The situation didn't seem too promising for the English, however. The confrontation had been scheduled to 1 May 1441, the day the 3-month truce would expire, but the English in Gascony were lacking men and resources, which forced the local English captains to postpone the show of force several times. Ever since the Earl of Huntingdon was recalled to England in late 1440, English affairs in Gascony were left without an ultimate direction, and the English crown was finding it increasingly difficult to worry about its Gascon territories, as the focus was on defending northern France from attacks by Charles VII. Though the Gascon Estates sent emissaries to England in February 1441 to update
King Henry VI on the situation and to request aid, little to no help was forthcoming for the time being. The show of force was eventually stipulated to happen on
St. John's Day (24 June) of 1442. This agreement paralyzed Gascony for 18 months. The English king's uncle and
heir presumptive Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, criticized the English crown's neglect for Gascony and its failure to properly support the Earl of Huntingdon in the region. He warned that English positions in Gascony would be vulnerable to an attack by forces of the houses of
Albret,
Foix, and
Armagnac, the most powerful families in southwestern France, all of whom were nominally loyal to the
House of Valois. Gloucester advocated for an active policy of intervention to protect English territories. His influence was limited however, as Henry VI was increasingly favourable to his uncle's rival,
Cardinal Henry Beaufort, and his policy of reconciliation, over Humphrey's irredentism.
Charles VII of France also faced his own problems. He led a difficult campaign against the English in the
Île-de-France in 1441, and in early 1442, he had a meeting at
Nevers with his some of his leading nobles, who made various requests not too dissimilar to those which formed the pretext of the
Praguerie revolt two years earlier. Among these nobles were the Dukes of
Orléans and
Burgundy, whose families had previously been mortal enemies in the
Armagnac–Burgundian Civil War several decades earlier, but were now close political allies. Furthermore,
Count John IV of Armagnac (one of Charles VII's more rebellious nobles) had been negotiating his daughter's marriage to the
king of England himself, which would have strengthened the English position in
Gascony, and helped to sway other French nobles to the English side. While Gascony stood on the sidelines, the English captain
Thomas Rempston, at this point the main English figure in southwestern France, hoped to exploit the diplomatic advantage and took the time to try to extend the truce to the entirety of
Guyenne. He engaged in negotiations with other nearby hostile French nobles. On 8 August 1441 he concluded a truce with the viscounts of
Limoges and
Turenne (nephew of
Pope Gregory XI), who held lands not far from
Bordeaux. At the
Nevers meeting of 1442, the
Duke of Orléans tried advocating for peace between
France and
England, not forgetting the promise he made to the English after his release in 1440.
Charles VII however was determined to lift the siege of
Tartas at once without delay. Charles ignored the demands of his vassals and skillfully dismissed them, and prepared a large expedition to
Gascony, the so-called "Journée de Tartas". ==
Journée de Tartas==