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Philip VI of France

Philip VI (French: Philippe; 1293 – 22 August 1350), called the Fortunate (French: le Fortuné) or the Catholic (French: le Catholique) and of Valois, was the first king of France from the House of Valois, reigning from 1328 until his death in 1350. Philip's reign was dominated by the consequences of a succession dispute. When King Charles IV of France died in 1328, his nearest male relative was his nephew, King Edward III of England, but the French nobility preferred Charles's paternal cousin, Philip.

Philip VI
Philip VI in a contemporary miniature depicting the trial of Robert III of Artois, c. 1336
King of France
Reign1 February 1328[1] – 22 August 1350
Coronation29 May 1328
PredecessorCharles IV
SuccessorJohn II
Regent of France
Regency1328
MonarchCharles IV
Born1293
Fontainebleau, Paris, France
Died22 August 1350 (aged 56 or 57)
Coulombes Abbey, Nogent-le-Roi, Eure-et-Loir, France
Burial
Saint Denis Basilica, Saint-Denis, Paris
Spouses
(m. 1313; died 1349)
(m. 1350)
Issue
among others
Illegitimate :
  • Jean d'Armagnac
  • Thomas de la Marche, bâtarde de France
HouseValois
FatherCharles, Count of Valois
MotherMargaret, Countess of Anjou

At first, Edward seemed to accept Philip's succession, but he pressed his claim to the throne of France after a series of disagreements with Philip. The result was the beginning of the Hundred Years' War in 1337.

After initial successes at sea, Philip's navy was annihilated at the Battle of Sluys in 1340, ensuring that the war would occur on the continent. The English took another decisive advantage at the Battle of Crécy (1346), while the Black Death struck France, further destabilising the country.

In 1349, King Philip VI bought the Province of Dauphiné from its ruined ruler, the Dauphin Humbert II, and entrusted the government of this province to his grandson, Prince Charles. Philip VI died in 1350 and was succeeded by his son King John II, the Good.

Early life edit

Little is recorded about Philip's childhood and youth, in large part because he was of minor royal birth. Philip's father Charles, Count of Valois, the younger brother of King Philip IV of France,[2] had striven throughout his life to gain the throne for himself but was never successful. He died in 1325, leaving his eldest son Philip as heir to the counties of Anjou, Maine, and Valois.[3]

Accession to the throne edit

 
Coronation of Philip VI

In 1328, Philip VI's first cousin King Charles IV died without a son, leaving his widow Jeanne of Évreux pregnant.[3] Philip was one of the two chief claimants to the throne of France. The other was King Edward III of England, who was the son of Charles's sister Isabella of France, and Charles IV's closest male relative. The Estates General had decided 12 years earlier that women could not inherit the throne of France. The question arose as to whether Isabella should have been able to transmit a claim that she herself did not possess.[4] The assemblies of the French barons and prelates and the University of Paris decided that males who derive their right to inheritance through their mother should be excluded according to Salic law. As Philip was the eldest grandson of King Philip III of France, through the male line, he became regent instead of Edward, who was a matrilineal grandson of King Philip IV and great-grandson of King Philip III.[5]

 
Edward III of England pays homage to Philip VI of France in Amiens, from a 1370–75 manuscript of the Grandes Chroniques de France

During the period in which Charles IV's widow was waiting to deliver her child, Philip VI rose to the regency with support of the French magnates, following the pattern set up by his cousin King Philip V who succeeded the throne over his niece Joan II of Navarre.[4] He formally held the regency from 9 February 1328 until 1 April, when Jeanne of Évreux gave birth to a daughter named Blanche of France, Duchess of Orléans.[6] Upon this birth, Philip was proclaimed king and crowned at the Cathedral in Reims on 29 May 1328.[7] After his elevation to the throne, Philip sent the Abbot of Fécamp, Pierre Roger, to summon Edward III of England to pay homage for the duchy of Aquitaine and Gascony.[8] After a subsequent second summons from Philip, Edward finally arrived at the Cathedral of Amiens on 6 June 1329 and worded his vows in such a way to cause more disputes in later years.[8]

The dynastic change had another consequence: Charles IV had also been King of Navarre, but, unlike the crown of France, the crown of Navarre was not subject to Salic law. Philip VI was neither an heir nor a descendant of Joan I of Navarre, whose inheritance (the kingdom of Navarre, as well as the counties of Champagne, Troyes, Meaux, and Brie) had been in personal union with the crown of France for almost fifty years and had long been administered by the same royal machinery established by King Philip IV, the father of French bureaucracy. These counties were closely entrenched in the economic and administrative entity of the crown lands of France, being located adjacent to Île-de-France. Philip, however, was not entitled to that inheritance; the rightful heiress was the surviving daughter of his cousin King Louis X, the future Joan II of Navarre, the heir general of Joan I of Navarre. Navarre thus passed to Joan II, with whom Philip struck a deal regarding the counties in Champagne: she received vast lands in Normandy (adjacent to the fief in Évreux that her husband Philip III of Navarre owned) as compensation, and he kept Champagne as part of the French crown lands.

Reign edit

Philip's reign was plagued with crises, although it began with a military success in Flanders at the Battle of Cassel (August 1328), where Philip's forces re-seated Louis I, Count of Flanders, who had been unseated by a popular revolution.[9] Philip's wife, the able Joan the Lame, gave the first of many demonstrations of her competence as regent in his absence.

Philip initially enjoyed relatively amicable relations with Edward III, and they planned a crusade together in 1332, which was never executed. However, the status of the Duchy of Aquitaine remained a sore point, and tension increased. Philip provided refuge for David II of Scotland in 1334 and declared himself champion of his interests, which enraged Edward.[10] By 1336, they were enemies, although not yet openly at war.

Philip successfully prevented an arrangement between the Avignon papacy and Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV, although in July 1337 Louis concluded an alliance with Edward III.[11] The final breach with England came when Edward offered refuge to Robert III of Artois, formerly one of Philip's trusted advisers,[12] after Robert committed forgery to try to obtain an inheritance. As relations between Philip and Edward worsened, Robert's standing in England strengthened.[12] On 26 December 1336, Philip officially demanded the extradition of Robert to France.[12] On 24 May 1337, Philip declared that Edward had forfeited Aquitaine for disobedience and for sheltering the "king's mortal enemy", Robert of Artois.[13] Thus began the Hundred Years' War, complicated by Edward's renewed claim to the throne of France in retaliation for the forfeiture of Aquitaine.

Hundred Years' War edit

 
Flemish leader as fish seller went to search in French camp
 
Philip VI and his first wife, Joan of Burgundy

Philip entered the Hundred Years' War in a position of comparative strength. France was richer and more populous than England and was at the height of its medieval glory. The opening stages of the war, accordingly, were largely successful for the French.

At sea, French privateers raided and burned towns and shipping all along the southern and southeastern coasts of England.[14] The English made some retaliatory raids, including the burning of a fleet in the harbour of Boulogne-sur-Mer,[15] but the French largely had the upper hand. With his sea power established, Philip gave orders in 1339 to begin assembling a fleet off the Zeeland coast at Sluys. In June 1340, however, in the bitterly fought Battle of Sluys, the English attacked the port and captured or destroyed the ships there, ending the threat of an invasion.[15]

On land, Edward III largely concentrated upon Flanders and the Low Countries, where he had gained allies through diplomacy and bribery. A raid in 1339 (the first chevauchée) into Picardy ended ignominiously when Philip wisely refused to give battle. Edward's slender finances would not permit him to play a waiting game, and he was forced to withdraw into Flanders and return to England to raise more money. In July 1340, Edward returned and mounted the siege of Tournai.[16] By September 1340, Edward was in financial distress, hardly able to pay or feed his troops, and was open to dialogue.[17] After being at Bouvines for a week, Philip was finally persuaded to send Joan of Valois, Countess of Hainaut, to discuss terms to end the siege.[17] On 23 September 1340, a nine-month truce was reached.[17]

So far, the war had gone quite well for Philip and the French. While often stereotyped as chivalry-besotted and incompetent, Philip and his men had in fact carried out a successful Fabian strategy against the debt-plagued Edward and resisted the chivalric blandishments of single combat or a combat of two hundred knights that he offered. In 1341, the War of the Breton Succession allowed the English to place permanent garrisons in Brittany. However, Philip was still in a commanding position: during negotiations arbitrated by the pope in 1343, he refused Edward's offer to end the war in exchange for the Duchy of Aquitaine in full sovereignty.

The next attack came in 1345, when the Earl of Derby overran the Agenais (lost twenty years before in the War of Saint-Sardos) and took Angoulême, while the forces in Brittany under Sir Thomas Dagworth also made gains. The French responded in the spring of 1346 with a massive counterattack against Aquitaine, where an army under John, Duke of Normandy, besieged Derby at Aiguillon. On the advice of Godfrey Harcourt (like Robert III of Artois, a banished French nobleman), Edward sailed for Normandy instead of Aquitaine. As Harcourt predicted, the Normans were ill-prepared for war, and many of the fighting men were at Aiguillon. Edward sacked and burned the country as he went, taking Caen and advancing as far as Poissy and then retreating before the army Philip had hastily assembled at Paris. Slipping across the Somme, Edward drew up to give battle at Crécy.[18]

Close behind him, Philip had planned to halt for the night and reconnoitre the English position before giving battle the next day. However, his troops were disorderly, and the roads were jammed by the rear of the army coming up and the local peasantry, which furiously called for vengeance on the English. Finding them hopeless to control, he ordered a general attack as evening fell. Thus began the Battle of Crécy. When it was done, the French army had been annihilated and a wounded Philip barely escaped capture. Fortune had turned against the French.

The English seized and held the advantage. Normandy called off the siege of Aiguillon and retreated northward, while Sir Thomas Dagworth captured Charles of Blois in Brittany. The English army pulled back from Crécy to mount the siege of Calais; the town held out stubbornly, but the English were determined, and they easily supplied across the English Channel. Philip led out a relieving army in July 1347, but unlike the Siege of Tournai, it was now Edward who had the upper hand. With the plunder of his Norman expedition and the reforms he had executed in his tax system, he could hold to his siege lines and await an attack that Philip dared not deliver. It was Philip who marched away in August, and the city capitulated shortly thereafter.

Final years edit

 
King Philip's funerary procession, which was presided over by the Archbishop of Reims, illustrated by Loyset Liédet

After the defeat at Crécy and loss of Calais, the Estates of France refused to raise money for Philip, halting his plans to counter-attack by invading England. In 1348 the Black Death struck France and in the next few years killed one-third of the population, including Queen Joan. The resulting labour shortage caused inflation to soar, and the king attempted to fix prices, further destabilising the country. His second marriage to his son's betrothed Blanche of Navarre alienated his son and many nobles from the king.[19]

Philip's last major achievement was the acquisition of the Dauphiné and the territory of Montpellier in the Languedoc in 1349. At his death in 1350, France was very much a divided country filled with social unrest. Philip VI died at Coulombes Abbey, Eure-et-Loir, on 22 August 1350[20] and is interred with his first wife, Joan of Burgundy, in Saint Denis Basilica, though his viscera were buried separately at the now demolished church of Couvent des Jacobins in Paris. He was succeeded by his first son by Joan of Burgundy, who became John II.

Marriages and children edit

Philip married twice. In July 1313, he married Joan the Lame (French: Jeanne), daughter of Robert II, Duke of Burgundy,[21] and Agnes of France, the youngest daughter of King Louis IX of France. She was thus Philip's first cousin once removed. The couple had the following children:

  1. King John II of France (26 April 1319 – 8 April 1364)[22]
  2. Marie of France (1326 – 22 September 1333), who died aged only seven, but was already married to John of Brabant, the son and heir of John III, Duke of Brabant; no issue.[23]
  3. Louis (born and died 17 January 1329).
  4. Louis (8 June 1330 – 23 June 1330)
  5. A son [John?] (born and died 2 October 1333).
  6. A son (28 May 1335), stillborn
  7. Philip of Orléans (1 July 1336 – 1 September 1375), Duke of Orléans
  8. Joan (born and died November 1337)
  9. A son (born and died summer 1343)

After Joan died in 1349, Philip married Blanche of Navarre,[24] daughter of Queen Joan II of Navarre and Philip III of Navarre, on 11 January 1350. They had one daughter:

By an unknown women he had:

  • Jean d'Armagnac (died after 1350), a knight [25][26]

By his mistress, Beatrice de la Berruère, he had another son:

  • Thomas de la Marche (1318-1361), bâtarde de France[27]

In fiction edit

Philip is a character in Les Rois maudits (The Accursed Kings), a series of French historical novels by Maurice Druon. He was portrayed by Benoît Brione in the 1972 French miniseries adaptation of the series, and by Malik Zidi in the 2005 adaptation.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ Philip VI's ascension as King was not confirmed until the birth of his predecessors posthumous daughter on 1 April 1328
  2. ^ David Nicolle, Crécy 1346: Triumph of the Longbow, (Osprey, 2000), 12.
  3. ^ a b Elizabeth Hallam and Judith Everard, Capetian France 987-1328, 2nd edition, (Pearson Education Limited, 2001), 366.
  4. ^ a b Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War: Trial by Battle, Vol. I, (Faber & Faber, 1990), 106-107.
  5. ^ Jules Viard, "Philippe VI de Valois. Début du règne (février-juillet 1328)", Bibliothèque de l'école des chartes, 95 (1934), 263.
  6. ^ Viard, 269, 273.
  7. ^ Curry, Anne (2003). The Hundred Years' War. New York: Routledge. pp. 18.
  8. ^ a b Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War: Trial by Battle, 109-110.
  9. ^ Kelly DeVries, Infantry Warfare in the Early Fourteenth Century, (The Boydell Press, 1996), 102.
  10. ^ Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War:Trial by Battle, 135.
  11. ^ The Hundred Years War:Not One But Many, Kelly DeVries, The Hundred Years War (part II): Different Vistas, ed. L. J. Andrew Villalon, Donald J. Kagay, (Brill, 2008), 15.
  12. ^ a b c Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War:Trial by Battle, 171-172.
  13. ^ Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War:Trial by Battle, 184.
  14. ^ Oars, Sails and Guns:The English and War at Sea, c.1200-1500, Ian Friel, War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, ed. John B. Hattendorf, Richard W. Unger, (The Boydell Press, 2003), 79.
  15. ^ a b Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War:Trial by Battle, 320-328.
  16. ^ Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War:Trial by Battle, 349.
  17. ^ a b c Jonathan Sumption, The Hundred Years War:Trial by Battle, 354-359.
  18. ^ "Philip VI". Britannica.
  19. ^ Mortimer, Ian (2008). The Perfect King The Life of Edward III, Father of the English Nation. Vintage. p. 276.
  20. ^ Jonathan Sumption, Hundred Years War:Trial by Fire, Vol. II, (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999), 117.
  21. ^ David d'Avray, Papacy, Monarchy and Marriage 860–1600, (Cambridge University Press, 2015), 292.
  22. ^ a b Marguerite Keane, Material Culture and Queenship in 14th-century France, (Brill, 2016), 17.
  23. ^ Henneman, John Bell (2015). Royal Taxation in Fourteenth-Century France: The Development of War Financing, 1322-1359. Princeton University Press. p. 91.
  24. ^ Identity Politics and Rulership in France: Female Political Place and the Fraudulent Salic Law in Christine de Pizan and Jean de Montreuil, Sarah Hanley, Changing Identities in Early Modern France, ed. Michael Wolfe, (Duke University Press, 1996), 93 n45.
  25. ^ Cité par Patrick Van Kerrebrouck, dans Les Valois, 1990, page 85.
  26. ^ Sirjean, Gaston (199). Encyclopédie généalogique des maisons souveraines du monde Vol.1 Part 8. University of Georgia Library: Biblioteca Universității din Georgia. p. 225.
  27. ^ Ormrod, W. Mark (2021). Winner and Waster and Its Contexts: Chivalry, Law and Economics in Fourteenth-Century England. D.S. Brewer. p. 52.
  28. ^ (in French). AlloCiné. 2005. Archived from the original on 19 December 2014. Retrieved 25 July 2015.

Sources edit

Philip VI of France
Cadet branch of the Capetian dynasty
Born: 1293 Died: 22 August 1350
Regnal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Charles IV
King of France
1328–1350
Succeeded by
French nobility
Preceded by Count of Anjou
1325–1328
Vacant
Title next held by
John II
Count of Maine
1314–1328
Count of Valois
1325–1328
Vacant
Title next held by
Philip III

philip, france, philip, french, philippe, 1293, august, 1350, called, fortunate, french, fortuné, catholic, french, catholique, valois, first, king, france, from, house, valois, reigning, from, 1328, until, death, 1350, philip, reign, dominated, consequences, . Philip VI French Philippe 1293 22 August 1350 called the Fortunate French le Fortune or the Catholic French le Catholique and of Valois was the first king of France from the House of Valois reigning from 1328 until his death in 1350 Philip s reign was dominated by the consequences of a succession dispute When King Charles IV of France died in 1328 his nearest male relative was his nephew King Edward III of England but the French nobility preferred Charles s paternal cousin Philip Philip VIPhilip VI in a contemporary miniature depicting the trial of Robert III of Artois c 1336King of France more Reign1 February 1328 1 22 August 1350Coronation29 May 1328PredecessorCharles IVSuccessorJohn IIRegent of FranceRegency1328MonarchCharles IVBorn1293Fontainebleau Paris FranceDied22 August 1350 aged 56 or 57 Coulombes Abbey Nogent le Roi Eure et Loir FranceBurialSaint Denis Basilica Saint Denis ParisSpousesJoan of Burgundy m 1313 died 1349 wbr Blanche of Navarre m 1350 wbr Issueamong othersJohn II of France Philip Duke of Orleans Joan of France Illegitimate Jean d Armagnac Thomas de la Marche batarde de FranceHouseValoisFatherCharles Count of ValoisMotherMargaret Countess of Anjou At first Edward seemed to accept Philip s succession but he pressed his claim to the throne of France after a series of disagreements with Philip The result was the beginning of the Hundred Years War in 1337 After initial successes at sea Philip s navy was annihilated at the Battle of Sluys in 1340 ensuring that the war would occur on the continent The English took another decisive advantage at the Battle of Crecy 1346 while the Black Death struck France further destabilising the country In 1349 King Philip VI bought the Province of Dauphine from its ruined ruler the Dauphin Humbert II and entrusted the government of this province to his grandson Prince Charles Philip VI died in 1350 and was succeeded by his son King John II the Good Contents 1 Early life 2 Accession to the throne 3 Reign 3 1 Hundred Years War 3 2 Final years 4 Marriages and children 5 In fiction 6 References 7 SourcesEarly life editLittle is recorded about Philip s childhood and youth in large part because he was of minor royal birth Philip s father Charles Count of Valois the younger brother of King Philip IV of France 2 had striven throughout his life to gain the throne for himself but was never successful He died in 1325 leaving his eldest son Philip as heir to the counties of Anjou Maine and Valois 3 Accession to the throne edit nbsp Coronation of Philip VI In 1328 Philip VI s first cousin King Charles IV died without a son leaving his widow Jeanne of Evreux pregnant 3 Philip was one of the two chief claimants to the throne of France The other was King Edward III of England who was the son of Charles s sister Isabella of France and Charles IV s closest male relative The Estates General had decided 12 years earlier that women could not inherit the throne of France The question arose as to whether Isabella should have been able to transmit a claim that she herself did not possess 4 The assemblies of the French barons and prelates and the University of Paris decided that males who derive their right to inheritance through their mother should be excluded according to Salic law As Philip was the eldest grandson of King Philip III of France through the male line he became regent instead of Edward who was a matrilineal grandson of King Philip IV and great grandson of King Philip III 5 nbsp Edward III of England pays homage to Philip VI of France in Amiens from a 1370 75 manuscript of the Grandes Chroniques de France During the period in which Charles IV s widow was waiting to deliver her child Philip VI rose to the regency with support of the French magnates following the pattern set up by his cousin King Philip V who succeeded the throne over his niece Joan II of Navarre 4 He formally held the regency from 9 February 1328 until 1 April when Jeanne of Evreux gave birth to a daughter named Blanche of France Duchess of Orleans 6 Upon this birth Philip was proclaimed king and crowned at the Cathedral in Reims on 29 May 1328 7 After his elevation to the throne Philip sent the Abbot of Fecamp Pierre Roger to summon Edward III of England to pay homage for the duchy of Aquitaine and Gascony 8 After a subsequent second summons from Philip Edward finally arrived at the Cathedral of Amiens on 6 June 1329 and worded his vows in such a way to cause more disputes in later years 8 The dynastic change had another consequence Charles IV had also been King of Navarre but unlike the crown of France the crown of Navarre was not subject to Salic law Philip VI was neither an heir nor a descendant of Joan I of Navarre whose inheritance the kingdom of Navarre as well as the counties of Champagne Troyes Meaux and Brie had been in personal union with the crown of France for almost fifty years and had long been administered by the same royal machinery established by King Philip IV the father of French bureaucracy These counties were closely entrenched in the economic and administrative entity of the crown lands of France being located adjacent to Ile de France Philip however was not entitled to that inheritance the rightful heiress was the surviving daughter of his cousin King Louis X the future Joan II of Navarre the heir general of Joan I of Navarre Navarre thus passed to Joan II with whom Philip struck a deal regarding the counties in Champagne she received vast lands in Normandy adjacent to the fief in Evreux that her husband Philip III of Navarre owned as compensation and he kept Champagne as part of the French crown lands Reign editPhilip s reign was plagued with crises although it began with a military success in Flanders at the Battle of Cassel August 1328 where Philip s forces re seated Louis I Count of Flanders who had been unseated by a popular revolution 9 Philip s wife the able Joan the Lame gave the first of many demonstrations of her competence as regent in his absence Philip initially enjoyed relatively amicable relations with Edward III and they planned a crusade together in 1332 which was never executed However the status of the Duchy of Aquitaine remained a sore point and tension increased Philip provided refuge for David II of Scotland in 1334 and declared himself champion of his interests which enraged Edward 10 By 1336 they were enemies although not yet openly at war Philip successfully prevented an arrangement between the Avignon papacy and Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV although in July 1337 Louis concluded an alliance with Edward III 11 The final breach with England came when Edward offered refuge to Robert III of Artois formerly one of Philip s trusted advisers 12 after Robert committed forgery to try to obtain an inheritance As relations between Philip and Edward worsened Robert s standing in England strengthened 12 On 26 December 1336 Philip officially demanded the extradition of Robert to France 12 On 24 May 1337 Philip declared that Edward had forfeited Aquitaine for disobedience and for sheltering the king s mortal enemy Robert of Artois 13 Thus began the Hundred Years War complicated by Edward s renewed claim to the throne of France in retaliation for the forfeiture of Aquitaine Hundred Years War edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Philip VI of France news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Flemish leader as fish seller went to search in French camp nbsp Philip VI and his first wife Joan of Burgundy Philip entered the Hundred Years War in a position of comparative strength France was richer and more populous than England and was at the height of its medieval glory The opening stages of the war accordingly were largely successful for the French At sea French privateers raided and burned towns and shipping all along the southern and southeastern coasts of England 14 The English made some retaliatory raids including the burning of a fleet in the harbour of Boulogne sur Mer 15 but the French largely had the upper hand With his sea power established Philip gave orders in 1339 to begin assembling a fleet off the Zeeland coast at Sluys In June 1340 however in the bitterly fought Battle of Sluys the English attacked the port and captured or destroyed the ships there ending the threat of an invasion 15 On land Edward III largely concentrated upon Flanders and the Low Countries where he had gained allies through diplomacy and bribery A raid in 1339 the first chevauchee into Picardy ended ignominiously when Philip wisely refused to give battle Edward s slender finances would not permit him to play a waiting game and he was forced to withdraw into Flanders and return to England to raise more money In July 1340 Edward returned and mounted the siege of Tournai 16 By September 1340 Edward was in financial distress hardly able to pay or feed his troops and was open to dialogue 17 After being at Bouvines for a week Philip was finally persuaded to send Joan of Valois Countess of Hainaut to discuss terms to end the siege 17 On 23 September 1340 a nine month truce was reached 17 So far the war had gone quite well for Philip and the French While often stereotyped as chivalry besotted and incompetent Philip and his men had in fact carried out a successful Fabian strategy against the debt plagued Edward and resisted the chivalric blandishments of single combat or a combat of two hundred knights that he offered In 1341 the War of the Breton Succession allowed the English to place permanent garrisons in Brittany However Philip was still in a commanding position during negotiations arbitrated by the pope in 1343 he refused Edward s offer to end the war in exchange for the Duchy of Aquitaine in full sovereignty The next attack came in 1345 when the Earl of Derby overran the Agenais lost twenty years before in the War of Saint Sardos and took Angouleme while the forces in Brittany under Sir Thomas Dagworth also made gains The French responded in the spring of 1346 with a massive counterattack against Aquitaine where an army under John Duke of Normandy besieged Derby at Aiguillon On the advice of Godfrey Harcourt like Robert III of Artois a banished French nobleman Edward sailed for Normandy instead of Aquitaine As Harcourt predicted the Normans were ill prepared for war and many of the fighting men were at Aiguillon Edward sacked and burned the country as he went taking Caen and advancing as far as Poissy and then retreating before the army Philip had hastily assembled at Paris Slipping across the Somme Edward drew up to give battle at Crecy 18 Close behind him Philip had planned to halt for the night and reconnoitre the English position before giving battle the next day However his troops were disorderly and the roads were jammed by the rear of the army coming up and the local peasantry which furiously called for vengeance on the English Finding them hopeless to control he ordered a general attack as evening fell Thus began the Battle of Crecy When it was done the French army had been annihilated and a wounded Philip barely escaped capture Fortune had turned against the French The English seized and held the advantage Normandy called off the siege of Aiguillon and retreated northward while Sir Thomas Dagworth captured Charles of Blois in Brittany The English army pulled back from Crecy to mount the siege of Calais the town held out stubbornly but the English were determined and they easily supplied across the English Channel Philip led out a relieving army in July 1347 but unlike the Siege of Tournai it was now Edward who had the upper hand With the plunder of his Norman expedition and the reforms he had executed in his tax system he could hold to his siege lines and await an attack that Philip dared not deliver It was Philip who marched away in August and the city capitulated shortly thereafter Final years edit nbsp King Philip s funerary procession which was presided over by the Archbishop of Reims illustrated by Loyset Liedet After the defeat at Crecy and loss of Calais the Estates of France refused to raise money for Philip halting his plans to counter attack by invading England In 1348 the Black Death struck France and in the next few years killed one third of the population including Queen Joan The resulting labour shortage caused inflation to soar and the king attempted to fix prices further destabilising the country His second marriage to his son s betrothed Blanche of Navarre alienated his son and many nobles from the king 19 Philip s last major achievement was the acquisition of the Dauphine and the territory of Montpellier in the Languedoc in 1349 At his death in 1350 France was very much a divided country filled with social unrest Philip VI died at Coulombes Abbey Eure et Loir on 22 August 1350 20 and is interred with his first wife Joan of Burgundy in Saint Denis Basilica though his viscera were buried separately at the now demolished church of Couvent des Jacobins in Paris He was succeeded by his first son by Joan of Burgundy who became John II Marriages and children editPhilip married twice In July 1313 he married Joan the Lame French Jeanne daughter of Robert II Duke of Burgundy 21 and Agnes of France the youngest daughter of King Louis IX of France She was thus Philip s first cousin once removed The couple had the following children King John II of France 26 April 1319 8 April 1364 22 Marie of France 1326 22 September 1333 who died aged only seven but was already married to John of Brabant the son and heir of John III Duke of Brabant no issue 23 Louis born and died 17 January 1329 Louis 8 June 1330 23 June 1330 A son John born and died 2 October 1333 A son 28 May 1335 stillborn Philip of Orleans 1 July 1336 1 September 1375 Duke of Orleans Joan born and died November 1337 A son born and died summer 1343 After Joan died in 1349 Philip married Blanche of Navarre 24 daughter of Queen Joan II of Navarre and Philip III of Navarre on 11 January 1350 They had one daughter Joan Blanche of France May 1351 16 September 1371 22 who was intended to marry John I of Aragon but who died during the journey By an unknown women he had Jean d Armagnac died after 1350 a knight 25 26 By his mistress Beatrice de la Berruere he had another son Thomas de la Marche 1318 1361 batarde de France 27 In fiction editPhilip is a character in Les Rois maudits The Accursed Kings a series of French historical novels by Maurice Druon He was portrayed by Benoit Brione in the 1972 French miniseries adaptation of the series and by Malik Zidi in the 2005 adaptation 28 References edit Philip VI s ascension as King was not confirmed until the birth of his predecessors posthumous daughter on 1 April 1328 David Nicolle Crecy 1346 Triumph of the Longbow Osprey 2000 12 a b Elizabeth Hallam and Judith Everard Capetian France 987 1328 2nd edition Pearson Education Limited 2001 366 a b Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle Vol I Faber amp Faber 1990 106 107 Jules Viard Philippe VI de Valois Debut du regne fevrier juillet 1328 Bibliotheque de l ecole des chartes 95 1934 263 Viard 269 273 Curry Anne 2003 The Hundred Years War New York Routledge pp 18 a b Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle 109 110 Kelly DeVries Infantry Warfare in the Early Fourteenth Century The Boydell Press 1996 102 Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle 135 The Hundred Years War Not One But Many Kelly DeVries The Hundred Years War part II Different Vistas ed L J Andrew Villalon Donald J Kagay Brill 2008 15 a b c Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle 171 172 Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle 184 Oars Sails and Guns The English and War at Sea c 1200 1500 Ian Friel War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance ed John B Hattendorf Richard W Unger The Boydell Press 2003 79 a b Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle 320 328 Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle 349 a b c Jonathan Sumption The Hundred Years War Trial by Battle 354 359 Philip VI Britannica Mortimer Ian 2008 The Perfect King The Life of Edward III Father of the English Nation Vintage p 276 Jonathan Sumption Hundred Years War Trial by Fire Vol II University of Pennsylvania Press 1999 117 David d Avray Papacy Monarchy and Marriage 860 1600 Cambridge University Press 2015 292 a b Marguerite Keane Material Culture and Queenship in 14th century France Brill 2016 17 Henneman John Bell 2015 Royal Taxation in Fourteenth Century France The Development of War Financing 1322 1359 Princeton University Press p 91 Identity Politics and Rulership in France Female Political Place and the Fraudulent Salic Law in Christine de Pizan and Jean de Montreuil Sarah Hanley Changing Identities in Early Modern France ed Michael Wolfe Duke University Press 1996 93 n45 Cite par Patrick Van Kerrebrouck dans Les Valois 1990 page 85 Sirjean Gaston 199 Encyclopedie genealogique des maisons souveraines du monde Vol 1 Part 8 University of Georgia Library Biblioteca Universității din Georgia p 225 Ormrod W Mark 2021 Winner and Waster and Its Contexts Chivalry Law and Economics in Fourteenth Century England D S Brewer p 52 Les Rois maudits Casting de la saison 1 in French AlloCine 2005 Archived from the original on 19 December 2014 Retrieved 25 July 2015 Sources editSeward Desmond 1999 The Hundred Years War Penguin Books ISBN 014 02 8361 7 Philip VI of France Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XVIII 9th ed 1885 p 743 Philip VI of FranceHouse of ValoisCadet branch of the Capetian dynastyBorn 1293 Died 22 August 1350 Regnal titles VacantTitle last held byCharles IV King of France1328 1350 Succeeded byJohn II French nobility Preceded byCharles III Count of Anjou1325 1328 VacantTitle next held byJohn II Count of Maine1314 1328 Count of Valois1325 1328 VacantTitle next held byPhilip III Portal nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philip VI of France amp oldid 1215046179, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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