Mad War 1487 campaign During the
Mad War, at the end of May 1487, nearly 15,000 French troops entered Brittany. The army of the Duke of Brittany was concentrated towards Malestroit and included 600 cavalry and nearly 16,000 infantry, mainly peasants. The advance of French troops was rapid:
Ancenis,
Châteaubriant,
La Guerche, and
Redon fell to the French.
Ploërmel attempted to resist, but fell after three days of bombardment and was taken on 1 June 1487. With this bad news, and political infighting between the Breton nobles, the Ducal army broke up. About 4,000 troops remained, unable to rescue Ploërmel. Francis II fled to
Vannes, and finally to
Nantes. In Nantes, a defence was organised. By 19 June 1487, French troops laid siege to that city. The siege was prolonged due to an effective Breton defence, the faithfulness of the people, the aid of foreign mercenaries, and the decisive support from
Cornouaille and
Léon, who broke the blockade. The French troops were held in check, and lifted the siege on 6 August. The French King still managed to take Vitré on 1 September, then
Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier and finally
Dol-de-Bretagne. Early in 1488, most Breton towns, however, were recovered by the Ducal army. Only
Clisson,
La Guerche,
Dol,
Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier, and
Vitré remained in the hands of the French.
1488 campaign On 20 January 1488, the
Dukes of Orleans and Brittany were declared rebels by the
Parlement of Paris. They and their accomplices were no longer considered rebellious vassals, but subjects guilty of high treason. In spring, the Duke of Orleans retook for his Breton ally
Vannes,
Auray, and
Ploërmel. The viscounty of
Rohan was forced to capitulate. On 24 April, a French judgment of confiscation was issued against all the goods of Louis of Orleans. Also in this period of conflict; For the Bretons: • Alain of Albret had obtained a subsidy from the Spanish court, and returned to Brittany with 5,000 men. •
Maximilian of Austria sent 1,500 men. • Lord Scales landed with 700 English archers, all volunteers. For the French: •
La Trémoille assembled his forces on the borders of the Duchy, while; Maximilian's attention was however diverted by a rebellion in his territory of
Flanders, supported by the French Marshal d'Esquerdes. In all of this, the various allies of the Duke of Brittany competed for the hand of
Anne of Brittany: •
Louis d'Orléans; • Alain d'Albret, and •
Maximilian of Austria were all candidates. The war resumed in late March 1488. La Trémoille assembled the French army of 15,000 troops in
Pouancé and easily took Château de Marcillé-Robert on 28 March. On April 7, Francis II ordered the muster of Breton troops in Rennes. On 15 April, the French army laid siege to Châteaubriant, which fell eight days later. La Trémoille then moved to Ancenis where he laid siege on the night of the 12th to 13th. The city fell to French artillery on 19 May. As negotiations began with the Duke of Brittany, who sought a truce, La Trémoille attacked
Le Loroux-Bottereau, which fell easily. On 1 June 1488, a truce concluded the negotiations. It favoured the French, whose troops remained mobilised along the border, while Breton nobles and peasants returned home. La Trémoille anticipated the end of the truce, and on 17 June, he put his army on the march towards its next target,
Fougères. The breakdown of negotiations on 9 July precipitated a Breton defeat; while the Breton army was still reassembling, the French army laid siege to Fougères. The city was regarded as one of the best defended, guarded by 2,000 to 3,000 men. By mid-July the Breton army was finally assembled, but it was too late to help Fougères, which had capitulated on the 19th, after a week of siege against the blows of powerful French artillery. Following this defeat, Dinan surrendered in early August, but Rennes decided to resist. La Trémoille, wished to avoid a lengthy and uncertain siege after the last siege of Nantes, chose to bypass Rennes, and attacked
Saint-Malo, which surrendered on 14 August. On 20 August 1488, peace was concluded in
Anjou. The
Treaty of Sablé committed the Bretons on several points, including the Duke's promise not to marry his daughters without the consent of the King of France. Francis II, Duke of Brittany, died on 9 September and
Anne of Brittany became Duchess in January of the following year. An amnesty was then given to Lescun, Dunois, and most of the vanquished. The French had also captured Louis of Orleans and was imprisoned in a fortress but would be pardoned by Charles VIII three years later.
1489 campaign On 10 February 1489, the
Treaty of Redon was signed between the Duchy of Brittany and
England: • King
Henry VII would provide 6,000 men from mid-February to November each year, but they had to be maintained at the Duchy's expense. On 14 February 1489, two pacts, one between the Archduchy of Austria and the Spanish Kingdom of Castile, and the other between Austria and England were also signed in
Dordrecht, against France; they were complemented by a 27 March Anglo-Spanish treaty in
Medina del Campo. Within the Duchy however, different ambitions clashed: • The Marshal of Rieux, as Regent of Brittany and guardian of the young Duchess, was best placed to assemble Breton forces. Alain d'Albret, mainly due to controlling the city of Nantes since 1489, was his ally, and his half-sister Françoise de Dinan, was the governess of
Anne of Brittany. • The Viscount Jean de Rohan (who claimed to inherit the Duchy because of his ancestry and his wife, Marie of Brittany) tried to conquer a part of the Duchy beginning with an assault on
Guingamp in November, but the Marshal of Rieux foiled him. He recommenced in January 1489 with his brother Pierre Quintin and French reinforcements, and succeeded, then seized without difficulty
Hédé,
Montfort,
Moncontour,
Quintin,
Quimper,
Lannion,
Tréguier,
Morlaix,
Concarneau, and
Brest in February with part of the Ducal fleet. Only
Concarneau resisted a siege of 15 days. He then demanded the hand of Anne for his son Jean. But Charles VIII, anxious about his progress, denied him this and forced him to submit. The Breton Chancellor Philippe de Montauban, Dunois, the Prince of Orange, Raoul de Lornay took the heiress with them, first to Redon, then fled to Nantes, without entering it, the city being held by the Marshal of Rieux. Finally, the Duchess's party took refuge in Rennes, and despite the outrage of the French King on February 10, Anne was crowned. The Breton treasury at this point was empty, the revenues of the domain were low: the Ducal jewels and plates had been sold. If this was not enough, loans on cities were forced (Francis II had already used this expedient). The chancellery required advances and loans (the Prince of Orange gave over 200,000 pounds, the Duke of Orleans 45,000). Monetary devaluation, which started in 1472 was exacerbated. Finally, various communities wanted to redeem their imposts (they had paid one time a hundred times the annual amount, and were later released). Austria and Spain sent mercenaries in March and April (respectively 1,500 and 2,000 men who joined
Anne of Brittany) and England (6,000 men sent to Rieux). They were employed to retake Rohan towns in
Lower Brittany (
Lannion,
Tréguier,
Morlaix from May to October). On 3 December 1489, the parties agreed to the Peace of Frankfurt, formally signed by Maximilian of Austria and the King of France on 22 July 1490. France retained
Brest, and other places acquired since the
Treaty of Sablé:
Dinan,
Fougères,
Saint-Aubin-du-Cormier, and
Saint-Malo. Brittany dismissed its mercenaries. Peace lasted for a year, but both sides kept themselves armed. In the summer of 1490, a peasant revolt broke out: the peasants of Cornouaille, led by John the Old, assembled and plundered the city of
Quimper. The revolt was put down by Spanish mercenaries at
Pratanros. On 4 July 1490, the
Estates of Brittany met in Vannes. They ratified new imposts and granted new taxes. These additional resources allowed them to pay: •
Jean de Rieux, for retaining powerful forts in Lower Brittany, absolving him of accusations of treason, and received a payment of 100,000 écus, plus 14,000 pension; •
Alain I of Albret, also obtained 100,000 écus, and the hand of Isabeau for his son Gabriel of Avesnes; • Françoise de Dinan, his half-sister. These gifts represented four times the annual budget of the Duchy, and were paid in installments. On 19 December 1490, Anne married Maximilian of Austria in Rennes by proxy. The French regarded this a provocation and violation of the Treaty of Sablé.
1491 campaign On 2 January 1491, Alain d'Albret changed allegiance, signing the Treaty of Moulins with the French King: promising the city of Nantes to him. He seized the castle of Nantes on 19 March. On 4 April, Easter Sunday, the French King entered the city, which offered no resistance, having been evacuated by the Breton Marshal of Rieux. The French army at this stage had a strength of 50,000 troops. Brittany was therefore regarded by the French as conquered: • French institutions were created in Brittany (administration of finances with Jean François de Cardonne appointed Chief of Finances); • The Prince of Orange was appointed lieutenant-general. In July, Rennes was besieged, where Anne's party with 12,000 men resisted, but with few provisions. By 27 October 1491, Charles VIII convened the
Estates of Brittany in Vannes, to counsel Anne in accordance to French conditions. A preliminary interview in
Laval requested the following: • the occupation of the Duchy by the French army; • the Viscount de Rohan to be appointed as lieutenant-general representing the King in the Duchy (governor); • any rights to the Duchy must be submitted to a commission of 24 members; •
Anne of Brittany to renounce her proxy marriage to her Austrian husband, Maximilian and; • Marriage of Anne to the French King. After the siege of Rennes, marriage with the King of France was accepted on 15 November, by the Treaty of Rennes: it guaranteed 120,000 livres to the Duchess, and 120,000 livres to the Ducal treasury, to pay off the mercenaries to leave the Duchy. The engagement took place on 23 November at Rennes, and the marriage on 6 December at the
Château de Langeais.
Settlement The conflict was settled by various treaties, by which the King of France obtained the renunciation of the rights of the different possible heirs, and regulated various aspects of the succession, including the payment of debts of the Duchy. • the marriage contract between
Charles VIII and
Anne of Brittany: • both spouses mutually donated their right of succession to the other; • Jean de Chalons, Prince of Orange and cousin of
Anne of Brittany, abandoned his rights to the King of France for 100,000 livres; • Peace of Étaples, signed on 3 November 1492, with the King of England: the two sovereigns agreed on a settlement of the Duchy's debts to the total of 620,000 gold crowns. This agreement freed all towns held as security. • the Treaty of Barcelona, signed on 19 January 1493, allowed the resolution of the Duchy's debts to the Spanish sovereigns, which also held some rights to the succession. • Later,
Louis XII and
Anne of Brittany put the Rohans on trial, thus depriving them of their rights. • The privileges and rights of Bretons were confirmed (e.g. no new law without the consent of the
Estates of Brittany. Appointment of civil officers was reserved only for Bretons or with authorisation, no military service could occur outside Brittany. Bretons could not be tried outside Brittany. Taxes or other compulsory payments would be decided only by the Estates.
Aftermath From a political standpoint, Brittany was therefore united to France, definitively according to chroniclers in the reign of Louis XII (only in 1532 according to the Breton writers and modern authors), then annexed and gradually assimilated. It lost its autonomy (under Charles VIII), before retrieving some of it in 1492 and 1499. This was, initially, a purely
personal union. The majority of the nobility of the Duchy and the middle class land owners were generally satisfied with this marriage because peace had returned and the tax burden was greatly reduced. A plot (which included those aggrieved by the settlement occurred: Some officers of the Duchy; captains and citizens hoping for ambitious positions, led by the Viscount of Rohan in collusion with England) in 1492 failed. The Breton fleet, on the orders of
Anne of Brittany, also now fought on the side of the French fleet, as shown in the
Battle of Saint-Mathieu in 1512. ==Sources==