Henry VI experienced two
coronations: the first at
Westminster Abbey in England, on 6 November 1429, and the second at
Notre-Dame in Paris, on 16 December 1431. The coronation in England was in response to the collapse of the
Siege of Orléans and was a move recommended by Henry's English and French advisers. His English coronation had already been postponed for seven years, and
John of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Bedford, was the one to suggest the idea of his French coronation in Paris, as there was no reason to further postpone his coronation until he came of age. Deeply shocked by the Valois success in having
Charles VII crowned King of France in
Reims, the traditional altar for the consecration of French kings, Bedford believed that Henry VI's coronation in Paris would cancel the victory of
Joan of Arc, and he quickly arranged it. Charles' coronation in Reims, on 16 July 1429, was an act of symbolic significance compared to the English position in the 1420s. However, by the end of 1427, the French and the English were quarrelling over strategic military plans to gain the upper hand in conquering France. The
States-General in Paris announced that the provinces adjacent to the east and south of
Normandy were assigned to
Philip the Good and so allowed Bedford to concentrate in Normandy. Some Englishmen who feared an English government in France were opposed to the idea of Henry's being crowned in France before his coronation in England. During Henry's coronation as king of England in 1429, poems by
John Lydgate were read to stress further Henry's dual inheritance of England and France. A direct link was made between Henry and his grandfather,
Charles VI. The painted pedigree paralleled Henry's descent through his mother,
Catherine of Valois, from
Saint Louis, and his descent on his father's side from another saint,
Edward the Confessor. This was not mentioned in John Lydgate's poem, no doubt because it was largely a translation from a French work. But in another poem written for the king's coronation on 6 November 1429 Henry's descent from both these saints was mentioned. There was also a mention of the king's descent from
Clovis, to whom God had sent an angel, to secure for Henry of France and England the
fleur-de-lys and to signify perfect religious belief and the steadfast unity of the three persons of the Trinity. The actual anointing and coronation were performed by
Cardinal Beaufort,
Bishop of Winchester, a natural son of
John of Gaunt. On 23 April 1430, Henry embarked from
Dover for France in company with Cardinal Beaufort, the Duke of Bedford and the bishops of Thérouanne, Norwich, Beauvais and Évreux. On 16 December 1431, on the way to his French coronation in Paris, Henry travelled to the
Basilica of St Denis, a hallowed burial place for French kings on the outskirts of Paris. Two days earlier, the coronation was carefully set to be held at the cathedral of
Notre-Dame, on the first Sunday in
Advent, which was the traditional day for a king of France to proceed to the cathedral, this being a symbolic parallel with the progress of the King of Heaven. Henry was preceded by twenty-five trumpeters and a guard of between two and three thousand men. The royal party's route took the usual ceremonial entry into Paris from the north. With trumpets sounding and
fleurs-de-lys flying, the procession proceeded over the Seine bridge to the
Île de la Cité, where the young French King kissed the Holy Relics at the
Sainte Chapelle. The route traversed to the western part of Île de la Cité carefully missing the
Cathedral and then moved east to the
Hôtel des Tournelles where
Anne of Burgundy and the Duke of Bedford awaited their royal nephew. The following day, the King waited to the east of the city for his coronation. Preparation was done for the hallowing at
Notre-Dame, and the gold draperies were taken down until the coronation day. The newly anointed and crowned sovereign would be seated on a great raised dais. Stairs were covered by
azure cloth sewn with
fleurs-de-lys from the top of the structure down. The English
Chapel Royal choir joined the choir of the cathedral of Paris, who sang their traditional
polyphonic music during the coronation. Cardinal Beaufort did the actual crowning, which was traditionally an office to be performed by the
bishop of Paris, who was further shocked that Beaufort also celebrated part of the Holy Mass service at the chapel, another office which properly belonged to him. The coronation had very important orchestration, seeking to present again the dual-lineage of Henry, and a French play called
tableau of Châtelet: a boy clothed in gold
fleurs-de-lys, representing the king of England and France, was balancing the two crowns on his head with actors representing the duke of Burgundy and his son, the count of Nevers, offering him the shields of France, and other actors playing Anne of Burgundy and the Duke of Bedford as offering him the
Lion Rampant of England. As a blight on the occasion,
Philip, Duke of Burgundy, never in fact met his acknowledged sovereign at any time during his expedition to France from 1430 to 1432, since Philip was in
Lille in connection with his newly established
Order of the Golden Fleece. )|alt= Joan in red dress being bound to a stake as a group of men look on Apart from its splendour and glory, the coronation ultimately achieved little. England's suspicions of Burgundy had become marked concerning the actual military position, as it was discovered three days before the coronation that Philip had made a six-day general truce with Charles VII. The coronation was principally an English affair, dominated by Beaufort, some English bishops, and some
Anglophile French bishops. The coronation had not offered resistance to the Valois-French pressing at the borders, with the English losing mile after mile of territory. Henry, with little to show for his two-year stay in his French kingdom, returned to England by way of Calais and never stepped on his French kingdom again. In 1432,
Henry Chichele,
Archbishop of Canterbury, stated that Henry's stay had not achieved its desired effect but had instead shown that English power in Normandy was weakening. Bedford himself was then mourning the death of his wife, Anne of Burgundy, and collapsed from exhaustion after news of more territory being lost to Charles VII. Five months later, Bedford married Jacquetta of Luxembourg, who came from a family distrusted by Philip the Good's Anglo-Burgundian forces, and thus Bedford and Philip lost the link they had with each other through Anne of Burgundy, who had been the primary mediator between the two. The last three years saw England struggle to maintain its military commitment to the war, and Philip was finding the war too costly on his part. ==See also==