Medieval Jean Froissart
The Death of Gaston Phoebus

The Death of Gaston Phoebus [Image]

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Jean Froissart's extensive travels took him as far as the county of Foix, where he was graciously received by Gaston Phoebus. Death by hydrocution of Gaston Phoebus, Count of Foix; Flandres, Bruges, (c.1500), from Jean Froissart, Chronicles.

Jean Froissart Chronicles The French historian and poet Jean Froissart was born in Valenciennes, in Flanders, about 1333. The Hundred Years' War between France and England was about to begin, and knighthood was in flower. Froissart gloried in the ideals of knighthood and in its heroic deeds. He described them in romantic ballads. He also wrote a history, his famous Chronicles, dealing with events from 1325 to 1400. It gives vivid accounts of the superstitious, romantic, warring world of that time. He wrote about the Hundred Years' War, with its picturesque battles of Crecy and Poitiers. There is no doubt that he allowed his imagination to fill in the barren spots where facts were missing: He never let uncertainty spoil a good story, and his sympathies were always with the lordly knights. To collect his stories, Froissart wandered on horseback, a greyhound trotting behind, through many lands. During his travels he talked with lords and knights, squires and heralds. Froissart jotted down their fanciful tales of the court and of the battlefield. The Bibliothèque Nationale de France presents all of the illustrations from the four volumes of The Age of King Charles V.

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