[229] Monstrelet, “Chronique,” t. i. c. 43, p. 165.
[230] Monstrelet, c. 37, p. 229. “Relig. de St. Denis.” The Duke of Burgundy before an assembly of princes boldly tried to justify the murder, and employed a friar to speak for that purpose. Charles was induced in his weak state to sign letters of pardon for him.
[231] “Relig. de St. Denis,” liv. xxviii. p. 749.
[232] Ibid., liv. xxix. p. 59.
[233] “Isabeau de Bavière,” p. 15, Vallet de Viriville.
[234] Before the final expulsion of the English, Aquitaine was gradually taking the name of Guyenne. But, when it became the settled name, Guyenne did not include Gascony, Limousin, Saintonge, Anjoumois, and Poitou.
[235] “Relig. de St. Denis.”
[236] Historians differ as to what this meant.
[237] Paradin, “Annales de Bourgogne,” liv. iii. p. 518.
[238] Juvenal des Ursins.