. The chronicles of Enguerrand de Monstrelet : containing an account of the cruel civil wars between the houses of Orleans and Burgundy; of the possession of Paris and Normandy by the English; their expulsion thence; and of other memorable events that happened in the kingdom of France, as well as in other countries ... Beginning at the year MCCCC., where that of Sir John Froissart finishes, and ending at the year MCCCCLXVII, and continued by others to the year MDXVI . l of France in John count of Nevers. He was again appointed to the THE CHRONICLES OF ENGUERRAND DE MONSTRELET. 137 loud complai


. The chronicles of Enguerrand de Monstrelet : containing an account of the cruel civil wars between the houses of Orleans and Burgundy; of the possession of Paris and Normandy by the English; their expulsion thence; and of other memorable events that happened in the kingdom of France, as well as in other countries ... Beginning at the year MCCCC., where that of Sir John Froissart finishes, and ending at the year MCCCCLXVII, and continued by others to the year MDXVI . l of France in John count of Nevers. He was again appointed to the THE CHRONICLES OF ENGUERRAND DE MONSTRELET. 137 loud complaints to him of tlie outrages that had been committed on his people at the town ofVoltri, and demanded that he would judicially inquire into it. The marshal replied that hewould make so severe an example of that town that all others should take warning from cardinal was then conducted into the city of Genoa, where he was made welcome by thechurchmen and other inhabitants; and this same day the body of the archbishop of Rheimswas brought thither, and honourably interred,—and his obsequies were performed in theprincipal church of Genoa. Shortly after, the marshal Boucicaut punished most severely allwhom he could apprehend that had committed tliese outrages, with their accompUces: theywere put to death in various ways, and their houses also were razed to the ground, that theseexecutions might serve for warnings to others never to commit such cruel Pisa.—From an old print in the Kings Library. The cardinal de Bar, with his companions, now set out from Genoa, and travelled, by easydays journeys, to Pisa, where were assembled a prodigious number of cardinals, doctors intheology, and graduates in civil law and other sciences, ambassadors and prelates, in obedienceto the two popes, from different kingdoms, and from all parts of Christendom. After manycouncils had been held on the schism in the church, they came at last to this conclusion : theyunanimously condemned t


Size: 1889px × 1323px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthormonstreletenguerrandded1453, booksubjectjoanofarcsain