[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":22},["ShallowReactive",2],{"zoom:p6ch4z8:en":3},{"period":4,"chapter":12,"zoom":15},{"id":5,"title":6,"titleEn":6,"titleEs":7,"range":8,"rangeEn":8,"rangeEs":8,"covers":9},"p6","The Hundred Years' War","La Guerra de los Cien Años","1328 → 1461",[10],{"filename":11,"url":11},"COMTE_Pierre-Charles_Sacre_de_Charles_VII_Huile_sur_toile.jpg",{"id":13,"title":14},"p6ch4","Charles VI: Minority, Madness, and Civil War (1380–1422)",{"id":16,"title":17,"chapterId":13,"html":18,"hasEn":19,"isFallback":20,"seoDescription":21},"p6ch4z8","1383: Restoration of Royal Authority after Roosebeke","\u003Cp>After Roosebeke, the priority was no longer to defeat an external enemy: it was to \u003Cstrong>reimpose obedience\u003C/strong> from the towns and restore the monarchy’s \u003Cstrong>fiscal capacity\u003C/strong>. Philip the Bold played a driving role: to restore royal authority was to restore taxation.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>🏰 Compiègne (4 January 1383): A Line of Government\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>At \u003Cstrong>Compiègne\u003C/strong> on \u003Cstrong>4 January 1383\u003C/strong>, the Duke of Burgundy set out the broad lines of royal policy for the year: submit the towns, secure revenues, and reaffirm sovereignty through public ceremony.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>🚪 Paris (January–March 1383): Punish, Occupy, Pardon\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>The ritual was designed to strike minds. After returning the oriflamme to \u003Cstrong>Saint-Denis\u003C/strong> (10 January), Charles VI made his entry into Paris the following day:\u003C/p>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>the army halted at the gates, then occupied the city;\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>the entry was made by trampling down the gates of the \u003Cstrong>Porte Saint-Denis\u003C/strong>;\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>ringleaders were arrested, some executed;\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>the billeting of troops was itself a punishment (extortion, charges imposed on citizens).\u003C/li>\n\u003C/ul>\n\u003Cp>On \u003Cstrong>27 January 1383\u003C/strong>, the Parisian municipality was confiscated: the provostship and the \u003Cem>échevinage\u003C/em> passed “into the king’s hand”, and certain urban structures (including some guild masterships) were abolished. Submission was completed by a staging of mercy: on \u003Cstrong>1 March 1383\u003C/strong>, a grand ceremony granted pardon after a speech by \u003Cstrong>Pierre d’Orgemont\u003C/strong> and a collective supplication.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>🏙️ A Template Reproduced in the \u003Cem>Pays d’Oïl\u003C/em>… and in the South\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>The protocol was repeated: royal entries, fines, confiscations, reorganisations. \u003Cstrong>Rouen\u003C/strong> was particularly punished (fines and loss of privileges), while \u003Cstrong>Languedoc\u003C/strong> was punished “as a whole” before negotiations: the monarchy learned to obtain obedience without permanently losing the consent of local elites.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>🧠 Key Takeaways\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>The restoration of 1383 combined repression, occupation, and pardon: a political pedagogy.\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>The objective was fiscal as much as symbolic: to make taxation — and therefore war and the state — accepted.\u003C/li>\n\u003C/ul>\n",true,false,"After Roosebeke, the priority was no longer to defeat an external enemy: it was to reimpose obedience from the towns and restore the monarchy’s fiscal capacity",1782343319256]