Coat of Arms of Jean V de Bueil

Jean V de Bueil (after 17 August 1405 and before 18 August 1406 - 1478),[1] called le Fléau des Anglais "plague of the English", count of Sancerre, viscount of Carentan, lord of Montrésor, Château-en-Anjou, Saint-Calais, Vaujours, Ussé and Vailly, son of Jean IV de Bueil and Marguerite Dauphine of Auvergne. He is the author of Le Jouvencel (c. 1466), a semi-autobiographical roman a clef based on his experiences during the latter part of the Hundred Years War.

Career

Jean de Bueil began his military career as a page of the Count of Narbonne and was present at the Battle of Verneuil. Later he served under mercenary captain Étienne de Vignolles, known as La Hire.[2] He was made captain of Tours in 1428, later captain general in Anjou and Maine. Together with Joan of Arc, he successfully completed the siege of Orleans. In September 1432 he assaulted Les Ponts-de-Cé but failed to take it from the routiers of Rodrigo de Villandrando. He participated with the Dauphin Louis in a campaign against the Swiss in 1444 and was present at the battle of St. Jakob an der Birs.[3] He was engaged in the reconquest of Normandy from the English and became admiral of France and captain of Cherbourg in 1450.[4] In 1453, he was present at the Battle of Castillon. In 1461, the new king Louis XI replaced de Bueil as Admiral with Jean de Montaubin,[5] which began a rift which would lead to de Bueil joining the rebels during the War of the Public Weal in 1465.[6] De Bueil was later reconciled to the king and was admitted to the Order of St. Michael in 1469[7] His last known act was to sign, on 31 May 1478 at his château de Vaujours, the document by which he confirmed certain rights of the prior of Charnes, a priory located in the county of Sancerre.[8]

Le Jouvencel

Seal of Jean V de Bueil

Jean de Bueil wrote Le Jouvencel about 1466. De Bueil intended that the work should have a didactic purpose for young noblemen.[9] He therefore uses an Aristotelian structure to his work, dealing with the hero's career in three parts, which reflect three elements of governance or discipline; the young soldier learns about ethics and self-discipline, the military commander learns leadership of men and the regent learns the governance of a country.[10] Le Jouvencel joins several medieval military literature traditions; chivalric romance, treatises on chivalry and manuals on warfare. De Bueil draws upon earlier writers such as Honoré Bonet and Christine de Pizan but also on his own military experience.[11] In so doing, he gives a rounded image of how a professional soldier thought about and practiced war at the end of the Middle Ages.

Le Jouvencel has been widely quoted by modern scholars of chivalry and medieval warfare.[12] Traditionally, this has focussed on his writings on the nature of military life. He viewed the life of arms to be ennobling in itself and, indeed, in some way, a route to salvation.[13] He is perhaps most quoted for his view on comradeship in arms

You love your comrade so much in war. When you see your quarrel is just and your blood is fighting well, tears rise to your eyes. A great sweet feeling of love and pity fills your heart on seeing your friend so valiantly exposing his body to execute and accomplish the command of our Creator. And then you prepare to go and live or die with him and for love not to abandon him. And out of that there arises such delectation, that he who has not tasted it is not fit to say what a delight is. Do you think that a man who does that fears death? Not at all: for he feels strengthened, he is so elated he does not know where he is. Truly he is afraid of nothing.[14]

In recent times, greater attention has begun to be given to the practical examples given in the text, for example, how to conduct a raid[15] or how to order an army on the march[16]

References

  1. Famiglietti, R.C. (2018). Recherches sur la maison de Bueil. Providence: Picardy Press. p. 125.
  2. Curry, Anne (2000). The Battle of Agincourt: Sources and Interpretations. The Boydell Press. p. 357. ISBN 0-85115-802-1.
  3. Kendall, Paul Murray (1974). Louis XI. London: Sphere. pp. 59–61, 64–65. ISBN 0-351-17097-9.
  4. Curry (2000), p.357
  5. Kendall (1974), p.129
  6. Kendall (1974), p.194
  7. Chan Tsin (2009), p.128
  8. Famiglietti (2018), p. 198-199 n. 1092.
  9. Chan Tsin, Mathieu (2009). "Chapter 7 : Medieval Romances and Military History:Marching Orders in Jean de Bueil's Le Jouvencel introduit aux armes". In Rogers, Clifford (ed.). The Age of the Hundred Years War. Journal of Medieval Military History. Vol. VII. Other eds. Kelly de Vries, John France. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-84383-500-4.
  10. Brown-Grant, Rosalind (2008). French Romance of the Late Middle Ages. Oxford: OUP. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-19-955414-0. Retrieved May 22, 2010.
  11. Keen, Maurice (1984). Chivalry. New Haven and London: Yale. p. 162. ISBN 0-300-03360-5.
  12. In addition to works cited here, see, for example Kenneth Fowler : The Age of Plantagenet and Valois (1968); Richard Barber: The Knight and Chivalry (1972); Malcolm Vale : War and Chivalry (1981) and Philippe Contamine : War in the Middle Ages (1984)
  13. Keen (1984), pp. 14,152,178
  14. Quoted in Hale, J. R. (1985). War and Society in Renaissance Europe 1450–1620. London: Fontana. p. 177. ISBN 0-00-686017-6.
  15. Rogers, Clifford (2007). Soldiers' Lives through History : The Middle Ages. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 239–241. ISBN 978-0-313-33350-7.
  16. Chan Tsin (2009), pp.127-134
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