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Medieval Sourcebook:
Hundred Years War: Treaty of Troyes, 1420 and Conditions in France in 1422


The Treaty of Troyes, 1420

6. After our death [Charles VI], and from that time forward, the crown and kingdom of France, with all their rights and appurtenances, shall be vested permanently in our son [son-inlaw], King Henry [of England], and his heirs.

7.....The power and authority to govern and to control the public affairs of the said kingdom shall, during our lifetime, be vested in our son, King Henry, with the advice of the nobles and wise men who are obedient to us, and who have consideration for the advancement and honor of the said kingdom....

24.....[It is agreed] that the two kingdoms shall be governed from the time that our said son, or any of his heirs shall assume the crown, not divided between different kings at the same time, but under one person who shall be king and sovereign lord of both kingdoms; observing all pledges and all other things to each kingdom its rights, liberties or custons, usages and laws, not submitting in any manner one kingdom to the other.

29. In consideration of the frightful and astounding crimes and misdeeds committed against the kingdom of France by Charles, the said Dauphin, it is agreed that we, our son Henry, and also our very dear son Philip, duke of Burgundy, will never treat for peace or amity with the said Charles.

Source:

from F. A. Ogg, A Source Book of Medieval History (New York, 1907), p. 443.


Conditions in France, c. 1422

Charles VI being dead, Charles VII succeeded to his father in the kingdom, in the year of our Lord 1422, when he was about twenty-two years of age. In his time, owing to the long wars wars which had raged within and without, the lethargy and cowardliness of the officers and commanders who were under him, the destruction of all military discipline and order, the rapacity of the troopers, and the general dissolution into which all things had fallen, such destruction had been wrought from the Loire to the Seine--even to the Somme--the farmers were dead or had fled, and almost all the fields had for many years lain without cultivation or any one to cultivate them.

---------- If any kind of cultivation was still carried on in [Champagne, Brie, Chartres, Perche, Beauvais, etc] it could only be done close to cities, towns, or castles, no further away that the watch could be seen, stationed on a high lookout, whence her could observe the robbers as they approached. He would then give the alarm by means of a bell, or a hunter's horn, to those in the field or vineyard, so they could betake themselves to a place of safety. This happened so frequently in many places that so soon as the oxen and plow animals were loosed, having heard the signal of the watch, they would, taught by long experience, rush to a place of safety in a state of terror. Even the pigs and sheep did the same.

Source

from sources in the Vatican Archives,  in J. H. Robinson, Readings in European History (Boston: 1904), p. 443.


This text is part of the Internet Medieval Source Book. The Sourcebook is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts related to medieval and Byzantine history.

Unless otherwise indicated the specific electronic form of the document is copyright. Permission is granted for electronic copying, distribution in print form for educational purposes and personal use. If you do reduplicate the document, indicate the source. No permission is granted for commercial use.

© Paul Halsall, July 1998
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