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Piracy or Policy: the Crisis in the Channel, 1400–1403. The Alexander Prize Essay
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 February 2009
Extract
The opening years of the fifteenth century witnessed an outburst of lawlessness at sea of such intensity that legitimate commerce between the kingdoms of France and England, and their allies, all but ceased. Official contemporary sources seem to leave no doubt as to the causes of this outburst. The truce conservators of the two kingdoms were in full agreement in placing the blame for the outrages against merchant shipping on the activities of ‘piratae’, ‘depraedatores’ and ‘banniti’, outlaws working without the sanction and beyond the control of their governments. Modern authorities have accepted this ‘official’ explanation without question.
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References
1 Rymer, T., Foedera (London, 1704–1735), viii, 274–6Google Scholar (August 1402) and 306–9 (June 1403).
2 Kingsford, C. L., ‘West Country Piracy: The School of English Seamen’, Prejudice and Promise in Fifteenth-Century England (Oxford, 1925), pp. 78–106Google Scholar. See also Nicolas, N. H., History of the Royal Navy (2 vols., London, 1847), i, 342–401Google Scholar, and de la Roncière, C., Histoire de la Marine Française (6 vols., Paris, 1899–1934), ii, 151–210Google Scholar.
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7 Foedera, viii, 306–9.
8 P.R.O., Issue Roll, E.403/564, mm. 3 and 12. For fears that the French would refuse to reaffirm the truce, see P.R.O., Parliamentary Proceedings, C.49/48/1.
9 P.R.O., E.403/564, m. 13 (Spicer); E.403/567, m. 5 (Hauley); Calendar of the Patent i Rolls, 1399–1401, pp. 271 and 291 (northern fleet). Hauley was assigned ‘ad custodiam I maris … ad resistendum malicio inimicorum Regis’.
10 Archives Nationales, Paris (A.N.), J.645/7.
11 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1399–1401, pp. 291, 350, 352 and 358.
12 The figures are compiled from A.N., J.645A/18 and 18bis, and J.645B/35. More complete details of these, and of the other lists that have provided the evidence for this essay, will be found in my forthcoming thesis.
13 A.N., J.645A/18 and 18bis, and Cat. Pat. Rolls, 1399–1401, p. 276.
14 Calendar of Inquisitions Miscellaneous, 1390–1422, pp. 113–15 (Prince); A.N., J.919/2 (Hogue). For Henry's intervention, J.645A/18; Calendar of the Close Rolls, 1399–1402, pp. 150–1; P.R.O., E.403/567, mm. 2 and 4; Accounts Various, E.101/128/24 and Treaty Roll, C.76/84, m. 8.
15 A.N., J.645B/36 and 36bis. Many of the French crimes are not specifically dated.
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21 Ibid., viii, 219–20.
22 Ibid., viii, 231–2. B.L., Cotton MS. Caligula D. iv, fo. 20.
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26 On three occasions only.Cal. Close Rolls, 1399–1402, pp. 428–9 and 446; P.R.O., C. 76/86, m. 1.
27 A.D.N., B.546/1509392, a list of Flemish losses from 1400 to 1411, the most comprehensive of the Flemish lists to have survived.
28 Ibid. For Hauley serving at sea, P.R.O., Privy Seal Files, E.28/9, unnumbered.
29 A.N., J.645A/18bis, item 32.
30 P.R.O., Chancery Miscellanea, C.47/32/24a; A.N., J.645B/35 (Castilian losses). P.R.O., Exchequer K.R., Council Proceedings, E.175 Roll 28; E.101/43/1 (English losses).
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49 A.N., J.645B/48, items 2 and 3.
50 Cal. Inquisitions Misc., 1399–1422, p. 106
51 P.R.O., C.47/32/24a.
52 A.N., J.645B/35.
53 Cal. Close Rolls, 1402–05, pp. 57–8;Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1401–05, p. 276.
54 A.D.N., B.546/1509392; P.R.O., C.47/32/24D; Exchequer T.R., Diplomatic Documents, E.30/1280 and 1628. A complete chronological catalogue of Flemish losses in the reign of Henry IV is included in my forthcoming thesis.
55 P.R.O., Ancient Correspondence, S.C. 1/43/131 and 132; Handelingen van de Leden en van de Staten van Vlaanderen, 1384–1405, ed. Prevenier, W. (Brussels, 1959), pp. 236–237Google Scholar.
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61 P.R.O., S.C.8/335/15843.
62 P.R.O., E.30/1280.
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67 P.R.O., S.C.8/179/8931.
68 Wilson, , ‘Anglo-French Relations’, pp. 177–229Google Scholar. Saint-Pol had armed two ships to prey on English shipping in early 1403 (A.D.N., B.553/15158, clause 1).
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