Six hundred years ago today, onetime royal favorite Jean de Montagu* was, at the instigation of his powerful noble rival, beheaded in Paris and his body hung up at Montfaucon.
Montagu (French link) was the 50-something scion of an ennobled notary — or else the illegitimate produce of King Charles V, whose ennobled notary had been induced to claim him. Regardless his blood, the lad made himself quite wealthy with a virtuous cycle of administrative acumen and political connection, winning a variety of honorary posts and riches aplenty he did not shy from displaying. Typical “New Money” type.
Sadly for Montagu, this cycle crested during the reign of Charles VI, also known as Charles the Mad for his bouts of illucidity.
“History,” wrote Barbara Tuchman, “never more cruelly demonstrated the vulnerability of a nation to the person of its chief of state than in the affliction of France beginning [with Charles’ first spell of insanity] in 1392.”
Charles the Mad’s erratic tenure would help bring French fortunes to the low ebb from which Joan of Arc would retrieve them.
Montagu’s period sob story was that his wealth earned him the enmity of nasty Duke of Burgundy John the Fearless,** who induced King Charles during one of the latter’s episodes to affix on Montagu responsibility for the crown’s financial shortfalls. Our day’s victim was arrested on October 7, 1409, tortured into a confession, and beheaded in Paris October 17.
Montagu’s surviving family had the verdict reversed within three years, which would have been a better deal for them had the family’s main branch not been wiped out three years after that at the Battle of Agincourt.
For the wider benefit of posterity, the beheaded lord also left a fair collection of endowed building projects in his lands in Marcoussis, including (French links all): the usual village church; a Celestine monastery; and a picturesque castle unfortunately devastated during the French Revolution but once resembling this:
* Not to be confused with his (likewise beheaded) contemporary across the channel, John Montagu, Earl of Salisbury.
** John the Fearless had most recently been seen engineering the infamous murder of the king’s brother, and surviving by dint of his ransom potential the hecatomb of the last crusade.
On this day..
- 1271: Not Nichiren, at the Tatsunokuchi Persecution
- 1902: Jim Buchanan, escaping lynching
- 1734: John Ormesby and Matthew Cushing
- 1976: Masacre de Los Surgentes, during the Dirty War
- 1968: Harun Thohir and Usman Janatin, for the MacDonald House bombing
- 1677: John S., William Fletcher, and Robert Perkins
- 1817: Maggie Houghtaling
- 1698: Six Streltsy of rank
- 1934: Harry Pierpont, Dillinger mentor
- 1859: Danford Balch, inadvertent PDX benefactor
- 1999: Zein al-Abidine al-Mihdar, Yemeni terrorist
- 1622: Anne de Chantraine, young witch