Coronation Philip VI, John's father, died on 22 August 1350, and John's coronation as John II, king of France, took place in
Reims the following 26 September. Joanna, his second wife, was crowned queen of France at the same time. In November 1350, King John had
Raoul II of Brienne, Count of Eu seized and summarily executed, for reasons that remain unclear, although it was rumoured that he had pledged the English the County of
Guînes for his release from captivity.
Military Ordinances of 1351 John inherited a French military weakened by disorganization and feudal fragmentation, and seven months after being crowned king, he issued the ordinances of 1351 which sought to address these issues. Enacted in response to military setbacks, such as the French defeat at the
Battle of Crécy in 1346, these ordinances aimed to address issues of organization, discipline, and payment within the French military, and serve as proof that John as a chivalrous king had an exact grasp of the inadequacies of the feudal army. The
military ordinances of 1351, issued by King John II the Good, are considered the first comprehensive military ordinances in French history due to their systematic approach to reforming the royal army during the
Hundred Years' War. While earlier French monarchs, such as
Philip Augustus, issued military-related decrees, none were as comprehensive or specifically focused on army-wide organization as John's ordinances. •
Institution of the "Montre" (Military Review System): To ensure accountability and proper equipping of troops. It mandated regular inspections, known as montres, to verify the number, equipment, and readiness of soldiers. Each combatant was required to be part of a company led by a captain, who was responsible for the unit's discipline and preparedness. Horses were marked to prevent soldiers from presenting the same mounts in multiple units to inflate numbers and claim additional pay. Wages were paid only after the montre, ensuring soldiers were properly equipped and present. This system aimed to curb fraud, reduce desertion, and ensure that only well-equipped soldiers received payment, marking a shift toward a more professional army. •
Standardizing units: Organizing troops into smaller units (
routes) led by appointed captains for better coordination. •
Limiting noble independence: Curtailing nobles' ability to act independently or abandon campaigns. •
Improving logistics: Enhancing provisioning to sustain campaigns. •
Discipline and Accountability: Captains were made responsible for their units' conduct, with strict oversight by the constable and marshals. The ordinance aimed to curb the lawlessness of troops, particularly when not engaged in active campaigns, as demobilized soldiers often turned to banditry. Rivalries among noble factions, including Charles of Navarre and the
Duke of Orléans caused political instability and undermined royal authority. Nobles had a resistance to discipline and resented serving under royal oversight or alongside common soldiers, as this clashed with their privileged status. The incomplete implementation of the ordinences by the nobility meant that their enforcement was inconsistent, with some captains adopting the structure while others ignored it. The crown's financial difficulties didn't help either, which forced reliance on feudal levies, limiting consistent payments to soldiers.
Impact on the Battle of Poitiers The
Battle of Poitiers saw the English, led by
Edward, the Black Prince, defeat a larger French army under John. The failure to integrate the ordinances contributed to the French defeat in several ways: •
Lack of unified command: The French army (12,000–15,000) suffered from divisions among commanders, including John, the
Dauphin Charles, and the Duke of Orléans, preventing coordination. Some contingents, like Orléans', fled or failed to engage. •
Poor tactical discipline: French knights reverted to impetuous charges, ignoring the ordinances' emphasis on disciplined tactics. Disorganized assaults failed against English defensive positions with longbowmen. •
Fragmented army structure: The French army, a mix of feudal levies and semi-professional units, lacked cohesion. The vanguard's impulsive attack under the Marshals of Clermont and Audrehem disrupted strategy. •
Contrast with English effectiveness: The English army's cohesion, professional soldiers, and unified command exploited French disarray, using longbowmen and terrain effectively. The French defeat at Poitiers had severe repercussions. The king's capture led to the
Treaty of Brétigny (1360) which ceded territories to England (most of which were later recovered by Charles V), and thousands of French casualties, including nobles, further weakened the feudal structure. The battle exposed military weaknesses and highlighted the failure to overcome noble resistance, delaying military recovery until further reforms were enacted under
Charles V.
Legacy While John's military ordinances were ambitious, their effectiveness was limited by the structural and economic constraints of the time. Although the ordinances were not entirely successful due to challenges in enforcement and the ongoing pressures of war, they represented the foundational step toward modernizing the French military, setting an historical precedent for later military developments. Their emphasis on centralized control and discipline influenced subsequent reforms, notably
Charles V's tactical and administrative reforms, and
Charles VII's creation of a standing army and permanent taxation which solidified royal control. As a result, the feudal system evolved from a decentralized military structure to one where nobles were integrated into a royal framework, with the crown gaining significant power over the fragmented nobility. These changes enabled France to recover from defeats like Poitiers and ultimately win the Hundred Years' War by 1453.
Creation of the Order of the Star On 16 November 1351, 3 months after creating the military reform ordinances of 1351, John established the
Order of the Star, a
chivalric order, to unify the French nobility under royal leadership and counter
Edward III's
Order of the Garter. Unlike earlier religious military orders (like
the Templars and
the Knights Hospitaller, etc.) the Order of the Star was a distinctly French, royal initiative. It was the first organized, state-sponsored group of knights in France with a clear military purpose tied to national defense, setting it apart from feudal levies or informal knightly groups.
Negotiations and falling out with Navarre at Rouen in 1356 (
Chroniques de Froissart, Loyset Liedet,
BnF, Manuscrit français 2 643 fº 197v). In 1354, John's son-in-law and cousin,
Charles II of Navarre, who, in addition to his
Kingdom of Navarre in the
Pyrenees mountains, bordering between France and Spain, also held extensive lands in Normandy, was implicated in the assassination of the
Constable of France,
Charles de la Cerda, who was the favourite of King John. Nevertheless, in order to have a strategic ally against the English in
Gascony, John signed the
Treaty of Mantes with Charles on 22 February 1354. The peace did not last between the two, and Charles eventually struck up an alliance with
Henry of Grosmont, the first
Duke of Lancaster. The following year, on 10 September 1355 John and Charles signed the
Treaty of Valognes, but this second peace lasted hardly any longer than the first culminating in a highly dramatic event where, during a banquet on 5 April 1356 at the
Royal Castle in
Rouen attended by the King's son
Charles, Charles II of Navarre and a number of Norman magnates and notables, John II burst through the door in full armour, swords in hand, along with his entourage, which included the king's brother
Phillip, younger son
Louis and cousins as well as over a hundred fully armed knights waiting outside. John lunged over and grabbed Charles of Navarre shouting, "let no one move if he does not want to be dead with this sword." With John's son,
Dauphin Charles, the banquet host, on his knees pleading for him to stop, the King grabbed Navarre by the throat and pulled him out of his chair yelling in his face, "Traitor, you are not worthy to sit at my son's table!" He then ordered the arrests of all the guests including Navarre and, in what many considered to be a rash move as well as a political mistake, he had John, the
Count of Harcourt and several other Norman lords and notables summarily executed later that night in a yard nearby while he stood watching. This act, which was largely driven by revenge for Charles of Navarre's and John of Harcourt's pre-meditated plot that killed John's favourite, Charles de La Cerda, would push much of what remaining support the King had from the lords in Normandy away to King Edward and the English camp, setting the stage for the English invasion and the resulting
Battle of Poitiers in the months to come.
Battle of Poitiers In 1355, the
Hundred Years' War had flared up again, and in July 1356,
Edward, the Black Prince, son of
Edward III of England, took an army on a great
chevauchée through France. John pursued him with an army of his own. In September the two forces met a few miles southeast of
Poitiers. John was confident of victory—his army was probably twice the size of his opponent's—but he did not immediately attack. While he waited, the
papal legate went back and forth, trying to negotiate a truce between the leaders. There is some debate over whether the Black Prince wanted to fight at all. He offered his wagon train, which was heavily loaded with loot. He also promised not to fight against France for seven years. Some sources claim that he even offered to return
Calais to the French crown. John countered by demanding that 100 of the Prince's best knights surrender themselves to him as hostages, along with the Prince himself. No agreement could be reached. Negotiations broke down, and both sides prepared for combat. On the day of the battle, John and 17 knights from his personal guard dressed identically. This was done to confuse the enemy, who would do everything possible to capture the sovereign on the field. In spite of this precaution, following the destruction and routing of the massive force of French knights at the hands of the ceaseless English
longbow volleys John was captured as the English force charged to finish their victory. John, who had dismounted to fight alongside his men wielding a battle-axe, continued to fight until Denis de Morbecque, a French exile who fought for England, approached him. "Sire," Morbecque said. "I am a knight of
Artois. Yield yourself to me and I will lead you to the Prince of Wales."
Surrender and capture King John surrendered by handing him his glove. That night King John dined in the red silk tent of his enemy. The Black Prince attended to him personally. He was then taken to
Bordeaux, and from there to
England. The Battle of Poitiers would be one of the major military disasters not just for France, but at any time during the Middle Ages. While negotiating a peace accord, John was at first held in the
Savoy Palace, then at a variety of locations, including
Windsor,
Hertford,
Somerton Castle in
Lincolnshire,
Berkhamsted Castle in
Hertfordshire, and briefly at King John's Lodge, formerly known as Shortridges, in
East Sussex. Eventually, John was taken to the
Tower of London. In France, what struck the people was not so much the defeat at Poitiers as the captivity of King John. When the French people learned of the frantic flight of the French lords from battle, they believed it was due to treason. And if not for English gold, then it was out of cowardice—and so, what did the once-revered words of 'honor' and 'nobility' mean? People began to hate the treacherous and cowardly knights. Some of them, returning to their estates, narrowly escaped being torn apart by furious
villeins, even those who, as prisoners on parole, came back to gather their ransoms.—at
Dover Castle, and reached English-held
Calais on 8 July. Leaving his son
Louis of Anjou in Calais as a replacement hostage to guarantee payment, John was allowed to return to France to raise the funds. The Treaty of Brétigny was ratified in October 1360.
Louis' escape and return to England On 1 July 1363, King John was informed that Louis had broken his parole and escaped from Calais. Troubled by the dishonour of this action, and the arrears in his ransom, John gathered his royal council to announce that he would voluntarily return to captivity in England and negotiate with Edward in person. When faced with the opposition of his advisors, the king famously replied that "if good faith were banned from the Earth, she ought to find asylum in the hearts of kings". Immediately after he appointed his son
Charles the Duke of Normandy to be regent and governor of France until his return.
Death John landed in England in January 1364 where he was met by Sir
Alan Buxhull, Sir Richard Pembridge and Lord Burghersh at Dover, to be conducted to Eltham and the
Savoy Palace and was warmly welcomed in London in January 1364. He was received with great honour, and was a frequent guest of Edward at Westminster. A few months after his arrival, however, he fell ill with an unknown malady. He died at the Savoy Palace in April 1364. His body was returned to France, where he was interred in the royal chambers at
Saint Denis Basilica. The malady that caused John's death in 1364 at age 44 is not known; the Black Death, recurrent in the 1360s, or other infectious diseases are plausible causes, but no primary source confirms this. Speculation about arsenic poisoning, mentioned in relation to his son
Charles V's illness, is not supported for John himself. John II was succeeded as King of France by his eldest son, Charles, who reigned as
Charles V, known as
The Wise. Physical strength Françoise Autrand and
Jean Deviosse suggest John's health was not robust, citing his limited participation in physical activities and his death from an unspecified illness. ==Personal relationships==