many
castles, 627; appear before Ville-
franche, 630; a truce is agreed
upon with La Hire and his men,
639; the French and they are
on amicable terms in Arras, ii,
6; are ill used by the Londoners
after the peace of Arras, 21; they
are suspected by the English, 24
Burgundy, Philip, duke of, goes to
take possession of Brittany, i,
13; makes preparations for the
marriage of his second son with
the daughter of the count de
Waleran, 24: makes a journey
to Bar-le-duc and to Brussels,
30; dies at Halle, in Hainault,
31; his body is carried to the
Carthusian convent at Dijon in
Burgundy, ib. ; his death univer-
sally lamented, ib.
Burgundy, John, duke of, goes to

Paris, and causes the dauphin
and queen to return thither, i,
38; his petition to the king of
France, 39; reconciled to the
duke of Orleans, 42; obtains the
government of Picardy, 43; holds
a council at Douay concerning
the king's order for disbanding
his army, 48; departs from Paris
on account of the affairs of Liege,
86; reply to his charges against
the duke of Orleans, 90; com-
pared to Cain, 93; his great
pride and obstinacy, 96; covet-
ousness the cause of his murder
of the duke of Orleans, 97; a
cutting apostrophe to, on his
murder of the duke of Orleans,
101; his dissimulation exposed,
102; his contradictory confes-
sions, ib.; reply to his libel
against the dul, 104; the
duchess of Orleans' proposed
punishment of, 113; assembles
men-at-arms to defend John of
Bavaria, 116; is informed of the
duchess of Orleans' demands
respecting his punishment, 117;
his great courage at the battle
near Tongres with the Liegeois,
121; gives no quarter to the

VOL. II.

prisoners, ib.; sends a message
to the king to inform him of his
victory over the Liegeois, 122;
returns to Flanders, 123; names
of the lords who attended him on
his expedition, 124; a council is
held at Paris to consider on the
manner of proceeding against
him, 128; the king's letters of
pardon to, annulled, ib.; measures
against him stopped in conse-
quence of his victory over the
Liegeois, 129; surnamed "Jean
sans peur," ib.; resolves to op-
pose all his enemies, ib.; marches
an army towards Paris, ib. ; pub-
lic rejoicings on his arrival, ib.;
negotiations respecting his peace
with the king, 130; terms of his
reconciliation, 132; ceremonials
of his reconciliation, ib.; intreats
a reconciliation with the children
of Orleans, 133; holds a council
at Lille, 145; makes magnificent
presents at Paris, 153; under-
takes the education of the duke
of Acquitaine, ib.; is suspicious
of the conduct of the Orleans
party, 160; assembles a large
army, 161; prepares for defence
against Charles duke of Orleans,
171; ambassadors are sent against
him from the duke of Orleans,
172; is accused at great length
in a letter to the king, 175 ;
greatly alarmed at the hostility of
the duke of Orleans, 181; receives
a challenge from the duke, 182;
his answer to the duke of Orleans'
challenge, ib.; is discontented
with sir Mansart du Bos, 183;
his letter to the duke of Bourbon
reminding the duke of his trea-
ties of alliance, ib. ; writes to the
bailiff of Amiens, 184; invades
the county of Clermont, 186;
assembles an immense army and
besieges the town of Ham, 187;
is deserted by the Flemings, 191;
assembles another army to march
to Paris, 193; much intercourse
takes place between him and
Henry, king of England, ib.; is
in danger of being assassinated at
Pontoise, 194; marches a large
army to Paris, 196; his reception
in that city, 197; leads a great
army to St. Cloud, 198; marches
to conquer Estampes and Dour-
dan, 203; pleads with the duke
of Acquitaine respecting peace
with the Armagnacs, 222; has
an interview with the duke of
Berry before Bourges during the
siege, ib.; rides on the same
horse with the duke of Orleans,
226; has the rule of the nation,
229; is threatened by the duke
of Acquitaine, 242; endeavours
to appease the Parisian mob, 245;
quits Paris in fear, 260; holds a
council at Lille, 265; is in great
fear that his enemies would turn

the king against him, ib.; is
waited upon by the earl of War-
wick, and others, 266; is advised
to march towards Paris with an
army, 267; gives a grand enter-
tainment at Lille, 268; is com-
manded by ambassadors from the
king to make no treaty with the
English, and to surrender his
castles, ib.; his daughter is sent
back from the king of Sicily,
273; writes letters to the king
of France, containing remon-
strances, ib.; goes to Antwerp,
where he holds a council, 278;
writes letters to all the principal
towns in Picardy, 279; marches
a large force towards Paris, 282;
arrives at St. Denis, 284; sends
his king-at-arms to the duke of
Acquitaine, ib.; is positively
refused admittance into Paris,
285; retires from before Paris,
and writes letters to the principal
towns of France, ib.; sends his
king-at-arms to the king and his
ministers, 286; retreats to Com-
piègne, ib.; goes to Arras and
holds a council, 287; writes,
from Arras, letters to the prin-
cipal towns, ib.; is deprived of
all the favours formerly done to
him by the king of France, 291;
holds a grand council at Arras,
and is promised support, 299;
forms alliances and goes into
Flanders, 305; garrisons different
towns and castles, ib.; peace
between him and the king, 311;
marches a force into Burgundy,
317; besieges the castle of Ton-
nerre, 318; besieges Château
Belin, and gives the castle to
his son the count de Charolois,
ib.; peace between him and the
king again concluded, 321; sends
ambassadors to the duke of Ac-
quitaine, 330; takes the oath to
observe peace with the king of
France, 331; makes war on Cam-
bray, 335; the lords of Picardy
are prevented by him from obey-
ing the summons of the king, to
arm against the English, 336; is
grieved at the result of the battle
of Azincourt, yet prepares to
march a large army to Paris,
348; vows revenge against the
king of Sicily, 349; is refused
admittance, with an armed force,
into Paris, ib.; again quits the
vicinity of Paris and marches
into Lille, 350; is called by the
Parisians Jean de Lagny, ib. ;
several persons of his faction are
banished at Amiens, on suspicion
of being concerned in the late
conspiracy, 353. See also Con-
spiracy; a truce is concluded
between him and England, 354;
open war is declared between him
and the Orleans faction and the
king, 358; increases his men-at-

M M

arms, ib.; meets the emperor of |
Germany and the king of England
at Calais, ib.; goes to Valen-
ciennes, in obedience to a sum-
mons which he receives from the
dauphin, 359; swears mutual
friendship towards duke William,
count of Hainault, ib.; sends
letters to many of the principal
towns of France, on the state of
the nation, 362; the foreign
companies attached to his party
commit great mischiefs, 368;
sends ambassadors to many of the
king's principal towns, to form alli-
ances with them, 369; threatens
the lord de Canny, and returns
answers to the charges of the king
against him,371; orders are issued
against him, 377; continues his
march towards Paris, ib.; several
towns and forts surrender to him,
in which he places captains and
governors, 378; crosses the river
Oise, at l'Isle-Adam,379; besieges
and conquers Beaumont and Pon-
toise, ib.; fixes his standard near
Paris, and calls the place
"the
camp of the withered tree," 381;
sends his hera'd to the king in
Paris, ib.; being forbidden an in-
terview with the king, leaves
Mont Chastillon, and makes seve-
ral conquests, ib.; sends letters
to the principal towns in France,
382; raises the siege of Corbeil,
and attends a request of the queen
of France at Tours, 383; marches
his whole army to Paris, 387;
being repulsed, marches with the
queen to Troyes, 388; visits the
emperor Sigismund at Montme-
liart, 391; is visited by the cardi-
nals d'Orsini and di San Marco,
393; peace is again attempted to
be made between him and the
rest of the princes of the blood,
394; his troops take the city of
Paris, and are joined by the Pari-
sians, 395; his badge, a St. An-
drew's cross, is worn by the
Parisians, 397; many towns and
castles submit to him, ib.; carries
the queen to Paris, 399; is made
governor of Paris, ib. ; orders the
government of Paris according to
his pleasure, 406; has an inter-
view with the dauphin, 416; is
summoned by the dauphin to
meet him at Montereau, 422; is
cautioned respecting his interview
with the dauphin, ib. ; resolves to
meet the dauphin, ib.; his last
interview with the dauphin, 423;
is struck with a battle-axe by sir
Tanneguy, ib. ; is barbarously
murdered, 424 ; names of the
principal actors in the conspiracy
against him, ib. ; is interred in
the church of our Lady at Mon-
tereau, 425

Burgundy, Philip, duke of, the

count de Charolois, holds a coun-

cil on the state of his affairs, and
concludes a truce with the English,
i, 429; orders a funeral service
to be performed in the church of
St. Vaast, at Arras, for his late
father, 430; lays siege to Crespy,
434; enters Troyes, 435; the
greater part of his army disbanded,
437; makes a formal complaint
to the king respecting the murder
of his father, 451; marches to
Pont de St. Remy and conquers
it, 463; lays siege to the town of
St. Riquier, ib.; breaks up the
siege to combat the Dauphinois,
464; obtains a great victory over
the Dauphinois at Mons, 466;
departs from Hesdin, 468; enters
into a treaty with his prisoners
for the surrender of St. Riquier,
469; he and the count de St. Pol
depart from Arras, and wait on
the kings of France and England,
471; returns to the duchy of
Burgundy, ib. ; death of his
duchess, 485; he and the dukes
of Bedford and of Brittany form
a triple alliance, 496; he and the
duke of Bedford endeavour to
make up the quarrel between the
dukes of Gloucester and of Bra-
bant, 515; marries the widow of
his uncle, the count de Nevers,
ib.; makes preparations to aid his
cousin, the duke of Brabant, 516;
his answer to the duke of Glou-
cester's letter, 518; returns to
Flanders, and answers the duke
of Gloucester's second letter, 520;
meets the duke of Bedford in the
town of Dourlens, 525; makes
preparations to combat the duke
of Gloucester, 527; the combat
is prevented, 529; defeats the
lord Fitzwalter in Holland, 530;
returns to Holland and besieges
the town of Zenenberche, which
surrenders to him, 531; attacks
the town of Hermontfort, 539;
treaty between him and the
duchess Jacqueline, 542; resolves
to finish the war in Holland, ib.;
escorts the duchess Jacqueline
into Hainault, 543; attends a
grand tournament at Brussels,
548; is made heir to the count
de Namur, ib.; comes to Paris,

556; sends ambassadors to

Amiens, 563; conducts his sister
back to Paris in great pomp to
her lord the duke of Bedford, ib.;
marries, for the third time, the
lady Isabella of Portugal, 567;
institutes the order of the Golden
Fleece, ib.; quarters his army at
Gournay-sur-Aronde, 570; be-
sieges the castle of Choisy, ib.;
encamps his army before Com-
piègne, 573; sends the lord de
Croy to the county of Namur,
against the Liegeois, 575; takes
possession of the duchy of the
duke of Brabant, 576; refuses to

give battle to the French, 583;
his new-born child is christened,
and dies, 584; visits Burgundy
with a thousand armed men, 600;
he and his duchess go into Hol-
land, 609; assumes the title of
count of Hainault, Holland, and
Zealand, and lord of Frizeland,
ib.; his duchess is brought to bed
of a son at Ghent, 612; renews
the coin at Ghent, ib. ; loses
several of his castles, 613; a
treaty of peace is concluded be-
tween him and the Liegeois, 614;
goes to St. Omer, to meet the
duke of Bedford, 615; differs
with the duke, ib. ; determines to
augment his army in defence of
his county of Burgundy, 617;
re-conquers many of his places,
618; keeps his appointment be-
fore Passy, 619; besieges the town
and castle of Avalon, ib.; his
duchess is delivered of a son, who
is knighted at the font, 624; holds
the feast of the Golden Fleece at
Dijon, ib.; attends the marriage
of the daughter of the king of
Cyprus, ib.; returns from Bur-
gundy to Flanders, 626; agrees
on terms for a peace with the
duke of Bourbon, 633; returns,
with his duchess, from Burgundy,
636; is displeased with the inha-
bitants of Antwerp, 638; attends
the convention of Arras, ii, 3;
his duchess arrives at the conven-
tion of Arras, ib.; peace is con-
cluded between him and Charles
VII. at Arras, 8; appoints dif-
ferent officers to the towns and
fortresses that had been conceded
to him by the peace, 19; in con-
sequence of the peace of Arras
sends some of his council and
heralds to the king of England,
to remonstrate and explain the
causes of the peace, 20; deter-
mines to make war on the English,
26; resolves to make an attack
on Calais, 27; his standard is
raised at all the gates of Paris,
29; marches with a great force to
the siege of Calais, 37; receives a
challenge of the duke of Glouces-
ter, 39; holds many councils
respecting the best means of
opposing the English, 48; enters
Bruges to quell the rebellion
there, 50; makes his escape from
Bruges, ib.; resolves to punish
the rebels at Bruges, 51; resolves
to avoid a general action with the
English, 59; peace is concluded
between him and the town of
Bruges, 65; sends an embassy to
the pope, 70; sends the lord de
Crevecœur to the French court to
negotiate a marriage between his
only son and the king's second
daughter, ib.; procures the ran-
som of the duke of Orleans, a
prisoner in England, 100; holds

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