Siege of Tartas

The conduct of this affair became an important subject as one of the arrangements concluded in 1441 stated that Albret had to switch his allegiance if his suzerain, Charles VII of France, failed to aid him against his enemies.[4] In 1439, the English sent to the region an army of 2,300 men (2,000 archers and 300 men-at-arms) under the command of John Holland, Earl of Huntingdon,[5] appointed lieutenant of Aquitaine on 27 March.[6][7] Holland landed with his force at Bordeaux on 2 August 1439, and was shortly afterwards joined by sir Thomas Rempston[8] (the English seneschal of Guyenne)[9] and by other important English-attached figures in the region.[1] Anticipating an Anglo-Gascon onslaught, in October 1439 the French Estates of Languedoc in southern France assembled at Castres and raised a subsidy to defend Guyenne and Gascony against Holland's army.As a guarantee to enforce the terms, the Lord of Albret handed Tartas over to Charles, his underage son, who would be placed under the tutelage of several prominent Gascon figures who were attached to the English.The most important point agreed, however, was one that stipulated that a trial of strength would be held at Tartas between the French and the English on the day the truce ended, and that the strongest side left standing would be awarded control of the town.Though it could be thought that a small Gascon town would not have concerned the king much in normal circumstances, the consequences of a potential defection from one of his most powerful vassals in Gascony would be disastrous for the Valois regime in southwestern France.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.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.[17] Charles VII assembled a large army, essentially provided by smaller nobility, as his leading vassals and princes of blood, the dukes of Orléans, Burgundy, Alençon, and Bourbon, who were all at odds with their overlord, did not bother contributing to the force.The French captain La Hire arrived the following day, after, according to legend, having fought a group of English routiers and assaulted a castle close to Ygos.Perhaps fearful of losing his lands, the Lord of Cauna afterwards paid homage to Charles VII, but Saint-Per remained faithful to the English party and took refuge in nearby Dax.After taking La Réole on 8 December[20] (where Charles VII was almost burnt within a house which was set on fire),[21] the French withdrew to Montauban on 23 of the same month to spend the winter, marking the end of the campaign.Henry VI received a letter from his secretary Thomas Beckington, dated on 18 October 1442, which informed the king about the enemy's progress in Guyenne and the capture of La Réole.It also complained about the lack of support from the English crown in the situation, stating that a few reinforcements would have stopped the French advance and even resulted in the possible capture of Charles VII himself.
Map depicting the vassal holdings of the duchy of Gascony.
Gascon fiefs in the Middle Ages
Illustration of the fortified town of Tartas (1612). The fortifications and hilly landscape present a difficulty for attackers.
24 June 1442: Journée de Tartas . French forces arrive in the town. (illustration from Vigiles de Charles VII , 15th century)
Hundred Years' War1415–53 phaseCharles VII of FranceMartial d'AuvergneTartasGasconyKingdom of EnglandAlbretKingdom of FranceJohn HollandThomas RempstonCharles II of AlbretJohn, Vc. of LomagneEdwardian phaseSecond War of Scottish IndependenceWar of the Breton SuccessionCastilian Civil WarWar of the Two PetersCaroline phaseDespenser's Crusade1383–1385 CrisisGlyndŵr rebellionArmagnac–Burgundian conflictLancastrian phaseLancastrian phase (1415–1453)HarfleurAgincourtValmont1st Caen2nd La RochelleBaugéCravantLa BrossinièreVerneuilSt. JamesMontargisOrléansHerringsJargeauMeung-sur-LoireBeaugencySaint-Pierre-le-MoûtierLa CharitéCompiègneGerberoySt. DenisCalaisPontoiseDieppeNormandy campaign of 1449–1450Formigny2nd CaenFalaiseCherbourgGascon campaign of 1450–1453BlanquefortCastillon2nd BordeauxceasefiresuzerainMiddle AgesMont-de-MarsanLandes departmentFranceMidouzetributarypersonal unionHouse of AlbretvassalAquitaineEdward, the Black PrinceHouse of ValoisCharles IIEnglandarchersmen-at-armsJohn Holland, Earl of HuntingdonBordeauxsir Thomas RempstonseneschalGuyenneEstates of LanguedocCastresCharles VIILord of AlbretHuntingdonJohn, Viscount of LomagneJohn IV, Count of ArmagnacChalosseLescunCouduresAudignonSainte-ColombeEarl of HuntingdonLa HireSaint-Severroyal domainsuzeraintyValoisMidi-PyrénéesKing of EnglandCharles IBattle of AgincourtJoan of ArcArmagnacCommingesKing Henry VISt. John's Dayheir presumptiveHumphrey, Duke of GloucesterCardinal Henry BeaufortÎle-de-FranceNeversPraguerieBurgundyArmagnac–Burgundian Civil WarCount John IV of ArmagnacPope Gregory XIDuke of OrléansVigiles de Charles VIIprinces of bloodAlençonBourbonCount of Armagnacconstable of FranceArthur de RichemontJean BureauLimousinFigeacToulouseRiscleGrenadeAdour riverNogaroLe HougaroutiersMeilhanCount of FoixMidouze riverhomageCondomMarmandeBayonneLa RéoleMontaubanHenry VIThomas Beckingtonseneschal of LannesLee, SidneyDictionary of National BiographyCarte, T.Griffiths, R.A.Royal Historical SocietyNicolas, H.H. ChisholmEncyclopædia Britannica 11th ed.Corpus Christi College, OxfordStevenson, J.Rolls seriesOxford Historical MonographsEnglish Monarchs series