Here begynneth the first volum of sir Iohan Froyssart of the cronycles of Englande, Fraunce, Spayne, Portyngale, Scotlande, Bretayne, Flau[n]ders: and other places adioynynge. Tra[n]slated out of frenche into our maternall englysshe tonge, by Iohan Bourchier knight lorde Berners: at the co[m]maundement of oure moost highe redouted souerayne lorde kyng Henry the. viii. kyng of Englande and of Fraunce, [and] highe defender of the christen faythe. [et]c.

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Title
Here begynneth the first volum of sir Iohan Froyssart of the cronycles of Englande, Fraunce, Spayne, Portyngale, Scotlande, Bretayne, Flau[n]ders: and other places adioynynge. Tra[n]slated out of frenche into our maternall englysshe tonge, by Iohan Bourchier knight lorde Berners: at the co[m]maundement of oure moost highe redouted souerayne lorde kyng Henry the. viii. kyng of Englande and of Fraunce, [and] highe defender of the christen faythe. [et]c.
Author
Froissart, Jean, 1338?-1410?
Publication
Imprinted at London :: In Fletestrete by Richarde Pynson, printer to the kynges noble grace,
And ended the. xxviii. day of Ianuary: the yere of our lorde. M.D.xxxiii. [1523]
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Subject terms
Europe -- History -- 476-1492 -- Early works to 1800.
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"Here begynneth the first volum of sir Iohan Froyssart of the cronycles of Englande, Fraunce, Spayne, Portyngale, Scotlande, Bretayne, Flau[n]ders: and other places adioynynge. Tra[n]slated out of frenche into our maternall englysshe tonge, by Iohan Bourchier knight lorde Berners: at the co[m]maundement of oure moost highe redouted souerayne lorde kyng Henry the. viii. kyng of Englande and of Fraunce, [and] highe defender of the christen faythe. [et]c." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A71318.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 7, 2024.

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¶ Howe the french kyng could haue no money of the receyuour of Parys. And howe the duke of Aniowe pas∣sed in to Italye / & of his noble chyual¦ry. Cap. CCC. xCi.

LE haue herd here before / howe the parysiens were a greed with the kyng / to pay a certayne sōme of flo¦rens euery weke. This some of flo¦reyns was payed to a certayne re∣ceyuour apoynted by them / but the kyng had it nat / nor it wēt nat out of Parys. And so it hap∣ped / that the kynge had besynes with money to pay his men of warre / suche as he sent in to Ca¦stell. wherto he was boūde / by ye aliaunces that was made before. And so the kyng sent to Pa∣rys to his receyuour / that he shulde prepare for hym a hundred thousande frankes / for he sayd he wold comforte and ayde kyng John̄ of Ca∣stell. The receyuour answered ye kyng{is} letters and message right graciously / and sayd: howe he had money mough. howe beit he myght de∣lyuer none without the hole consent of ye towne of Parys. These wordes pleased nothyng the kyng / but he sayde he wolde puruey right well for remedy: whanne he myght / and so he dyd.

Page CClxxii

And so for his entente (as at that tyme) he pur∣ueyed hym of other money / by the helpe of his good townes in Pycardy. Thus there was a great discēcion / bytwene the kyng and them of Parys. and so the kyng wolde nat come to Pa¦rys / but he abode at Mieulx / at Senles / or at Compayne / & there a bout: wherof they of Pa¦rys were sore displeased. And the greatest sure tie and meane that they hadde / was the duke of Aniou / who wrote hym selfe kynge of Cecyll / and of Hyerusalem: and had taken on hym the armes therof. This duke most comonly lay at Parys / and there he gate moche good to helpe hym to his viage. He gate toguyder so great a sōme of money (that it was sayd) that he had at Roquemore besyde Auignon / two myllions of florens. He entreated so them of Parys by his fayre langage. and by that he had ye soueraynte aboue all his bretherne / bycause he was eldest. that he had of them the sōme of a hundred thou∣sande frankes. But the kyng coude gette none of them / nor his vncles of Berrey / nor of Bur∣goyne. and whan the duke of Aniou had made his prouision / in the springyng tyme of the yere he toke his iourney / & so passed the realme / and came to Auignon: wher as he was greatly fea¦sted with the pope / and with the cardynals. and thyder came to hym the barones and rulers / of the good townes of Prouence / & receyued hym for their lorde / and dyd hym homage & feaulte. and dyd put them selfe in to his obeysance. and thyder came to him ye gentle erle of Sauoy his cosyn: with certayne lordes and knightes / who were also well receyued of the pope and cardy∣nals. And there the duke of Aniou delyuered to the erle of Sauoy a great sōme of money / for thē of Sauoy / who were a great nombre. So than the duke and therle toke leaue of the pope and departed / and toke the way to the dolphyn of Uien / and so in euery good towne they had good chere. And so their men of warre went on before / and at last they entred into Lombardy / the whiche passage was redy open. And so the duke entred in to Lombardy / & in euery towne had great feast and chere / and specially at Myl¦layne. There they were honored beyonde mea¦sure of sir Galeas / and sir Barnabo. and they had of them great riches and iuels / that it were marueyle to recounte it. And in euery place the duke of Aniowe helde astate lyke a kynge / and euer as he went he made money floreyns / and whyte money to pay his menne of warre. And whan they came in to Coustane / and aprochyd Rome / than they kept them selfe nerer togyder than they dyde before. For the romayns / who knewe right well of their comyng / were great∣ly fortifyed agaynst them. and ye romayns had a capitayn an englisshman / called sir John̄ Ha¦onde / who hadde longe lyued amonge the ro∣mayns: and knewe all the fronters / and hadde many so wdyours in the felde / atte the wages of the romayns / as almayns / and other nacyons: in the quarell of pope Urban. who was at Ro∣me. He was nothynge afrayde of the comynge of the duke of Aniowe. and whan any spake to hym and shewed hym howe the duke of Aniou: with the erle of Sauoy in his company / was comyng to Rome warde / by lykelyhode to put hym downe fro his siege apostolyke / bycause they were all clementyns. He wolde than aun∣swere / and saye. Christe protege nos. Christ helpe vs. this was all the fray that he had / and all the aunswere that he wolde make.

THus the men of warre / and the duke of Aniou callynge hym selfe kyng of Na∣poles / of Cecyll / and of Hyerusalem / Duke of Puylle / and of Calabre. And the Erle of Sa∣uoy and his company / costed Italy and Cou∣stane / and the marches of Denconnye / and the lande of Patrimone: and entred nat Rome / for the duke of Aniowe wolde make noo warre to Rome / nor to ye romayns. for he thought to do the viage that he enterprised or he departed out of Fraūce. and in euery place where as he went he kept ye state of a kynge / and euery man pray∣sed hym. And all men of warre lyked well his paymēt. The same tyme in ye cytie of Napoles there was his enemye / sir Charles de la Payx / who in lyke wyse wrote hym selfe kyng of Na∣poles / of Cecyll / and of Hyerusalem / Duke of Puyll / and of Calabre. He claymed to be kyng by rightfull enherytaūce / without any heyre in lawfull maryage / after the kynge of Napoles was deed. This Charles helde the gyft that the quene had made to the pope / but in vayne: and so shewed after his opinyon / by two reasōs. the one was / he sustayned and sayd. and the neapo¦litans ayded hym / in sustaynynge of the same. and the cesilyens in lykewise (they sayd) howe the quene of Napoles / coude nat gyue away a¦nother mannes herytage. and though her gyft hadde bene good / and so alowed in the court of Rome / yet she dyd nat well. for she helde with pope Urbane and nat with Clemēt. these were the questions and the debates / that sir Charles de la Payx layde for him selfe / and in ye begyn∣nyng he wrought wysely. For he sore fortifyed

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and furnysshed the castell of Leufe / the whiche is the moost strongest castell of the worlde. for it is set by enchaūtment in the see / and it is nat passyble to be wone / but by nygromancy or by the art of ye deuyll. he vitailed it for thre or four yere / & had with hym a certayne men of warre and so kept that place: for he knewe well they of Napoles wold nat forsake him though he lost Puyll & Calabre for .ii. or thre yere. he thought to recouer it agayne as lyghtly. for he ymagy∣ned in his mynd: that the duke of Aniou wolde entertayne suche a nombre of men of warre as he hadde brought with hym / the whiche shulde nat long lye in his puyssaunce so to do / outher for faulte of vytayle: or for money. Wherby he thought they shulde be constrayned to departe within a two or thre yere. And than he ymagi∣ned / that whan they were wery and out of good rule / than he wolde fyght with them at his ad∣uauntage. These thoughtes and ymagynaci∣ons hadd Charles de la Payx / wherof he sawe some take effect: or the terme passed that he pre¦sired. For truly / there was no prince christned: without it were the frenche kyng / or the kynge of Englande. that coude kepe four yere to gy∣der suche a nombre of men of warr / out of their owne countreys / as ye duke of Aniou had with hym. He brought ouer the mountaynes a .xxx. thousande fyghtinge men / and to begyn suche an enterprise / behoueth in ye beginnynge wyse∣ly to consyder and ymagin.

wHan the duke of Aniou and his com∣pany / entred in to Puylland in to Ca¦labre / the countrey incontynent tour¦ned to them. For the people shewed / howe they desyred no other thyng / nor to haue none other lorde / but the duke of Aniou. And so thus with in a shorte tyme / all the lordes / cyties / and tow∣nes in that coūtrey / were vnder his obeysance. Suche as had ben in those coūtreyes / the whi∣che is one of the greatest marches of the world. sayde and affyrmed: howe yt for bycause of the great plenty & welthe that haboundeth in those parties / the people are all ydell / and wyll do no laboure. And whan these men of warre were in this countrey / the whiche they founde so reple∣nysshed with all welth / wherof they were right glade. And than the duke of Aniou / the erle of Sauoy / the erle of Uandon / & all the chyualry of Fraunce / of Bretayn / and of Sauoy passed forthe and came in to the marches of Napoles. They of Napoles / for all ye feare that they had of these men of warre / they wolde neuer close gate of their towne / but kept thē styll open. for they thought well / that ye duke of Aniou shulde neuer en in to their towne / with their displea∣sure. for if he were within the towne with all the people that he had / they thought he shulde but lese hym selfe and all his / and they lyst. for their houses were nat easy to be wonne / for they had plankes and boordes: to take away whan they lyst. and vnderneth is the see / so that none dare enterprise there too fyght. Than there was an enchaunter / a connynge man in nygromancy / in the marches of Napoles / and so he came to the duke of Aniou / and sayd. Sir / if ye wyll / I shall rendre to you the castell of Leufe / and all tho that be within / at your pleasure. howe may that be {quod} the duke. Sir quod he I shall shewe you. I shall by enchaūtment / make the ayre so thycke / that they within / shall thinke that there is a great bridge on the see / for ten men to go a front. And whan they within the castell se this bridge / they wyll be so afrayde / that they shall yelde them to your mercy. for they wyll thanne dout / if they be assayled / that they shulde be ta∣ken perforce. The duke had great marueyle of his wordes / and called to hym the erle of Uan∣don / and the erle of Genesue / sir John̄ and sir Peter of Benill / sir Moris of Maum & other. and shewed theym what this enchauntour had said / wherfore they had great marueyle. Than the duke sayd. Fayre mayster: on this bridge ye ye speke of / may our people assuredly go ther∣on to the castell / to assayle it. Sir quod the en∣chauntour / I dare nat assure you that. for if a∣ny that passeth on the bridge / make the signe of the crosse on hym / all shall go to noughte / and they that be on the bridge shall fall in to the see. Than the duke began to laugh / and a certayne of yong knyghtes that were there present sayd / sir. For godsake / let the mayster assay his con∣nyng / we shall leue makyng of any signe of the crosse on vs as for that tyme / and a more redyer way can we nat gette our enemyes. Well {quod} the duke / I shall take aduise in this mater. Therle of Sauoy was nat there present / but he came to the duke sone after.

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