Over the next three years, Jean and Marguerite de Carrouges had two more children and settled in Paris and Normandy, profiting from their celebrity with gifts and investments. In 1390, Carrouges was promoted to a ''chevalier d'honneur'' as a bodyguard of the King, a title which came with a substantial financial stipend and was a position of important social standing. The following year he was dispatched to
Hungary on a mission to investigate the severity of the threat from the
Ottoman Empire, the boundaries of which had been steadily spreading under Sultan
Bayezid I. In this mission he was second in command to
Jean de Boucicaut, a
Marshal of France and famous soldier, indicating the elevated social position Carrouges enjoyed following the duel. In 1392, Carrouges was present for one of the more notorious occurrences in fourteenth-century France: the descent into madness of King Charles VI. As a ''chevalier d'honneur'', Carrouges accompanied the King on the campaign and was present when the Royal Army entered
Brittany to hunt for
Pierre de Craon, a noble who had fled Paris after a failed attempt to murder
Olivier V de Clisson,
Constable of France. As the army passed
Le Mans on 8 August 1392, a loud noise startled the French King who, believing himself to be under attack, lashed out at the nearest person to him. The man was his brother Louis of Valois, who turned and fled. Killing several pages who attempted to calm his temper, the King set off on the full pursuit of Louis, leaving the army strung out across the countryside behind him. The pursuit continued for hours until the exhausted King was eventually subdued by his bodyguards, including Carrouges.
Crusade of Nicopolis In early 1396, following the peace treaty with England, the French army mobilised against another pressing threat; that of the
Ottoman Turks to the East, as part of a new
crusade. As a leader of the original party to investigate events in Hungary, it was natural that Jean de Carrouges would return with his followers in the service of his old commander, Admiral
Jean de Vienne. The army crossed Central Europe, united with the Hungarians and marched south, burning the city of
Vidin, and massacring the inhabitants before following the course of the
Danube southeast, cutting a swathe of destruction through the Ottoman territory. On 12 September, the army arrived at the city of
Nicopolis, but was repulsed from its walls, and settled into a siege. Thousands more were captured and executed after the battle by the victorious Turkish troops. The exact fate of Sir Jean de Carrouges is unknown, but it is probable that he fell close to his commander, Jean de Vienne, whose forces were trapped in a gully and decimated by Turkish cavalry. After his death, his estates passed to his 10-year-old son, Robert de Carrouges, and a mural of Jean and Marguerite de Carrouges was painted in the
Abbey of St. Étienne in
Caen to celebrate his memory. Over time, both the family and mural faded into obscurity. His family was succeeded by that of Le Veneur de Tillières. The latter received the land and
Château de Carrouges, which they remained the owner of until 1936, when the last representative of the family line ceded them to the State. In 1944, the castle was restored, as well as now managed by the
Centre des monuments nationaux, and open to the public. The commune of
Sainte-Marguerite-de-Carrouges, close to the town of
Carrouges, was also named for Marguerite de Carrouges. ==Legacy==