[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":25},["ShallowReactive",2],{"zoom:p5ch18z14:en":3},{"period":4,"chapter":15,"zoom":18},{"id":5,"title":6,"titleEn":6,"titleEs":7,"coverArtworkId":8,"range":9,"rangeEn":9,"rangeEs":9,"cover":10},"p5","High Middle Ages","Plena Edad Media","hannibal-alpes","987 → 1453",{"fileName":11,"filePageUrl":12,"imageUrl":13,"sourceLabel":14},"Facade-notre-dame-paris-ciel-bleu.JPG","https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Facade-notre-dame-paris-ciel-bleu.JPG","/assets/p5-moyen-age-classique-cover.png","Wikimedia Commons",{"id":16,"title":17},"p5ch18","Charles VI: Minority, Madness, and Civil War (1380–1422)",{"id":19,"title":20,"chapterId":16,"html":21,"hasEn":22,"isFallback":23,"seoDescription":24},"p5ch18z14","1420–1422: The Treaty of Troyes and the Death of Charles VI","\u003Cp>The combination of civil war and English pressure led to a sovereignty crisis. In 1420, part of the power chose a radical solution: to reorganise the succession in favour of England.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>🤝 1420: The Treaty of Troyes\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>The \u003Cstrong>Treaty of Troyes\u003C/strong> (1420) stipulated that \u003Cstrong>Catherine\u003C/strong>, daughter of Charles VI, would marry \u003Cstrong>Henry V\u003C/strong> of England, and that the heir of this union would be recognised as King of France. The Dauphin Charles was set aside.\u003C/p>\n\u003Cp>This text was contested: many judged that a king could not freely dispose of the crown, and Charles VI’s authority was undermined by illness. But the treaty became a major political weapon: it justified the Anglo-Burgundian alliance.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>⚰️ 1422: End of a Reign\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>Charles VI died on \u003Cstrong>21 October 1422\u003C/strong> at the \u003Cstrong>Hôtel Saint-Pol\u003C/strong> in Paris, after more than forty years of reign. He was buried at \u003Cstrong>Saint-Denis\u003C/strong>.\u003C/p>\n\u003Cp>The succession remained disputed: juridically and politically, the kingdom divided between the partisans of the lineage arising from the treaty and those who supported the Dauphin, the future Charles VII, in the territories south of the Loire.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>🧠 Key Takeaways\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>Troyes (1420) was a civil war solution: a settlement that fractured the kingdom further.\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>The death of 1422 opened a legitimacy crisis at the heart of the end of the Hundred Years’ War.\u003C/li>\n\u003C/ul>\n",true,false,"The combination of civil war and English pressure led to a sovereignty crisis. In 1420, part of the power chose a radical solution: to reorganise the",1777502646405]