Chroniques de J. Froissart, tome 08.2/13 : 1370-1377 (Depuis le combat de…
Jean Froissart's 'Chronicles' are like the ultimate medieval news report, and this volume is one of the most intense installments. It covers a critical seven-year stretch in the long, messy conflict we now call the Hundred Years' War.
The Story
This book picks up with the war at a turning point. England, led by the famed Black Prince, has been winning for decades. But things are starting to crack. The Prince is seriously ill, and the cost of his campaigns is bleeding his territories dry. Across the channel, King Charles V of France has learned from past defeats. He refuses to fight the English head-on in another massive battle like Crécy or Poitiers. Instead, he uses a strategy of harassment, small strikes, and diplomacy, slowly wearing the English down and winning back towns without risking his main army.
Froissart guides us through this shift. We see the English struggling to hold their French lands against this new kind of war. We follow brutal raids, desperate sieges, and political maneuvering. It's not just about kings and generals; Froissart fills the pages with stories of individual knights, their triumphs, and their downfalls. The action jumps from Aquitaine to Brittany to the coasts of England itself, painting a picture of a conflict that was exhausting everyone involved.
Why You Should Read It
What makes this book special is Froissart's voice. He wasn't a detached scholar; he was a storyteller who loved chivalry and adventure. Reading him, you get the gossip, the glory, and the gore. You feel the frustration of the English knights who want a clean fight and can't get one, and the calculated patience of the French king. The Black Prince's decline is portrayed with a real sense of tragedy—a hero fading as his world becomes more complicated. It’s history without the hindsight. Froissart doesn't know how the war will end, so the uncertainty and tension on every page are completely real.
Final Verdict
This is a perfect read for anyone who loves epic, character-driven nonfiction. If you enjoy books that make you feel like you're living in another time, Froissart is your guide. It's especially great for fans of medieval history, military strategy, or biographies of complex figures like the Black Prince. A word of warning: it's a direct translation of a 14th-century text, so the style is old-fashioned and the chronology can jump around. But if you lean into that, you'll find one of the most vivid and human accounts of the Middle Ages ever written.
This title is part of the public domain archive. Access is open to everyone around the world.
Anthony Hernandez
11 months agoHelped me clear up some confusion on the topic.
John Allen
5 months agoGreat read!
Deborah Smith
1 year agoPerfect.
Carol Smith
9 months agoGood quality content.
Betty Sanchez
10 months agoAs someone who reads a lot, the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. Exactly what I needed.