Here begynneth the thirde and fourthe boke of sir Iohn̄ Froissart of the cronycles of Englande, Fraunce, Spaygne, Portyngale, Scotlande, Bretayne, Flaunders, and other places adioynyng, translated out of Frenche in to englysshe by Iohan Bourchier knyght lorde Berners, deputie generall of ye kynges towne of Calais and marchesse of the same, at the co[m]maundement of our most highe redouted souerayne lorde kyng Henry the eyght, kynge of Englande and of Fraüce [sic] [and] highe defender of the Christen faithe. [et]c
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Title
Here begynneth the thirde and fourthe boke of sir Iohn̄ Froissart of the cronycles of Englande, Fraunce, Spaygne, Portyngale, Scotlande, Bretayne, Flaunders, and other places adioynyng, translated out of Frenche in to englysshe by Iohan Bourchier knyght lorde Berners, deputie generall of ye kynges towne of Calais and marchesse of the same, at the co[m]maundement of our most highe redouted souerayne lorde kyng Henry the eyght, kynge of Englande and of Fraüce [sic] [and] highe defender of the Christen faithe. [et]c
Author
Froissart, Jean, 1338?-1410?
Publication
Imprinted at London :: In Fletestrete by Rycharde Pynson, printer to the kynges moost noble grace,
And ended the last day of August: the yere of our lorde god. M.D.xxv. [1525]
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Subject terms
Europe -- History -- 476-1492 -- Early works to 1800.
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"Here begynneth the thirde and fourthe boke of sir Iohn̄ Froissart of the cronycles of Englande, Fraunce, Spaygne, Portyngale, Scotlande, Bretayne, Flaunders, and other places adioynyng, translated out of Frenche in to englysshe by Iohan Bourchier knyght lorde Berners, deputie generall of ye kynges towne of Calais and marchesse of the same, at the co[m]maundement of our most highe redouted souerayne lorde kyng Henry the eyght, kynge of Englande and of Fraüce [sic] [and] highe defender of the Christen faithe. [et]c." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A71319.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 9, 2025.
Pages
¶Howe and by what incydent the
siege was reysed before the towne of
Aufryke / and by what occasyon and
howe euery man retourned to their
owne countreis. Cap. C.lxxiiii. (Book 174)
YE haue herde here before /
howe the christen men had besie¦ged
the stronge towne of Aufry¦ke /
by lande & by see: Settyng
all their ententes / howe to con∣quere
it / for they thought if they might wyn
it / the brute therof shulde sounde / to their
great honours and prayse. and howe they
myght there kepe them selfe toguyder / and
to resyst agaynst their ennemyes: sayenge
howe they shulde alwayes haue conforte of
the Christen men / and specially of the Fren∣che
kyng / who was yong and desyrous of de¦des
of armes / consydring howe he had truce
with the Englysshmen for two yeres to cōe.
descriptionPage ccxi
the sarazyns feared the same / wherfore dayly
they made prouysyon for the towne / and re∣fresshed
alwaies their towne with newe fressh
men / hardy aduenturers / accordynge to their
vsage. Thus the season passed on / and after
the christen men hadde suffred the great losse
of their companyons with lytell wynnynge
or aduauntage on their partye / all their hole
hoost were in a maner dyscomforted / for they
coulde nat se howe to be reuenged. Than ma∣ny
of theym beganne to murmure / sayenge
we lye here all in vayne / as for the skrymys∣shes
that we make / therby shall we neuer wyn
the Towne of Auffryke / for if we slee any of
them / for eche of them they wyll gette agayne
ten other. They be in their owne countrey /
they haue vytayles and prouysyons at their
pleasure / and that we haue is with great daū¦ger
and parell. What shall we thynke to do? if
we lye here all this wynter / longe and colde
nyghtes / we shalbe morfounded and frosen to
dethe. Thus we shall be in a herde case by dy∣uers
wayes. first in wynter no man dare take
the see for the cruell and tyrryble wyndes and
tempestes of the see / for the sees and tempestes
are more fierser in wynter than in somer / and
if we shulde lacke vytayles but eight dayes to¦gyther /
and that the see wolde suffre none to
come to vs / we were all deed and lost without
remedy. Secondly though it were so that we
had vytayles and all thynges necessary with
out daunger / yet howe coulde our watche en∣dure
the payne and traueyle contynually to
watche euery night. the parell and aduenture
is ouer herde for vs to beare / for our enemyes
who be in their owne countrey / and knowe the
countrey / may come by nyght and assayle vs
to their great aduauntage / and do vs great
domage / as they haue done all redy. Thyrdly
if for faute of good ayre & of swete fresshe mea∣tes /
wherwith we haue been norysshed / that
mortalyte hap to fall in our hoost / we shall dye
euery man fro other / for we haue no remedy to
resyst agaynst it. Also furthermore if the geno¦uoys
turne agaynst vs / which are rude people
and traytours / they may be nyght tyme entre
in to their shyppes / & so leue vs here to pay for
the scotte. All these doutes are to be consydred
by our capytaynes who lye at their ease / and
regarde nat the case we be in▪ and also some of
the genouoys spared nat to speke / and sayd in
raylynge to the crysten men. What men of ar∣mes
be ye frenche men / whan we departed fro
Genne we thought that within fyftene dayes
that ye had layen at siege before the towne of
Aufryke / ye shulde haue conquered it / & nowe
we haue ben here more thanne two monthes /
and as yet we haue done nothyng / as for such
assautes & skrymysshes as ye make / the towne
nedeth nat to feare this yere / nor yet the nexte.
by this maner of meanes ye shall neuer con∣quere
this realme of Aufryke nor yet of Thu∣nes.
This comunynge spred so abrode in the
hoost / that it came to the knowlege of the gret
lordes and capytaynes of the armye / and spe∣cyally
the lorde of Coucy / who was sage and
discrete / and to whose coūsayle the chefe parte
of the host inclyned euer vnto. He sayd to him
selfe and considred howe all these doutes were
greatly to be feared / and to the entente to or∣dayn
hastely remedy / he assembled secretly all
the great lordes of the hoost togyder in coun∣sayle /
bycause wynter aproched. This coun∣sayle
was kept in the duke of Burbons tente /
and the conclusyon was to dyslodge for that
seasone / and euery man to retourne the same
way as they came / the lordes prepared secretly
for this. than the patrons of the galees were
sente for / and their purpose was shewed vnto
them / and they wyst nat what to say to the con¦trary /
at laste they sayde. My lordes take no
doute nor suspecte in vs / we haue made you
promesse / wherfore we wyll acquyte vs truely
to you / for if we wolde haue enclyned to the
treaties of the affrykans / they wolde gaue de∣syred
to haue had peace with vs / bnt we wold
neuer gyue heryng to them. we wyll kepe our
faythe to you / syth we haue promysed so to do.
Sirs quod the lorde of Coucy / we repute you
for good and trewe / and valyasit men / but we
haue consydred dyuers thynges / wynter apro¦cheth /
and we are destytute of vitayles & other
prouysions. By the grace of god we ones re∣tourned
in to the realme of Fraunce / we shall
so enfourme the kynge / who is yonge and lu∣sty
and desyrous to knowe the maner of these
marches / and seynge that he hath treuce with
the englysshe men / we thynke small counsay∣lynge
wyll cause hym to come hyther with a
puyssaunce royall / as well to ayde the king of
Cicyll / as to make some conquest vpon the sa¦razyns /
wherfore syrs / we requyre you make
redy your galees and all other vessels / for we
wyll departe within shorte dayes. The geno∣uoys
descriptionPage [unnumbered]
were nothynge content with the frenche
men / in that they wolde departe fro the siege
before the stronge towne of Aufryke / but they
coulde fynde none other remedy / wherfore it
behoued them to suffre. A generall brute ran
through the hoost / howe the genouoys were a¦boute
to bargayne with the sarazyns / & take
their parte / and to betray ye crysten men. The
crysten men beleued this to be true / and some
said one to an other. our souerayne capitayns
as the duke of Burbone / the erle Dolphyn of
Auuergne / and the lorde Coucy / syr Guy de la
Tremoyle / syr Iohan of Vyen / and syr Phy∣lyppe
of Bare / they knowe surely howe euery
thynge gothe / and therfore we shall thus so∣daynely
departe fro the siege. Their depar∣ture
was publysshed throughe the hoost / and
euery man cōmaunded to conuey euery thing
in to their shyppes. Than saruaūtes and var∣letres
were redy to trusse all maner of bagga∣ges /
and to cary it in to their vessels lyenge at
ancre. Whan euery thyng was cōueyed / euery
man entred in to suche shyppes as they came
in / and dyuers barones and knyghtes made
couenaūt with their patrons and maysters of
their shyppes / some to sayle to Naples / some
to Cicyll / some to Cyper / and some to Rodes /
to the entent to go to Iherusalem. Thus they
departed fro the siege of Aufryke / and toke
the see in the syght of the sarazyns that were
within the towne. Whan they sawe their de∣parture /
they made gret noyse with blowyng
of hornes and sownynge of taburs / and shou∣tynge
and cryeng / in suche wyse / that the host
of sarazyns that lay abrode knew therof. than
ye shuld haue sene the yonge sarazyns moūte
on their horses / and came to the place where
the siege had layne / to se if they coulde haue
founde any thynge there. Agadingor of Oly∣ferne /
and Brahadyne of Thunes formest.
And there they sawe howe the christen men
were so clene departed / that they had lefte no¦thynge
behynde that they myght cary. There
the sarazyns rode vp and downe more than
two houres / to se the maner howe the crysten
men had lodged theym selfe at the siege / they
greatly praysed the crysten mennes subtyltie /
in that they had made so many pyttes in the
erthe to haue therby fresshe water. And whan
they hadde been there a certayne space / and
well regarded the galees and shyppes on the
see / some of theym entred in to the towne of
Aufryke / to se their frendes and alyes / and o∣ther
departed agayne to their lodgynges / and
made bost of their voyage / sayenge howe the
crysten men durst abyde there no lengar / and
sayd howe their puissaunce was nothynge to
regarde / and that they wolde neuer more sette
somoche by the frenche men nor by the geno∣uoys /
as they had done before. and of this they
sayd trouth / I shall tell you howe & wherfore.
AFter that this siege was thus conty∣nued /
as I was enfourmed ye sarazins
waxed proude / for they sawe well howe the
genouoys had done their full power to hurte
and to anoy them / and they sawe that this voy¦age
was to their great coste / and yet had won
but lytell / whiche was of trouthe. And all that
season the sarazyns knewe nothing of the deth
of so many crysten knyghtes and squyers as
were slayne at the great skrymysshe / but the
same day that the crysten men departed / they
had knowledge therof / and I shall shewe you
by what meanes. The sarazyns founde in the
felde a varlet of the genouoys / lyenge on the
grounde sore sycke of the hote feuer / and was
nat able to go to the galees whan his felowes
departed. And of the fyndynge of this varlet /
the sarazyns were ryght ioyfull / and brought
him before their lordes / and shewed howe they
had founde hym / than a trucheman was set to
here his examynacion. In the begynnynge he
wolde shewe nothyng / for he reekened himselfe
but deed / and he desyred the sarazyns incon∣tynent
that they wolde put hym to deth. than
the lordes of the hoost / as Agadingor Doly∣ferne /
Brahadyn of Thunes / and dyuers o∣ther /
thought if they shulde cause hym to dye
they shulde wyn nothyng therby / yet rather to
saue his lyfe / so yt he wolde shewe the trouthe
of that he shulde be demaunded. Than it was
shewed hym that if he wolde without lyenge
shewe the trouth / his lyfe shulde be saued / and
to be delyuered franke and free / and sent into
his owne coūtrey by the first shyp that shulde
come thence / outher in to the lande of Geneue
or Marcyll / and also that he shulde haue gy∣uen
to hym a. C. besantes of golde. Whan the
varlet who feared dethe herde this promesse
he was well comforted / for he knew well what
so euer the sarazyns promyse by their faythe
shulde be truely kepte / and also ye knowe well
naturally euery man is lothe to dye. Than he
descriptionPage ccxii
said to the truchman. cause the lordes to swere
on their lawe to vpholde all that ye sayd / and
than shall I aunswere you to all that I shalbe
examyned of / as farre forth as I knowe. The
trucheman shewed this to the lordes / and they
made faythfull promesse by their fayth to full∣fyll
their promesse. Than ye varlet sayd. nowe
demaund what ye wyll / and I shall answere.
Than firste he was demaunded of whence he
was. He answered and sayd / he was of Port∣nances.
Than they demaunded of hym of the
feates of the frenche men that had been at the
siege. He named to them dyuers / for he hadde
kepte often tymes cōpany with harauldes / by
whome he had lerned dyuers of their names.
Than they desyred to knowe ye occasion why
they departed so sodaynely fro the siege. wher
to he answered wysely and sayd. As for that I
can nat tell / but by supposynge / and acordyng
as I haue herde spoken in our host / as for me
I was neuer a counsayle with the lordes. but
as the brute went / the frenchmen were in doute
of the genouoys that they shulde betray them /
and the genouoys denyed it and sayd / they ne¦uer
thought it nor neuer wolde / and blamed
the frenchmen yt they shulde so slaunder them.
Also it was sayd that parte of the occasyon of
their departure was bycause the wynter drue¦nere /
and they were afrayde of taking of suche
domage as they had receyued before. what do¦mage
was that quod the lordes. Syrs {quod} he /
the same daye that ten of our men shulde haue
fought with ten of yours / they lost about a .lx.
knightes and squiers of name and armes / the
genouoys sayd for that cause they departed.
They beleued well ye varlet / of whiche newes
the lordes sarazyns had great ioye. They en∣quered
of hym no further / but vphelde to him
all their promesses / & so he retourned to Port∣nances
and to Geane / and shewed all this ad∣uenture /
and what he had said and herde / and
he receyued no blame therof. Than the sara∣zyns
sayd amonge them selfe / they shulde nat
nede to care for the frenche men nor for the ge∣nouoys
of a longe season after / and said howe
before the towne of Aufryke they had taken no
profyte / howe be it they sayde they wolde take
better hede to their portes and hauens and the
see costes of their Realmes / and specyally to
the straytes of Marroke they set sure watche /
that the genouoys nor venysians shulde nat
passe that wayes in to Englande / nor in to
Flaunders / with their marchaundyses / with∣out
payenge of a great trybute / and yet that to
be by greate grace and lycence. Thus the sa∣razyns
assembled and alyed them togythers
of dyuers realmes / as of Aufryke / Thunes /
Bogy / Martoke / Belmaryn / Tremessyans /
& Granade / all agreed togyder to kepe strayt∣ly
their portes and passages / and to sette ga∣lees
armed on the see to a great nombre / to the
entent to be lordes and maisters of the see. and
all this they dyd for the great hatred that they
had to the frenchmen and genouoys / bycause
they had ben at the siege before Aufryke. thus
they dyd great trouble to the goers and com∣mers
on the see / so that moche yuell and mys∣chefe
grewe therby / for by meanes that the sa∣razyns
were thus lordes of the see / suche mar∣chaundyses
as came fro Dāmas / fro Cayrel
fro Alexaunder / fro Venyce / fro Naples / and
fro Geane / were in yt season so dere in Flaun∣ders
and so scarce / that many thynges coulde
nat be gotte / nouther for golde no syluer / and
specially all spycery was wonderfull dere and
gayson.
YE haue herd here before howe the cry¦sten
men departed for the siege of Au¦fryke.
They all passed the see / but all
aryued nat at one porte / for some were so sore
tourmented on the see / that they retourned in
great daunger / howe be it some of theym re∣turned
to Geane. Processyons were made in
Fraūce for their good spede / for there was no
tydynges herde of them. The lady of Coucy /
the lady of Sulley / the lady Dolphyn of Au∣uergne /
and other ladyes of Fraūce / who had
their husbandes in this voyage were in great
sorowe / as longe as the voyage endured. and
whan tydynges came howe they were passed
the see / they were ryght ioyfull. The duke of
Burbone and the lorde of Coucy retourned
priuely / and lefte behynde them all their cary∣age
and trayne / and so they came to Parys a¦boute
saynte Martyns tyde in wynter. The
frenche kynge was ioyouse of their comynge /
as it was reason / and demaunded of them ty∣dinges
of Barbary / and of their voyage. they
shewed al that they knewe / and had herde and
sene. The kynge and the duke of Thourayne
were glad to here them speke. Than the kyng
sayd / if we can bringe it aboute to make peace
in the churche / and bytwene vs and Englāde /
descriptionPage [unnumbered]
we shall gladly make a voyage with an army
royall in to those parties / to exalte the crysten
fayth / and to confounde the infydels and to ac¦quyte
the dedes of our predecessours / as kyng
Ppilyp and kinge Iohan / for they bothe eche
after other tooke on them the crossey / to haue
gone to the holy lande / and they had gone thy∣der
if ye warres had nat fallen in their realme.
In lyke wyse we wolde gladly make suche a
voyage. Thus the Frenche kynge comuned
with these lordes / and so the day passed / and
lytell and lytell men came home fro their voy¦age /
and the kynge helde hym selfe that season
most comenly at Parys / somtyme at ye castell
of Lowre / and a nother tyme in the howse of
saynt Powle / where the quene most comenly
laye. So it fell in the same season aboute the
feest of saynt Andrewe / and that all knyghtes
and squyers were retourned fro their voyage
into Barbary / wherof all yt worlde spake. than
in the frenche kynges court there was a mocy¦on
moued for a newe iourney to be made thy∣der.
And bycause that the frenche kynge had
gret affection to dedes of armes / he was coun¦sayled
and exorted therto / and it was sayde to
hym. Syr ye haue deuocyon and great yma∣gynacion
to go ouer the see / to fyght agaynst
the infydels / and to conquere the holy lande.
That is trewe quod the kynge / my thought
nyght and day is on none other thyng. and as
I was enfourmed / it was ye lord of Tremoyle
and sir Iohan Mercier that had these wordes
to the king / for they owed their fauour to pope
Clement beynge at Auignon. and loke what
they two sayd ye kyng wolde agre to them / for
they were most speciall in fauour. Than they
sayd to the kynge. Syr ye can nat with good
conscience take on you this voyage / with out
first the church be all one. syr begyn first at the
heed / than your enterprise shall take good con¦clusyon.
Why quod the kynge where wolde ye
haue me to begyn? Syr quod they at this pre¦sent
tyme ye be nat charged with any great bu¦synesse /
ye haue treuce with the englysshe men
for a longe space. wherfore syr if it please you
this peace durynge / ye myght make a goodly
voyage. and syr we can se no better nor more
honourable a voyage for you / thanne to go to
Rome with a great puyssaunce of men of ar∣mes /
and pull downe and dystroy that ante∣paye /
whome the romayns by force hath crea∣ted
and set in the seate cathedrall of saynt Pe∣ter /
if ye wyll ye maye well accomplysshe this
voyage / and we suppose ye can nat passe your
tyme more honorably. And syr / ye maye well
know that if this antepape and his cardynals
knowe ones yt ye be mynded to come on them
with an army / they wyll yelde them self / & aske
mercy. The kynge remēbred hym selfe a lytell
and sayd / howe he wolde do as they had deuy¦sed /
for surely he said he was moche bounde to
pope Clement / for the yere past he had ben at
Auygnon / where as the pope and his cardy∣nals
made hym ryght honourable chere / and
had gyuen more than was demaunded / bothe
to hym selfe / to his brother / and to his vncles /
wherfore the kynge sayd it hadde deserued to
haue some recompence. and also at his depar∣ture
fro Auignon / he had promysed the pope
to helpe & to assyst hym in his quarell. At that
season there was at Parys with the kyng / the
dukes of Berrey and Burgoyne. than it was
agreed and concluded that the nexte Marche
after the kynge shuld departe fro Parys / and
take the way towardes Sauoy and Lombar¦dy /
and the erle of Sauoy to sende his cosyn
Germayne with hym / and the kynge to haue
vnder his charge the duke of Tourayne his
brother with four thousande speares / and the
duke of Burgoyne with two thousande spea∣res /
and the duke of Berrey two thousāde / the
constable of Fraunce two thousande speares /
with the bretons / raintoners and lowe mar∣ches /
the duke of Burbon a thousāde speares /
the lorde of saynt Poll and the lorde of Coucy
a thousande speares / & all these men of armes
to be payed in hande for thre monethes / and
so fro terme to terme. And whan those tydyn∣ges
were knowen in Auignon / pope Clement
and his cardynals were greatly reioysed / and
thought in a maner their enterprise atcheued.
Also the kinge was coūsayled nat to leaue the
duke of Bretayne behynde hym / but to sende
and to desyre hym to prepare hym selfe to go
with him in this voyage. The kyng wrote no¦tably
to hym / and sent his letters by a man of
honour an offycer of armes / signyfyenge the
duke in his letters the state of this voyage.
Whan the duke had red these letters he turned
hym selfe & smyled / and called to hym the lorde
of Mountboucher and sayd. Syr harke and
regarde well what the frenche kyng hath writ∣ten
to me / he hath enterprised to departe this
next Marche with a great puissaunce to go to
descriptionPage ccxiii
Rome and to distroy suche as take parte with
pope Bonyface. As god helpe me his iourney
shall tourne to nothynge / for in shorte space he
shall haue more flax to his dystaffe than he can
well spynne / I thynke he wyll leaue soone his
folyssh thought. And also he desyreth me to go
with hym with two thousande speares / howe¦beit
I wyll honour him as I ought to do / and
I wyll write to him ioyously / bycause he shall
be contente / and shewe hym / howe if he go in
this voyage he shall nat go without me / seyng
it pleaseth him to haue my company / howe be
it sir of Moūtboucher I say vnto you / I wyll
nat traueyle a man of myne for all yt the kyng
hath purposed and sayd / nothynge shall there
be done in that behalfe. The duke of Bretayne
wrote goodly letters and swete to the frenche
kynge / and the officer of armes returned with
theym to Parys / and delyuered them to the
kynge / who redde them and was well conten¦ted
with the aunswere.
∴ ∴
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