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Cursed Kings

par Jonathan Sumption

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Jonathan Sumption's Cursed Kings is the eagerly anticipated fourth volume in what Allan Massie has called "one of the great historical works of our time." Cursed Kings tells the story of the destruction of France by the madness of its king and the greed and violence of his family. In the early fifteenth century France, Europe's strongest and most populous state, suffered a complete internal collapse. As the warring parties within fought for the spoils of the kingdom under the vacant gaze of the mad King Charles VI, the country was left at the mercy of one of the most remarkable rulers of the European Middle Ages: Henry V of England, who had destroyed the French army on the field of Agincourt in October 1415 and left most of France's leadership dead. Sumption recounts in extraordinary detail the relentless campaign of conquest that brought Henry to the streets and palaces of Paris within just a few years. He died at the age of thirty-six in a French royal castle in 1422, just two months before he would have become king of France. Six centuries later, these extraordinary events are overlaid by the resounding words of Shakespeare and the potent national myths of England and France. In Cursed Kings, Jonathan Sumption strips away the layers to rediscover the personalities and events that lie beneath.… (plus d'informations)
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Coping manfully with the mass of data, Jonathan Sumpton has completed Volume IV of a big book on a big war. While this will be a five volume work, I await the final volume as eagerly as I am waiting for the completion of Chronicles of Ice and Fire. There is a similarity of theme in these works. If there is no effective king to control matters, even the largest European Feudal state drops into a pit of vipers. Plague, local warlords indulging in cycles of revenge, and external ambitions all wreak havoc on the state. France, with a mad king, and a blood feud between the houses of Burgundy and Armagnac nearly falls victim to a well-organized, and ambitious neighbour, Henry V of England. This volume chronicles the complete dissolution of the French, and covers what has to be the lowest point of the conflict for them. The prose is clear, the research immense, and the maps, alas second-rate, but thus the weakest part of the work. Read, and Reread this book while waiting for George Martin to finish his opus. You'll find a lot of resemblances, and, this is all real! ( )
  DinadansFriend | Mar 18, 2017 |
An immensely detailed account of the fourth section of the Hundred Years War in this monumental series. This volume covers from a state visit by the Byzantine emperor to Paris in June 1400 --a reminder that despite Charles VI's madness, France was still doing well t that point -- through the Armagnac/Burgundian civil wars and English involvement down through the classic Agincourt (judging fro reviews, this writer's following Anne Curry in making this less heroic than the usual tradition has upset some readers) and on to the deaths of Henry V and Charles VI. To me, the most significant aspect was the realization that in 1406 the French really seemed on the verge of eliminating the English presence in Guyenne, until Duke Louis of Orleans' siege of Bourg failed. Another point that struck me is that it is often said the coming of canon favored royal power against the noble castles, but the account of the French civil war shows that the artillery of Duke John the Fearless of Burgundy strengthened him as an over-mighty subject rather than the feeble royalty or his rivals. ( )
  antiquary | Dec 26, 2015 |
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Jonathan Sumption's Cursed Kings is the eagerly anticipated fourth volume in what Allan Massie has called "one of the great historical works of our time." Cursed Kings tells the story of the destruction of France by the madness of its king and the greed and violence of his family. In the early fifteenth century France, Europe's strongest and most populous state, suffered a complete internal collapse. As the warring parties within fought for the spoils of the kingdom under the vacant gaze of the mad King Charles VI, the country was left at the mercy of one of the most remarkable rulers of the European Middle Ages: Henry V of England, who had destroyed the French army on the field of Agincourt in October 1415 and left most of France's leadership dead. Sumption recounts in extraordinary detail the relentless campaign of conquest that brought Henry to the streets and palaces of Paris within just a few years. He died at the age of thirty-six in a French royal castle in 1422, just two months before he would have become king of France. Six centuries later, these extraordinary events are overlaid by the resounding words of Shakespeare and the potent national myths of England and France. In Cursed Kings, Jonathan Sumption strips away the layers to rediscover the personalities and events that lie beneath.

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