,
Brittany, France In 1391, Craon was abruptly expelled from the royal court in Paris for unknown reasons. He blamed
Olivier V de Clisson, encouraged by de Clisson's enemy
John IV, Duke of Brittany. After a period in Brittany, Craon returned to Paris in secret, planning to murder Clisson. He waylaid Clisson in a narrow street. Clisson's unarmed servants fled, but Clisson was saved from death by his
chainmail coat, and was able to draw his sword and fend off his attackers. In the struggle, he fell from his horse and was knocked unconscious against the door of a baker's shop. Believing him dead, Craon fled Paris for Brittany. In fact Clisson was only superficially injured. In the aftermath of the attack, several of Craon's servants in Paris were arrested and executed for assisting him. Craon's property was seized and his castle in
Porchefontaine near
Versailles was razed to the ground. John V refused to deliver Craon to the king, so Charles and Clisson marched on Brittany, only for the king to have a mental breakdown during the expedition, killing several of his own soldiers in a deranged fit. Clisson's enemies at court blamed him for provoking the disaster and instituted proceedings against him. Clisson himself then fled to Brittany, becoming a lifelong ally of his old enemy John IV. ==Exile and return==