Premium pages left without account:

Auction archive: Lot number 7

(King of England and Lord of Ireland, and Duke of Aquitaine, 1421-71) Indenture …

Auction 18.10.2012
18 Oct 2012
Estimate
£1,000 - £1,500
ca. US$1,608 - US$2,412
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 7

(King of England and Lord of Ireland, and Duke of Aquitaine, 1421-71) Indenture …

Auction 18.10.2012
18 Oct 2012
Estimate
£1,000 - £1,500
ca. US$1,608 - US$2,412
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

(King of England and Lord of Ireland, and Duke of Aquitaine, 1421-71) Indenture agreement between Henry VI and Jean Salvain [Sir John Salvin], knight, royal councillor, a contract by Salvain, Captain of Château Gaillard, for the period of one year from 29 June 1444, following the advice and consideration of Richard, Duke of York, lieutenant general and governor of France and Normandy, for the defence of Château Gaillard Jean Salvain is obliged to maintain two mounted lancers, eight foot lancers and thirty archers, of which one eighth only of his men may be French, the remaining must be English, Irish, Welsh or Gascons, among his troops he should never recruit a captain or any person participated in the horrible murders committed in the area of St-Pierre-sur-Dives [near Lisieux] by Walter Houx and his accomplices, he may retain in his service a gunner ("cannonier"), an armourer, a bowmaker and a crossbowmaker, soldiers should be properly equipped and the captain (Salvain), his lieutenant and his troops should be garrisoned at Château Gaillard, and the captain to be responsible for any misdeeds of his troops, if he fails in any of his obligations the king or the lieutenant-general of France may transfer his duties to any other person, manuscript in French, on vellum, in a chancellery hand, in brown ink, 40 lines, indented at head, without seal, folds, slightly creased, lightly soiled, 273 x 657mm., Honfleur, 26th June 1444. *** The defence of the Vexin, Normandy and Lancastrian France under the lieutenancy of Richard Duke of York.. âteau Gaillard. The castle was constructed in 1196 by Richard I to protect the Vexin from French incursions and was a long running source of contention between the two kingdoms. Although by the 1440's the castle was over two hundred years old its strategic value was still high and it changed hands repeatedly during the Hundred Years War. It was finally taken by the French for the last time in 1449. 1444, the year of Henry VI's negotiations to marry Margaret of Anjou. "By the end of January 1444, the English council had taken the weighty decision to pursue the possibility of a marriage alliance with a French princess, and probably by that stage Margaret's name was being considered. By 1 February it was resolved to send Suffolk to France... to negotiate with Charles VII's representatives a termination of the war and the conclusion of a marriage. It quickly became apparent that there was no likelihood of the French making any significant concessions to English, who appear to have requested acknowledgement of their possession, without homage, of Gascony and Normandy, setting aside for the moment the intractable question of the crown of France. Charles VII was not in such a precarious military position that he felt it necessary to discuss the dismemberment of his kingdom or the alienation of his rights. The arrangements for the marriage between Henry VI and Margaret were made two days later." - Ralph A. Griffiths. The Reign of King Henry VI: The exercise of royal authority, 1422-1461, 1981. Richard Duke of York (1411-60), magnate and claimant to the English throne. "He was descended from Edward III through both parents, his father being the son of that king's fourth son, Edmund of Langley, first duke of York, and his mother the great-granddaughter of Edward's second son, Lionel of Antwerp, duke of Clarence. As lieutenant of France for the second time York became embroiled in the government's various diplomatic initiatives, including the moves associated with the truce of Tours. It has often been assumed that Duke Richard was hostile the peace negotiations of the 1440s, but there is absolutely no evidence for this. While the confusions of policy in the early years of the decade must have been exasperating for anyone charged with responsibility for the defence of Lancastrian France, there is nothing to suggest that York preferred war to diplomacy as a means of preserving English interests. As the plan to see

Auction archive: Lot number 7
Auction:
Datum:
18 Oct 2012
Auction house:
Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions
16-17 Pall Mall
St James’s
London, SW1Y 5LU
United Kingdom
info@dreweatts.com
+44 (0)20 78398880
Beschreibung:

(King of England and Lord of Ireland, and Duke of Aquitaine, 1421-71) Indenture agreement between Henry VI and Jean Salvain [Sir John Salvin], knight, royal councillor, a contract by Salvain, Captain of Château Gaillard, for the period of one year from 29 June 1444, following the advice and consideration of Richard, Duke of York, lieutenant general and governor of France and Normandy, for the defence of Château Gaillard Jean Salvain is obliged to maintain two mounted lancers, eight foot lancers and thirty archers, of which one eighth only of his men may be French, the remaining must be English, Irish, Welsh or Gascons, among his troops he should never recruit a captain or any person participated in the horrible murders committed in the area of St-Pierre-sur-Dives [near Lisieux] by Walter Houx and his accomplices, he may retain in his service a gunner ("cannonier"), an armourer, a bowmaker and a crossbowmaker, soldiers should be properly equipped and the captain (Salvain), his lieutenant and his troops should be garrisoned at Château Gaillard, and the captain to be responsible for any misdeeds of his troops, if he fails in any of his obligations the king or the lieutenant-general of France may transfer his duties to any other person, manuscript in French, on vellum, in a chancellery hand, in brown ink, 40 lines, indented at head, without seal, folds, slightly creased, lightly soiled, 273 x 657mm., Honfleur, 26th June 1444. *** The defence of the Vexin, Normandy and Lancastrian France under the lieutenancy of Richard Duke of York.. âteau Gaillard. The castle was constructed in 1196 by Richard I to protect the Vexin from French incursions and was a long running source of contention between the two kingdoms. Although by the 1440's the castle was over two hundred years old its strategic value was still high and it changed hands repeatedly during the Hundred Years War. It was finally taken by the French for the last time in 1449. 1444, the year of Henry VI's negotiations to marry Margaret of Anjou. "By the end of January 1444, the English council had taken the weighty decision to pursue the possibility of a marriage alliance with a French princess, and probably by that stage Margaret's name was being considered. By 1 February it was resolved to send Suffolk to France... to negotiate with Charles VII's representatives a termination of the war and the conclusion of a marriage. It quickly became apparent that there was no likelihood of the French making any significant concessions to English, who appear to have requested acknowledgement of their possession, without homage, of Gascony and Normandy, setting aside for the moment the intractable question of the crown of France. Charles VII was not in such a precarious military position that he felt it necessary to discuss the dismemberment of his kingdom or the alienation of his rights. The arrangements for the marriage between Henry VI and Margaret were made two days later." - Ralph A. Griffiths. The Reign of King Henry VI: The exercise of royal authority, 1422-1461, 1981. Richard Duke of York (1411-60), magnate and claimant to the English throne. "He was descended from Edward III through both parents, his father being the son of that king's fourth son, Edmund of Langley, first duke of York, and his mother the great-granddaughter of Edward's second son, Lionel of Antwerp, duke of Clarence. As lieutenant of France for the second time York became embroiled in the government's various diplomatic initiatives, including the moves associated with the truce of Tours. It has often been assumed that Duke Richard was hostile the peace negotiations of the 1440s, but there is absolutely no evidence for this. While the confusions of policy in the early years of the decade must have been exasperating for anyone charged with responsibility for the defence of Lancastrian France, there is nothing to suggest that York preferred war to diplomacy as a means of preserving English interests. As the plan to see

Auction archive: Lot number 7
Auction:
Datum:
18 Oct 2012
Auction house:
Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions
16-17 Pall Mall
St James’s
London, SW1Y 5LU
United Kingdom
info@dreweatts.com
+44 (0)20 78398880
Try LotSearch

Try LotSearch and its premium features for 7 days - without any costs!

  • Search lots and bid
  • Price database and artist analysis
  • Alerts for your searches
Create an alert now!

Be notified automatically about new items in upcoming auctions.

Create an alert