Charles V King of France

Male 1368 - 1422  (53 years)


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  • Name Charles V King of France 
    Born 03 Dec 1368  Paris, France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 21 Oct 1422  Paris, France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried Basilica of Saint Denis Cemetery, Saint Denis, Paris, France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I727  King of Scots
    Last Modified 13 Feb 2009 

    Family Isabeau of Bavaria (Queen of France),   b. 1370,   d. 24 Sep 1435, Paris, France Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 65 years) 
    Children 
    +1. Catherine of Valois,   b. 27 Oct 1401, Paris, France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 03 Jan 1437, London, England Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 35 years)
    Last Modified 13 Feb 2009 
    Family ID F294  Group Sheet

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 03 Dec 1368 - Paris, France Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - 21 Oct 1422 - Paris, France Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBuried - - Basilica of Saint Denis Cemetery, Saint Denis, Paris, France Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Maps 
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    Pin Legend  : Address       : Location       : City/Town       : County/Shire       : State/Province       : Country       : Not Set

  • Notes 
    • Charles VI (b. 3 December 1368 ? d. 21 October 1422), called the Well-loved (French: le Bien-Aimé) and the Mad (French: le Fol or le Fou), was the King of France from 1380 to 1399, as a member of the House of Valois.

      Early Life
      He was born in Paris, the son of King Charles V and Jeanne de Bourbon. At the age of eleven, he was crowned King of France in 1380 in the cathedral at Reims. He married Isabeau of Bavaria in 1385. Until he took complete charge as king in 1388, France was ruled primarily by his uncle, Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy.

      Charles VI was known both as Charles the Well-loved and later as Charles the Mad, since, beginning in his mid-twenties, he experienced bouts of psychosis. These fits of madness would recur for the rest of his life. Based on his symptoms, he probably suffered from schizophrenia.

      Madness
      Charles's first known fit occurred in 1392 when his friend and advisor, Olivier de Clisson, was the victim of an attempted murder. Although Clisson survived, Charles was determined to punish the would-be assassin Pierre de Craon who had taken refuge in Brittany. Contemporaries said Charles appeared to be in a "fever" to begin the campaign and appeared disconnected in his speech. Charles set off with an army on 1 July 1392. The progress of the army was slow, nearly driving Charles into a frenzy of impatience.

      While travelling through a forest on a hot August morning, a barefoot man dressed in rags rushed up to the King's horse and grabbed his bridle. "Ride no further, noble King!" he yelled. "Turn back! You are betrayed!" The king's escorts beat the man back but did not arrest him, and he followed the procession for a half-hour, repeating his cries.

      The company emerged from the forest at noon. A page who was drowsy from the sun dropped the king's lance, which clanged loudly against a steel helmet carried by another page. Charles shuddered, drew his sword and yelled "Forward against the traitors! They wish to deliver me to the enemy!" The king spurred his horse and began swinging his sword at his companions, fighting until one of his chamberlains and a group of soldiers were able to grab him from his mount and lay him on the ground. He lay still and did not react, falling into a coma. The king killed a knight named the bastard of Polignac and several other men (the exact number of victims differs in the chronicles from the time).

      The king continued to suffer from periods of mental illness throughout his life. During one attack in 1393, Charles could not remember his name and did not know he was king, and when his wife came to visit he asked his servants who she was and ordered them to take care of whatever she required so that she would leave him alone.[1] During an episode of 1395-1396, he claimed that his name was George and that his coat of arms was a lion with a sword thrust through it.[2] At this time, he recognized all the officers of his household but did not know his wife or his children. Sometimes he ran wildly through the corridors of his Parisian residence, the Hôtel Saint-Pol, and to keep him inside the entrances were walled up. In 1405 he refused to bathe or change his clothes for five months.[3] His later psychotic episodes were not described in detail probably because of the similarity of his behavior and delusions. Pope Pius II, who was born in the middle of the reign of Charles VI, wrote in his Commentaries that there were times when Charles thought that he was made of glass, and this caused him to protect himself in various ways so that he would not break.[4]

      The Bal des Ardents
      In January 1393, Queen Isabeau de Bavière organized a party to celebrate the marriage of one of her ladies-in-waiting. The King and five other lords dressed up as wild men and danced about chained to one another. They were "in costumes of linen cloth sewn onto their bodies and soaked in resinous wax or pitch to hold a covering of frazzled hemp, so that they appeared shaggy & hairy from head to foot".[5] In view of the obvious danger of fire, the torch-bearers were told to stand at the side of the room. Nonetheless, the King's brother, Louis of Valois, Duke of Orléans, who had arrived late, approached with a lighted torch in order to discover the identity of the masqueraders, and he accidentally lit one of them on fire. There was panic as the fire spread. The Duchess of Berry, to save a dancer who had come near her to intrigue and tease her, threw the train of her gown over him, and it was soon revealed to her that the life she had saved was the king's.[6] Four of the other men perished. This incident became known as the Bal des Ardents (the "Ball of the Burning Men".)

      Struggles for power
      With the King mad, his uncles Philip the Bold, Duke of Burgundy and John, Duke of Berry took control and dismissed Charles's advisers and various other officials he had appointed. Another contender for power was the King's brother, Louis I de Valois, Duke of Orleans. This was to be the start of a series of major feuds among the princes of royal blood which would cause much chaos and conflict in France even beyond Charles's reign.

      Allegations of an affair between Louis of Orléans and Queen Isabeau were soon spreading. As a result, the legitimacy of her children, especially the heir to the throne, was often questioned. Furthermore, the Duke of Burgundy accused Louis of wasting state money on personal pleasures rather than on supporting or defending the realm.

      Philip the Bold's death in April 1404 did not bring an end to Louis' problems. John the Fearless, the new Duke of Burgundy took over and the feud escalated. In 1407 the Duke of Orléans was murdered in the streets of Paris. John did not deny responsibility, claiming that Louis was a tyrant who squandered money.

      Louis' son, Charles, new Duke of Orléans, turned to his father-in-law, Bernard VII, Count of Armagnac, for support. This resulted in the Armagnac-Burgundian Civil War.

      Charles VI's secretary Pierre Salmon spent much time in discussions with the king while he was suffering from his intermittent but incapacitating psychosis. In an effort to find a cure for the king's illness, stabilize the turbulent political situation, and secure his own future, Salmon supervised the production of two distinct versions of the beautifully illuminated guidebooks to good kingship known as Pierre Salmon's Dialogues.


      [edit] The English invasion
      Charles VI's reign was marked by the continuing war with the English known as the Hundred Years' War. An early attempt at peace occurred in 1396 when Charles' daughter, the not quite seven-year-old Isabella of Valois, married the 29-year-old Richard II of England.

      By 1415, however, the feud between the Royal family and the house of Burgundy had led to chaos and anarchy throughout France. Taking advantage, Henry V of England led an invasion which culminated in October when the French army was defeated at the Battle of Agincourt.

      With the English taking over the country, John the Fearless sought to end the feud with the Royal family by negotiating with the Dauphin, the King's heir. They met at the bridge at Montereau on the 10th of September 1419 but in the course of the meeting the Duke was killed by Tanneguy du Châtel, a follower of the Dauphin. John's successor, Philip the Good, threw in his lot with the English.

      (Philip the Good would later make peace with the Dauphin, now Charles VII, with the Treaty of Arras when, under the inspiration of Joan of Arc, the tide of the war turned in favour of the French side. Joan was burned at the stake when Burgundy handed her over to the English.)

      In 1420, King Charles signed the Treaty of Troyes which recognized Henry of England as his successor, disinherited his son the Dauphin Charles, and betrothed his daughter, Catherine of Valois, to Henry (see English Kings of France).

      Many historians have misinterpreted this treaty and the disinheriting of the Dauphin Charles. The Dauphin sealed his fate, in the eyes of the king, by committing treason: he declared himself regent, usurping royal authority, and refused to obey the king's order to return to Paris.[7] It is important to remember that when the Treaty of Troyes was finalized in May 1420, the Dauphin Charles was only 17 years old. He was a weak figure who was easily manipulated by his advisors and even his own mother despised him.

      Charles VI died in 1422 at Paris and is interred with his wife Isabeau de Bavière in Saint Denis Basilica. Both their grandson, the one-year-old Henry VI of England, and their son, Charles VII, were proclaimed King of France, but it was the latter who finally became the actual ruler with the support of Joan of Arc.

      Charles VI appears to have passed on his mental illness to his grandson Henry, whose inability to govern led England to a civil strife of its own known as the Wars of the Roses.

      References
      ^ R.C. Famiglietti, Royal Intrigue: Crisis at the Court of Charles VI, 1392-1420, New York, 1986, p. 4, citing the chronicle of the Religieux de Saint-Denis, ed. Bellaguet, II, pp. 86-88.
      ^ R.C. Famiglietti, Royal Intrigue: Crisis at the Court of Charles VI, 1392-1420, New York, 1986, p. 5, citing the chronicle of the Religieux de Saint-Denis, ed. Bellaguet, II, pp. 404-05.
      ^ R.C. Famiglietti, Royal Intrigue: Crisis at the Court of Charles VI, 1392-1420, New York, 1986, p. 6, citing the chronicle of the Religieux de Saint-Denis, ed. Bellaguet, III, p. 348
      ^ Enea Silvio Piccolomini (Papa Pio II), I Commentarii, ed. L. Totaro, Milano, 1984, I, p. 1056.
      ^ Barbara Tuchman, A Distant Mirror,1978, Alfred A Knopf Ltd. See the chronicle of the Religieux de Saint-Denis, ed. Bellaguet, II, pp. 64-71.
      ^ Chronicles ... by Sir John Froissart, ed. T. Johnes, II (1855), pp. 550-52
      ^ R.C. Famiglietti, Royal Intrigue: Crisis at the Court of Charles VI, 1392-1420, New York, 1986, Chapter X.
      ^ (French) Gérard de Nerval. Rêverie de Charles VI

      Sources
      Famiglietti, R.C., Royal Intrigue: Crisis at the Court of Charles VI, 1392-1420, New York; AMS Press, 1986.
      Famiglietti, R.C., Tales of the Marriage Bed from Medieval France (1300-1500), Providence; Picardy Press, 1992.
      Tuchman, Barbara, A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century, New York; Ballantine Books, 1978.
    • Reign 16 September 1380 ? 21 October 1422
      Coronation 4 November 1380
      Predecessor Charles V
      Successor Charles VII
      Spouse Isabeau of Bavaria
      Issue
      Isabelle, Queen of England
      Louis, Dauphin of Viennois
      John, Dauphin of Viennois
      Michelle, Duchess of Burgundy
      Catherine, Queen of England
      Charles VII
      Father Charles V
      Mother Joanna of Bourbon
      Born 3 December 1368(1368-12-03)
      Paris, France
      Died 21 October 1422 (aged 53)
      Paris, France
      Burial Saint Denis Basilica


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