Chroniques de J. Froissart, tome 08.2/13 : 1370-1377 (Depuis le combat de…

(8 User reviews)   1571
By Jennifer Chen Posted on Mar 22, 2026
In Category - Epic Fantasy
Froissart, Jean, 1338?-1410? Froissart, Jean, 1338?-1410?
French
Hey, you know how we talk about Game of Thrones being brutal? This is the real thing, but without dragons. I just finished this chunk of Froissart's chronicles covering 1370-1377, and it's wild. It's all about the messy middle of the Hundred Years' War. Think less grand strategy and more gritty reality: a king of France dies, his son is crowned, and England's famous Black Prince is slowly fading from illness while trying to hold his lands in France. The real conflict here isn't just between kingdoms—it's about what happens when the legendary heroes start to falter. Power vacuums open up, local lords go rogue, and brutal, small-scale raids become the norm. It's a story of decline, shifting fortunes, and the sheer, exhausting grind of a war that nobody seems able to win. Froissart was there, talking to the knights and squires, and he gives you the frontline gossip. If you want to understand the human cost behind the history dates, this is it.
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This volume picks up in a turbulent time. The great English victories of earlier decades are a memory. Edward, the Black Prince, is in Aquitaine, but he's seriously ill. His strength is waning just as the need to govern and defend his vast French territory is peaking. Across the way, King Charles V of France is playing a smarter, more cautious game, avoiding big battles and letting the English overextend themselves.

The Story

The narrative isn't one clean plot, but a series of interconnected episodes. We see the Black Prince's final, grim military action—the brutal sack of Limoges. We follow the power struggles after the death of the King of Castile, which pull both France and England into a Spanish sideshow. Mostly, we watch the war fracture into a hundred smaller conflicts: raids, sieges of minor castles, and the rise of freelance captains who fight for profit as much as for king or country. The spotlight shifts from royal courts to the muddy fields and besieged towns where the war was truly lived and felt.

Why You Should Read It

What grabs me about Froissart is his access. He's less a dry historian and more a medieval journalist. He traveled, he interviewed aging knights about their glory days, and he reported their stories with a flair for drama and personal honor. Reading this, you get the rumors, the boasts, and the grudges. You see how fragile a commander's reputation is, and how quickly fortune can turn. The Black Prince's physical decline becomes a powerful metaphor for the fading of England's initial dream of conquest. It’s history with the sweat and rust still on it.

Final Verdict

This isn't for the casual reader looking for a simple novel. It's for anyone fascinated by realpolitik of the Middle Ages, military history fans who want the campaign details beyond the famous battles, and readers who enjoy primary sources that haven't been overly polished. If you like Bernard Cornwell's historical fiction but want to hear the actual, unfiltered voices from the era, Froissart is your guy. Just be ready for a dense, episodic, and sometimes shocking ride.



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Margaret Rodriguez
1 year ago

I came across this while browsing and the plot twists are genuinely surprising. A valuable addition to my collection.

Kimberly Robinson
1 week ago

Essential reading for students of this field.

Anthony Scott
8 months ago

Very helpful, thanks.

Brian Young
5 months ago

Citation worthy content.

Melissa Hernandez
6 months ago

From the very first page, the emotional weight of the story is balanced perfectly. Thanks for sharing this review.

5
5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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