Pollard Memorial Library (Lowell)

The last duel, a true story of crime, scandal, and trial by combat in medieval France, Eric Jager

Label
The last duel, a true story of crime, scandal, and trial by combat in medieval France, Eric Jager
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 227-233) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The last duel
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
54806068
Responsibility statement
Eric Jager
Review
"In 1386, a few days after Christmas, a huge crowd gathers at a Paris monastery to watch the two men fight a duel to the death meant to "prove" which man's cause is right in God's sight. The dramatic true story of the knight, the squire, and the lady unfolds during the devastating Hundred Years' War between France and England, as enemy troops pillage the land, madness haunts the French court, the Great Schism splits the Church, Muslim armies threaten Christendom, and rebellion, treachery, and plague turn the lives of all into toys of Fortune."
Sub title
a true story of crime, scandal, and trial by combat in medieval France
Summary
"At the heart of the tale is Jean de Carrouges, a Norman knight who returns from combat in Scotland to find his wife, Marguerite, accusing Jacques Le Gris, her husband's old friend and fellow courtier, of brutally raping her. The knight takes his cause before the teenage King Charles VI, the highest judge in France. Amid Le Gris's vociferous claims of innocence and doubts about the now pregnant Marguerite's charges (and about the paternity of her child), the deadlocked court decrees a "trial by combat" that leaves her fate, too, in the balance. For if her husband and champion loses the duel, she will be put to death as a false accuser.""Carrouges and Le Gris, in full armor, eventually meet on a walled field in Paris before a massive crowd that includes the king and many nobles of the realm. A fierce fight on horseback and then on foot ensues during which both combatants suffer wounds - but only one is fatal. The violent and tragic episode was notorious in its time owing to the nature of the alleged crime, the legal impasse it provoked, and the resulting trial by combat, an ancient but increasingly suspect institution that was thereafter abolished."--Jacket
Table Of Contents
Author's note -- Prologue -- Part one. Carrouges -- The feud -- Battle and siege -- The crime of crimes -- The challenge -- The inquiry -- Part two. The judgment of God -- Oaths and last words -- Mortal combat -- Convent and crusade -- Epilogue -- Appendix : The quarrel's aftermath
Classification
Content
Mapped to