The Tudor occupation of Boulogne: conquest, colonisation and imperial monarchy, 1544-1550

"On 18 November, the privy council dismissed claims made by John Dudley, captain of Boulogne, that the French were about to lay siege to Boulogne. The councillors marveled that Dudley 'or any other having experience of the warres' could think that the French could lay siege to the tow...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Murphy, Neil 1980- (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Cambridge ; New York ; Port Melbourne ; New Delhi ; Singapore Cambridge University Press 2019
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Online Access:Rezension
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Summary:"On 18 November, the privy council dismissed claims made by John Dudley, captain of Boulogne, that the French were about to lay siege to Boulogne. The councillors marveled that Dudley 'or any other having experience of the warres' could think that the French could lay siege to the town 'at this tyme of the year especially in a cuntrey so devasted and voyd of all victualls and forrage'. The English also adopted these tactics in Scotland in the 1540s, with Henry VIII's ambassadors informing Charles V in April 1545 that the French could not invade England through Scotland because 'the cuntrey to be so wasted, spoyled, and heryed, and to be in such miserable penurye, that it wer not likely they woold or could do eny thing that waye' and that likewise the French king 'could do no good this yere for to asseege Boulloyn ... for lack of victailes and fourraige and other thinges necessary'. The English achieved a high level of destruction in the Boulonnais, which they maintained throughout 1545"...
Item Description:Includes bibliographical references and index
Physical Description:xviii, 296 Seiten 4 Illustrationen, Karte
ISBN:9781108472012

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