- Saintonge War
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Saintonge War
partof=
caption="St. Louis IX at the Battle of Taillebourg", byEugène Delacroix .
date=July 1242
place=Saintonge ,France
result=French victory
combatant1=
combatant2=flagicon|EnglandKingdom of England
commander1=Louis IX
commander2=Henry III
strength1=around 50,000
strength2=around 30,000
casualties1=
casualties2=The Saintonge War was a feudal dynastic encounter that occurred in1242 between forces ofLouis IX of France and those ofHenry III of England .Saintonge is the region aroundSaintes in the west ofFrance . The conflict arose because some vassals of Louis were displeased with accession of his brother, Alphonse, as count of Poitou. The French decisively defeated the English at the Battle of Taillebourg and concluded the struggle at the Siege of Saintes, but because of dynastic sensibilities and the desire to go on a crusade, Louis did not annexGuyenne .Prelude
By the terms of his will Louis VIII had left Poitou as an
appanage to his younger son Alphonse. In June 1241, Louis IX held a plenary court atSaumur inAnjou and announced that Alphonse, having come of age, was ready to come into possession. Many nobles fromAquitaine attended the court, among themIsabella of Angoulême and her husband, theCount of La Marche , Hugh de Lusignan. After the meeting at Saumur, Louis went toPoitiers and installed his brother as theCount of Poitiers . The Lusignans were not receptive to Capetian authority in the region, and Isabella was particularly frustrated that her son, the Earl of Cornwall and brother to King Henry III, had not got the title. Shortly after his arrival at Poitiers, Louis learned that Hugh had assembled an army of men-at-arms at the nearby town of Lusignan. Talks between Louis and Alphonse and Hugh and Isabella did not resolve the dispute.In April 1242, Louis assembled a force at
Chinon that some contemporaries estimated at around 50,000. On May 20, 1242, Henry arrived at Royen and joined the rebelling French nobles, forming an army that may have numbered about 30,000. [These figures may have been glamorized.] The two kings exchanged letters, but these resolved nothing.Battle of Taillebourg
Henry advanced to Tonnay-Charente by mid-July and Louis moved to Sainte-Jean-d'Angely, just north of Taillebourg, the armies intending to reach the bridge across the
Charente River , located in the commune of Taillebourg. Henry and Hugh positioned their army near the village of Saint-James on the west bank of the river and camped in the neighboring field, while Louis was welcomed to the fortified chateau of Geoffroy de Rancon, the Count of Taillebourg. Henry decided to send an advance guard to protect the left bank of the Taillebourg bridge, a move that led to a sharp encounter with some French troops on either July 21 or 22. Louis decided to follow up this engagement and launched a full offensive with the entire French army. The aggressive French assaults carried the day and the English king fled south to the town of Saintes, along with the revolting barons.iege of Saintes
On July 22 or 23, the French army arrayed itself before the city of
Saintes . Henry realized that Hugh did not have as much support as he may have earlier claimed and withdrew toBordeaux . It is uncertain if there were was any armed conflict associated with the siege. Recognizing that he was in a hopeless position, Hugh surrendered to Louis on July 24, ending the Saintonge War.Aftermath
Casualties are unknown, but were probably not heavy. Hugh's revolt and Henry's assistance were primarily aimed at exploiting the diversion provided by French involvement in the
Albigensian Crusades .Raymond VII of Toulouse led a revolt in May 1242, but his allies revoked their support after the English were defeated; Raymond submitted to the king's authority atMontargis in January 1243. Louis did not take advantage of his victory by annexing thePlantagenet fief of Guyenne, probably because he was mostly concerned with going on theSeventh Crusade in 1248. He simply allowed Henry to do homage without inflicting further punishment.ources
* [http://xenophongroup.com/montjoie/taillebr.htm The Saintonge War]
References
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