Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Prologue
- Part II The Chevauchée in the Languedoc, October to December 1355
- Part III Interlude
- Part IV The Poitiers Chevauchée, August to October 1356
- 10 Advance to the Vienne – La Réole to Manot, 6 July to 14 August 1356
- 11 Romorantin – Manot to Romorantin, 14 August to 5 September 1356
- 12 Manoeuvre – Romorantin to Poitiers, 5 to 17 September 1356
- 13 Battle Joined – Nouaillé-Maupertuis, 18 and 19 September 1356
- 14 The Return to Bordeaux – Nouaillé-Maupertuis to Bordeaux, 20 September to 2 October 1356
- Part V Epilogue
- Appendix 1 Summary Itinerary for Prince's Division, 1355
- Appendix 2 Summary Itinerary for Prince's Division, 1356
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Warfare in History
11 - Romorantin – Manot to Romorantin, 14 August to 5 September 1356
from Part IV - The Poitiers Chevauchée, August to October 1356
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Prologue
- Part II The Chevauchée in the Languedoc, October to December 1355
- Part III Interlude
- Part IV The Poitiers Chevauchée, August to October 1356
- 10 Advance to the Vienne – La Réole to Manot, 6 July to 14 August 1356
- 11 Romorantin – Manot to Romorantin, 14 August to 5 September 1356
- 12 Manoeuvre – Romorantin to Poitiers, 5 to 17 September 1356
- 13 Battle Joined – Nouaillé-Maupertuis, 18 and 19 September 1356
- 14 The Return to Bordeaux – Nouaillé-Maupertuis to Bordeaux, 20 September to 2 October 1356
- Part V Epilogue
- Appendix 1 Summary Itinerary for Prince's Division, 1355
- Appendix 2 Summary Itinerary for Prince's Division, 1356
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Warfare in History
Summary
When the summer came, he reassembled his forces and made a march upon Saintonge, Périgord, and Quercy, and came, I assure you, as far as Romorantin. Then he took the tower by assault, and made prisoner messire Boucicault and the great Lord of Craon, and very many others.
Chandos HeraldOnce across the Vienne banners were unfurled and the character of the campaign changed. Bourges, where the declared objective of the prince was to join the count of Poitiers in battle, was about 125 miles away in a direct line. The countryside in between was generally easy going and the prince could be there in a week if he so chose. A campaign of destruction might draw out the count of Poitiers or perhaps King Jean could be drawn south. The previously cautious approach was now set aside, and the itinerary becomes a catalogue of towns and castles taken and destroyed.
The route to Lesterps, ten miles beyond the river Vienne, would certainly have taken the army through St-Maurice-des-Lyons. From the thirteenth century Lesterps had been defended with walls and ditches. There was a fortified Augustinian abbey, also walled with an internal gate to the town, forming an integral part of Lesterps. After the soft, honey-coloured sandstone prevalent during the march north to the Vienne, the hard, grey granite of the Massif Central now begins to predominate and is evident in the vestiges of the town walls and the remaining thirteenth-century houses.
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- In the Steps of the Black PrinceThe Road to Poitiers, 1355–1356, pp. 137 - 152Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2011