France, central region at the heart of the Massif Central covering approximately the modern departments of Cantal, Puy-de-Dôme and (parts of) Haute-Loire; bounded to the north by the duchy of Bourbon, the west by Limousin, the south by Viadene, the south-east by Gévaudan and the south-west by Quercy. Major towns: Clermont, Montferrand and Riom.
France, centre (modern departments of Corrèze, Creuse and Haute-Vienne); bounded to the north-east by La Marche, the east by Auvergne, the north-west by Poitou, the west by Périgord and Angoumois, and the south by Quercy. Principal city: Limoges, many of whose surrounding fortresses (including Chalusset, Rochechouart, Isle, Châlus, etc) were occupied by routier garrisons during the early 1370s.
Bernard de Ventadour (c. 1293 - 1389?), lord of Montpensier, second son of Èbles VIII de Ventadour and Marguerite de Beaujeu. He married Marguerite de Beaumont.
Bernard de Ventadour (c. 1293 - 1389?), lord of Montpensier, second son of Èbles VIII de Ventadour and Marguerite de Beaujeu. He married Marguerite de Beaumont.
France, centre (modern departments of Corrèze, Creuse and Haute-Vienne); bounded to the north-east by La Marche, the east by Auvergne, the north-west by Poitou, the west by Périgord and Angoumois, and the south by Quercy. Principal city: Limoges, many of whose surrounding fortresses (including Chalusset, Rochechouart, Isle, Châlus, etc) were occupied by routier garrisons during the early 1370s.
Bernard de Ventadour (c. 1293 - 1389?), lord of Montpensier, second son of Èbles VIII de Ventadour and Marguerite de Beaujeu. He married Marguerite de Beaumont.
Bernard de Ventadour (c. 1293 - 1389?), lord of Montpensier, second son of Èbles VIII de Ventadour and Marguerite de Beaujeu. He married Marguerite de Beaumont.
Bernard de Ventadour (c. 1293 - 1389?), lord of Montpensier, second son of Èbles VIII de Ventadour and Marguerite de Beaujeu. He married Marguerite de Beaumont.
France, central region at the heart of the Massif Central covering approximately the modern departments of Cantal, Puy-de-Dôme and (parts of) Haute-Loire; bounded to the north by the duchy of Bourbon, the west by Limousin, the south by Viadene, the south-east by Gévaudan and the south-west by Quercy. Major towns: Clermont, Montferrand and Riom.
France, Midi-Pyrénées; corresponds approximately to the modern department of Aveyron; traversed from east to west by the River Aveyron which flows through Rodez, the major city; bounded to the north by Viadene and Auvergne; the west by the Causses de Gramat and Limogne, and by Quercy; the south by Languedoc and the east by Gévaudan and the Causses du Larzac; to the north-east by the Causse de Sauveterre; (ceded to the English in 1360 under the treaty of Brétigny; held by them until early 1369).
France, centre (modern departments of Corrèze, Creuse and Haute-Vienne); bounded to the north-east by La Marche, the east by Auvergne, the north-west by Poitou, the west by Périgord and Angoumois, and the south by Quercy. Principal city: Limoges, many of whose surrounding fortresses (including Chalusset, Rochechouart, Isle, Châlus, etc) were occupied by routier garrisons during the early 1370s.
France, Aquitanian Basin, modern Midi-Pyrénées region; covering approximately the modern departments of Lot and Tarn-et-Garonne; bounded to the north by Limousin, the west by Périgord and Agenais, the south by Gascony and Languedoc, and to the east by Rouergue and Auvergne; limestone plateaux and deep valleys; upper Quercy extends northwards from the diocesan city of Cahors as far as Souillac, Rocamadour, Martel, Bretenoux and Castelnau; lower Quercy (ceded to the English by the 1259 treaty of Paris) to the south as far as Moissac and Montauban. Held by the English from 1360 (treaty of Brétigny) until late 1369.
France, south-central; historic region between the Margeride to the north-east and the Aubrac to the south-west; roughly equivalent to the modern department of Lozère; principal town: Mende. Bounded to the north by Auvergne, the south by Languedoc, the west by Rouergue and the east by Vivarais.
France, south-west; occupied most of the modern Hautes-Pyrénées; capital: Tarbes; other towns: Lourdes, Bagnères-de-Bigorre, Tournay, Lannemezan; confiscated by Philip IV of France in 1292; ceded to the English crown in 1360 under the treaty of Brétigny; recaptured by the French with the aid of the count of Foix after 1370.
France, south-west; historic county whose capital was Agen; part of the inheritance of Eleanor of Aquitaine acquired through her marriage to Henry II; corresponded roughly to the department of Lot-et-Garonne; bounded to the south by the lands of Armagnac-Fézensac and the county of Toulouse, to the west by Guyenne, the east by Quercy and the north by Périgord.
Aimerigot or Mérigot Marchès, a notorious routier captain. The SHF editors mention that he was the nephew of Pierre le Béarnais, captain of Chalusset, and that he changed his allegiance from French to the English camp; see SHF, t. IX, p. lxix (note 3).
Aimerigot or Mérigot Marchès, a notorious routier captain. The SHF editors mention that he was the nephew of Pierre le Béarnais, captain of Chalusset, and that he changed his allegiance from French to the English camp; see SHF, t. IX, p. lxix (note 3).
The bourc Carlat, a mercenary captain. ‘The name ‘bourc’, a word used in Southern France for a bastard son, often of a noble family, occurs frequently among members of the mercenary companies, and the number of bastards in their ranks is significant’.
Pierre le Béarnais, alias Perrot de Fontans, notorious routier and captain of the castle of Chalusset located outside the town of La Planche in the Limousin, about 14 km south of Limoges between Pierre-Buffière and Le Vigen and at the confluence of the Briance and Ligoure, modern department of Haute-Vienne.
Aimerigot or Mérigot Marchès, a notorious routier captain. The SHF editors mention that he was the nephew of Pierre le Béarnais, captain of Chalusset, and that he changed his allegiance from French to the English camp; see SHF, t. IX, p. lxix (note 3).
Gap: sampling SHF 2-94syncD’autre part en Auvergne et en Limosin ave noient presque tous les jours fais
d’armes et merveilleuses emprises. Et par especial, dont ce fut grant damage pour le païs, li castiaux de Mont Ventadour en
Auvergne, qui est uns dez fors chastiaux dou monde, fu trais
et vendus a I Breton, le plus cruel et le plus auster de tous les autres,
qui s’appelloit Joffrois Tieste Noire. Et je vous diray comment il heut. Li
contes de Ventadour et de Montpenséestois uns anciens et simples preudons qui plus ne s’armoit. Mais se tenoit toust cois en son castel. Chis contes avoit
avoec lui uns escuiers qui s’apielloit Ponces dou Bois,
liquels l’avoit servi longhement et trop petit avoit pourfité en son service et veoit que
nul pourfit d’or ne d’argent il n’i pooit avoir. Si s’avisa d’un mauvais avis qu’il
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