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Introduction: England and France in the mid fourteenth century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2013

Susan Rose
Affiliation:
Open University
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Summary

After Edward iii of England had taken the town of Calais, following a siege lasting just under a year, Froissart describes how the king called his marshals to him and puts these words into his mouth:

Sirs, take these keys of the town and castle of Calais and go and assume possession of them. Take the knights who are there and make them prisoners or else put them on parole: they are gentlemen and I will trust them on their word. All other soldiers, who have been serving there for pay, are to leave the place just as they are and so is everyone else in the town, men, women and children, for I wish to repopulate Calais with pure-blooded English.

Why did a state of war exist between England and France at this time, and why was so much time and effort expended on the siege of this town? Why did Edward intend to hold it as an English possession, the clear motive behind the banishment of all its original inhabitants? The first of these questions can be answered fairly easily. This was the final important episode in the 1346 campaign of the Hundred Years' War, the campaign that included the crushing French defeat at Crécy and also English successes in Brittany and Gascony. Hostility between these two kingdoms in north-west Europe was no new thing. Some historians have been inclined to see it as a consequence of the Norman Conquest of England.

Type
Chapter
Information
Calais
An English Town in France, 1347–1558
, pp. 1 - 6
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2008

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