[Footnote 8:] [The] terms of the treaty provided for a seven years' truce, with international free trade and mutual assistance in civil or foreign wars of either monarch. Louis's complaisance went so far that he did not insist on Edward's renouncing the title of King of England and France.]
[Footnote 9:] [The] Paston Letters. Sir John Paston to his mother, Sept. 11, 1475.]
[Footnote 10:] [The] story must be omitted here. The constable was finally apprehended, tried, and executed at Paris.]
[Footnote 11:] [Dépêches] Milanaises, i., 253. The copy only is at Milan and there is no seal.]
[Footnote 12:] [Toutey], p. 380.]
[Footnote 13:] [Dép]. Milan., i., 266.]
[Footnote 14:] [Dép]. Milan., i., 300.]
[Footnote 15:] [Jomini] lays the defeat to a tactical error. "Charles had committed the fault of encamping with one wing of his army resting on the lake, the other ill-secured at the foot of a wooded mountain. Nothing is more dangerous for an army than to have one of its wings resting on an unbridged stream, on a lake, or on the sea." Charles explained to Europe that he had been surprised, and his defeat was a mere bagatelle.]
[Footnote 16:] [III]., 216.]
[Footnote 17:] ornaments.]