III. The Postclassical Period, 500–1500 > F. Europe, 461–1500 > 6. Western Europe, 1300–1500 > c. France > 1465
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  The Encyclopedia of World History.  2001.
 
 
1465
 
Louis's defeat by the league at Montlhéry. Louis split the league by diplomacy.  1
Louis's greatest rival was Duke Philip the Good of Burgundy. Philip was head of the first union of the Low Countries since the days of Charlemagne, a curious approximation of the ancient Lotharingia that included: the duchy and county of Burgundy, Flanders, Artois, Brabant, Luxemburg, Holland, Zealand, Friesland, Hainault. The dukes lacked only Alsace and Lorraine and the royal title.  2
 
1467
 
The accession of Charles the Bold as duke of Burgundy opened the final duel with Burgundy.  3
 
1468
 
Anglo-Burgundian alliance; marriage of Charles the Bold to Margaret of York.  4
 
1474
 
Louis formed the Union of Constance (a coalition of the foes of Burgundy, under French subsidies), which opened the war on Charles.  5
 
1475
 
Edward IV, an ally of Charles, invaded France; Louis met him at Piquigny and bought him off.  6
 
1476
 
Charles's conquest of Lorraine and war on the Swiss cantons: defeat of Charles at Grandson and Morat.  7
 
1477, Jan. 5
 
Defeat and death of Charles at Nancy (triumph of the Swiss pikemen over cavalry); end of the Burgundian menace. Louis united the duchy of Burgundy with the crown and occupied the county of Burgundy (Franche Comté). Flanders stood by the daughter of Charles, Mary of Burgundy, and was lost to France forever. Mary hurriedly married the Habsburg archduke Maximilian, the “heir” to the empire.  8
 
1480
 
On the extinction of the house of Anjou, Anjou, Bar, Maine, and Provence fell to the French crown. Bar completed Louis's mastery on the eastern frontier.  9
The most significant internal fact of the reign was the development of a clear basis for royal power. Only one meeting of the Estates General was held (1469), and on that occasion the Estates asked the king to rule without them in future. Legislation was thenceforth by royal decree, a situation that facilitated Louis's thoroughgoing reform of the government and administration.  10
Cultural Developments. Jean Froissart (1337–1410) wrote his Chroniques, a colorful history of his times. Philippe de Commines (1447–1511), a Fleming who left the service of Charles the Bold for that of Louis, produced in his Mémoires a fine piece of critical history. François Villon (1430–70) was a lyric poet of the first rank. Christine de Pisan (1363?–1434?), whose writings include Livre de la mutacion de fortune, a major historical work; a biography of King Charles V; The City of Ladies, which lists the great women of history and their contributions; the Book of Three Virtues, which gives prudent advice on household management for women of all classes; and many letters and an autobiography.  11
Jan (d. 1441) and Hubert van Eyck (d. 1426), Flemish painters in the service of the court of Burgundy, perfected oil technique, religious painting, and portraiture, raising the painter's art to the highest stage of proficiency and perfection.  12
The Burgundian school of music flourished under the patronage of Charles the Bold: Gilles Binchois (d. 1470); Guillaume Dufay (d. 1474).  13
The only professional engineering document of the Middle Ages is the notebook of Villard de Honnecourt (fl. late 14th century), a French architect who worked in Cambrai, Laon, Reims, Meaux, and Chartres, as well as in Hungary. His notebook contains architectural plans, practical geometry, descriptions of machines. Jean Buridan (d. 1358) used the concept of impetus as an explanation for motion and acceleration. Nicole Oresme, College of Navarre, used geometrical diagrams to display the variation of physical quantities under various conditions. (See France)  14
 
 
 
The Encyclopedia of World History, Sixth edition. Peter N. Stearns, general editor. Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Maps by Mary Reilly, copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

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