Charles the Bold

A shy and pliant young woman, Isabella was adored by Philip the Good, who saw an opportunity to renew the Treaty of Arras (which had been debased by Charles VII's threatening actions towards Burgundy) by marrying a Bourbon to his son.

The Duke, wary of the power his chancellor might get with this appointment, refused his son's request and instead proposed Philip I of Porcéan, high bailiff of Hainault and a member of the influential House of Croÿ.

[60] While the duke thought that the hostilities between France and Burgundy were at an end, the new king at his coronation ceremony refused to participate in the feast sponsored by Philip in his honour.

[61] Charles feared Louis's intention was to demolish the Burgundian defensive system in Picardy, and he was furious when a crisis occurred in autumn 1463 regarding the Somme towns, land belonging to his father.

[65] The League became the most dangerous in a series of princely revolts against the French crown; one chronicle recorded the number of the participants against Louis XI to be seven dukes, twelve counts, two lords, one marshal, and 51,000 men-at-arms.

[67] The parties signed the Treaty of Conflans, which ceded the rule of Normandy to Charles, Duke of Berry, and returned the Somme lands to Burgundy.

The Estates of Guelders, and the towns of Nijmegen, Arnhem, and Zutphen rejected Arnold's will, and Louis XI asked Frederick III, the Holy Roman Empire, to confiscate the duchy.

[112] Charles greatly desired to transform the Duchy of Burgundy into a kingdom, to free it from the limitations of vassalage to the French crown and to enhance his personal stature.

[113][e] Despite all the grandeur, Frederick III was disappointed that Charles had not brought his daughter,[119] amidst rumours spread by Habsburg adversaries alleging that Mary was physically defective.

[136] To both increase his grip on the seats of justice and to fill up his treasury, Charles dismissed the aldermen and sold their offices to the highest bidders; only the wealthiest subjects came to hold those positions.

According to Nancy Bradley Warren, the portrayal of Charles and Saint Anne may have been a way to legitimise his marriage to Margaret and reassure those who were dubious regarding an alliance with England.

[146] Pope Sixtus IV sent three instructions to the papal legate at the Burgundian court, Lucas de Tollentis, directing him to encourage Charles to undertake a crusade against the Ottomans.

[148] Charles may have considered an expedition to the east as the climax of his life's work; however, during his lifetime, he never undertook a crusade nor did he make preparations for it as his father had.

[149] Only for a short time, between late 1475 and early 1476, did he seriously consider a crusade and that was only after a meeting with Andreas Palaiologos, the deposed Despot of the Morea, who agreed to cede his claim as the Emperor of Trebizond and Constantinople to Charles.

[155] However, the mutual friendship with the Kingdom of Naples brought Burgundy and Hungary closer to each other, and in his pursuit to ally with Frederick III's opponents, Charles made contact with Matthias.

[172] Charles constantly toyed with the idea of marrying his daughter, Mary, to Ferdinand's second son, Frederick of Naples, who visited the Burgundian court in 1469 and 1470.

Charles the Bold triumphantly replaced Louis XI as the dominant influence in Italian politics, with three of four major secular powers in the region—Milan, Naples, and Venice—all aligned with him.

[197] As a patron of Renaissance humanism, he commissioned the translation of Quintus Curtius Rufus's Histories of Alexander the Great into French to replace the inadequate Roman d'Alexandre en prose.

[205] Charles was a patron of the composer Antoine Busnois, who became his choirmaster;[206] his court musicians also included Hayne van Ghizeghem and Robert Morton.

[215] The first of these ordinances, addressed to the Marshal of Burgundy, contains instructions on who could be recruited to the army and describes the personnel of the artillery: namely, masons, assistants, cannoneers, and carpenters.

[216] The second ordinance, issued at Abbeville in 1471, proclaimed the formation of a standing army, called Compagnie d'ordonnance, made up of 1250 lances fournies, who were accompanied by 1200 crossbows, 1250 handgunners, and 1250 pikemen.

[230] Despite the constant warning from military authors of the past against the recruitment of mercenaries, contemporary chronicler Jean Molinet praised Charles for his brilliant solution, saying that he was favoured by both heaven and earth and thus above the "commandments of philosophers".

[231] Over the span of five years, Charle's deputy in Upper Alsace, Peter von Hagenbach, alienated his Alsatian subjects; antagonized the neighbouring Swiss Confederacy, who felt threatened by his rule; and showed aggressive intentions towards the city of Mulhouse.

[233] In April 1474, the rebelling Alsatian cities and the Swiss formed the League of Constance to drive Charles and Peter von Hagenbach from Alsace,[235] and rebellion quickly broke out.

[244] Upon learning of Frederick's plan, Charles intensified the barrage, and attempted to drain the city's moat by diverting the River Erft and sinking overloaded barges into the Rhine.

[250] Charles had to sign a treaty with Louis as well, so that he would be free to march south and deal with the League of Constance, whose members now also included René II of Lorraine.

[273] Charles was too slow in organizing his troops for a counterattack: he himself tarried in putting on his armour, and before his men finished taking their positions, the Swiss army had already reached them.

[291] It took a group consisting of Charles's Roman valet, his Portuguese personal physician, his chaplain, Olivier de la Marche, and two of his bastard brothers to identify the corpse through a missing tooth, ingrown toenail, and long fingernails.

To secure her legitimacy as ruler, Mary signed the Great Privilege on 11 February 1477 and restored powers to the States General in Flanders, Brabant, Hainaut, and Holland.

[296] Maximilian used a combination of diplomacy and military strength to defend and regain territories from Louis XI, though France kept the geographic Duchy of Burgundy; he also quelled several internal revolts to preserve a great deal of the Burgundian State.

La Duchesse de Bourgogne arrêtée aux portes de Bruges by Sophie Frémiet . 19th-century depiction of the arrest of Isabella of Portugal , her son Charles, and their entourage at the gates of Bruges
Philip the Good, dressed in black, wearing chaperon, and beside him is Charles, bareheaded and wearing the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece
Charles, aged 12 or 13, standing beside his father, Philip, Duke of Burgundy; Jean Wauquelin presenting his 'Chroniques de Hainaut' to Philip the Good , 1447
Miniature painting, a feast with Louis and Philip sitting next to each other
The Duke of Burgundy providing a sumptuous feast for Louis, Dauphin of France , by Job , 1905
Two armies, one with the banners of Louis XI and one with the banners of the Duchy of Burgundy, fighting a pitched battle against each other
Battle of Montlhéry , early-16th-century miniature illustrating Philippe de Commines
Charles the Bold in mourning attire after the death of Philip the Good. Georges Chastellain stands on the left with greying hair and carrying a book. Illumination from a manuscript of Chastellain's Chronicle of the Dukes of Burgundy
Valois Burgundy at its greatest extent under Charles the Bold
Engraving of two horsemen, one the Emperor and the other the Duke of Burgundy, with their respective entourage
Meeting of Charles the Bold and Frederick III in Trier, 1473
Assembly of forty four gentlemen dressed in scarlet red in the Parliament of Mechelen, with Charles the Bold sitting in the centre, presiding the event
Solemn opening session of the Parliament of Mechelen under Charles the Bold , Jan Coessaet, 1587, Museum Hof van Busleyden [ nl ]
Charles wears a cloth of gold and Saint George stands behind him, wearing an armour
Charles the Bold presented by Saint George , Lieven van Lathem , opening of the Prayer Book of Charles the Bold, c. 1471
Charles the Bold ordering Louis XI to sign the Treaty of Péronne; 1913; Histoire de France et notions d'Histoire Générale by Gustave Hervé , illustrated by Valéry Müller
Charles and Emperor Frederick III at a banquet in Trier
King Ferdinand is wearing a long red robe and chaperon
King Ferdinand I of Naples depicted as a knight of the Oder of the Golden Fleece in Statuts, Ordonnances et Armorial by Gilles Gobet, the Toison d'or King of Arms , 1473
A kneeling man presents his book to Charles who is seated on his throne
Vasco de Lucena presenting his translation of Quintus Curtius Rufus 's Histories of Alexander the Great to Charles the Bold. Folio from Le Jardin de vertueuse consolation by an anonymous master , between 1470 and 1475.
Military Ordinance of Charles the Bold , Master of Fitzwilliam 268, c. 1475
A knight mounting a horse, who has an adorned armour
Armour of Charles the Bold in the Vinkhuijzen collection of military uniforms, 1910, kept at the New York Public Library
Trial of Peter von Hagenbach, 1474
Painting of the encampment of Charles the Bold's army outside of the walls of Neuss
Siege of Neuss by Charles the Bold in 1475 , by Adriaen Van den Houte
Charles the Bold and his men fleeting on horses
The flight of Charles the Bold after the Battle of Morat by Eugène Burnand , 1894, now in the Eugène Burnand Museum, Moudon
Rene II standing before the body of Charles the Bold, who wears a golden crown
Duke René II of Lorraine holding the hands of the corpse of Charles the Bold, Chronique scandaleuse by Jean de Roye
Burgundian territories (orange/yellow) and limits of France (red) after the Burgundian Wars .