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The chronicles of Enguerrand de Monstrelet, Vol. 01 [of 13] cover

The chronicles of Enguerrand de Monstrelet, Vol. 01 [of 13]

Chapter 22: CHAP. XVII.
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About This Book

A chronological, chaptered narrative records turbulent medieval politics and warfare, detailing civil strife between rival noble factions, episodes of foreign occupation and their reversal, diplomatic negotiations, sieges and battles, naval actions, tournaments, and public ceremonies. The text assembles proclamations, challenges and deeds of arms, ecclesiastical and administrative notices, and concise biographical sketches, frequently with close attention to regional actors and military detail. Its episodic, documentary approach emphasizes shifting allegiances, legal actions, and the interplay of martial and courtly life, offering a continuous historical account of political events and social practices across the period it covers.

CHAP. XVII.

CHARLES KING OF NAVARRE NEGOTIATES WITH THE KING OF FRANCE, AND OBTAINS THE DUCHY OF NEMOURS.—DUKE PHILIP OF BURGUNDY MAKES A JOURNEY TO BAR-LE-DUC AND TO BRUSSELS.

At this same season, Charles[65] king of Navarre came to Paris to wait on the king. He negotiated so successfully with the king and his privy council that he obtained a gift of the castle of Nemours, with some of its dependant castlewicks, which territory was made a duchy. He instantly did homage for it, and at the same time surrendered to the king the castle of Cherbourg, the county of Evreux[66], and all other lordships he possessed within the kingdom of France, renouncing all claim or profit in them to the king and to his successors, on consideration, that with this duchy of Nemours the king of France engaged to pay him two hundred thousand gold crowns of the coin of the king our lord.

When this was done, duke Philip of Burgundy left Paris to go to Bar-le-Duc, to attend the funeral of his sister the duchess of Bar[67], who had died there. After this ceremony, he went to his town of Arras, where the duchess was, and there celebrated the feast of Easter. He then went to Brussels in Brabant, to the duchess’s, grandmother[68] to his wife, who had sent for him, to resign into his hands the government of the country; but he was there seized with an alarming illness, and caused himself to be carried to Halle, as will be more fully shewn hereafter.