[CHAPTER XVIII.]
RICHARD II. AND THE POLITICAL REVOLUTION.
1382—1399.
- Progress of the War with France. 1382—1386 [278]
- Richard's Growing Unpopularity. 1385—1386 [278]
- The Impeachment of Suffolk and the Commission of Regency. 1386 [279]
- The Lords Appellant and the Merciless Parliament. 1387—1388 [279]
- Richard's Restoration to Power. 1389 [280]
- Richard's Constitutional Government. 1389—1396 [280]
- Livery and Maintenance. 1390 [281]
- Richard's Domestic Policy. 1390—1391 [281]
- Richard's Foreign Policy. 1389—1396 [282]
- Richard's Coup d'État. 1397 [282]
- The Parliament of Shrewsbury. 1398 [283]
- The Banishment of Hereford and Norfolk. 1398 [283]
- Richard's Despotism. 1398—1399 [283]
- Henry of Lancaster in England. 1399 [284]
- The Deposition of Richard and the Enthronement of Henry IV. 1399 [285]
- Nature of the Claim of Henry IV. [286]
PART IV.
LANCASTER, YORK, AND TUDOR. 1399—1509.
[CHAPTER XIX.]
HENRY IV. AND HENRY V.
HENRY IV., 1399—1413. HENRY V., 1413—1422.
- Henry's First Difficulties. 1399—1400 [289]
- Death of Richard II. 1400 [291]
- Henry IV. and the Church [291]
- The Statute for the Burning of Heretics. 1401 [292]
- Henry IV. and Owen Glendower. 1400—1402 [292]
- The Rebellion of the Percies. 1402—1404 [293]
- The Commons and the Church. 1404 [294]
- The Capture of the Scottish Prince. 1405 [295]
- The Execution of Archbishop Scrope. 1405 [296]
- France, Wales, and the North. 1405—1408 [296]
- Henry, Prince of Wales. 1409—1410 [297]
- The Last Years of Henry IV. 1411-1413 [298]
- Henry V. and the Lollards. 1413-1414 [299]
- Henry's Claim to the Throne of France. 1414 [300]
- The Invasion of France. 1415 [301]
- The March to Agincourt. 1415 [302]
- The Battle of Agincourt, October 25, 1415 [302]
- Henry's Diplomacy. 1416-1417 [303]
- Henry's Conquest of Normandy. 1417-1419 [303]
- The Murder of the Duke of Burgundy and the Treaty of Troyes. 1419-1420 [304]
- The Close of the Reign of Henry V. 1420-1422 [306]
[CHAPTER XX.]
HENRY VI. AND THE LOSS OF FRANCE. 1422-1451.
- Bedford and Gloucester. 1422 [307]
- Bedford's Success in France. 1423-1424 [307]
- Gloucester's Invasion of Hainault. 1424 [308]
- Gloucester and Beaufort. 1425-1428 [308]
- The Siege of Orleans. 1428-1429 [309]
- Jeanne Darc and the Relief of Orleans. 1429 [310]
- The Coronation of Charles VII. and the Capture of the Maid. 1429-1430 [311]
- The Martyrdom at Rouen. 1431 [312]
- The Last Years of the Duke of Bedford. 1431-1435 [312]
- The Defection of Burgundy. 1435 [313]
- The Duke of York in France. 1436-1437 [313]
- The English Lose Ground. 1437-1443 [313]
- Continued Rivalry of Beaufort and Gloucester. 1439-1441 [314]
- Beaufort and Somerset. 1442-1443 [317]
- The Angevin Marriage Treaty. 1444-1445 [317]
- Deaths of Gloucester and Beaufort. 1447 [318]
- The Loss of the French Provinces. 1448-1449 [318]
[CHAPTER XXI.]
THE LATER YEARS OF HENRY VI. 1450-1461.
- The Growth of Inclosures [320]
- Increasing Power of the Nobility [321]
- Case of Lord Molynes and John Paston [321]
- Suffolk's Impeachment and Murder. 1450 [322]
- Jack Cade's Rebellion. 1450 [322]
- Rivalry of York and Somerset. 1450-1453 [323]
- The First Protectorate of the Duke of York. 1453-1454 [323]
- The First Battle of St. Albans and the Duke of York's Second Protectorate [324]
- Discomfiture of the Yorkists. 1456-1459 [325]
- The Battle of Northampton and the Duke of York's Claim to the Throne. 1460 [326]
- The Battle of Wakefield. 1460 [327]
- The Battle of Mortimer's Cross and the Second Battle of St. Albans. 1461 [328]
- The Battle of Towton and the Coronation of Edward IV. 1461 [328]
[CHAPTER XXII.]
THE YORKIST KINGS.
1461—1485.