- Treaty of Sablé
The Treaty of Sablé (also known as the Treaty of Verger or the Treaty of Le Verger) was signed on
August 20 ,1488 inSablé between Duke Francis II of Brittany andCharles VIII of France . Based on the terms of the accord, theDuke of Brittany acknowledged himself as a vassal of theKing of France . Moreover, the Duke of Brittany pledged the territories ofSaint Malo ,Dinan ,Fougères andSaint-Aubin-du-Cormier to be controlled by the French crown. Also, Francis promised to remove all foreign troops from his territories, as well as ensure to seek Charles's consent before marryingAnne of Brittany . In return, Charles removed his forces from Brittany except in the town garrisons of the territories pledged by Francis. [Fisher, p. 29. "On August 20," [1488] "a treaty was signed at Sablé between Francis and Charles. The Duke of Brittany acknowledged himself a vassal of the French crown; he placed St. Malo, Dinan, Fougères, and St. Aubin du Cormier in the hands of the French king as pledges; he promised to expel the foreign troops; he promised that Anne should not be married without Charles's consent. The French king in return for these concessions engaged to withdraw his army, saving the garrisons necessary to hold the towns which had been given him in pledge."] In another aspect of the treaty, the Duke of Britanny was no longer permitted to summon any troops fromEngland . [Craik and MacFarlane, p. 295. "La Tremoille took Dinant and St. Malo, and threatened to besiege the unfortunate Duke Francis in Rennes, his capital. Finding that no assistance arrived from England or from any other quarter, Francis at last accepted the hard terms offered by the French court; and in the middle of August (1488) he signed the treaty of Verger. Hereby, the claims of the French crown to the duchy were submitted to the consideration of certain commissioners: the French were to retain the conquests they had made, and the duke was bound never more to call in troops from England or any other country, and not to marry either of his daughters without the full approbation of his suzeraine lord the King of France."]References
ee also
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List of treaties ources
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George Lillie Craik and Charles MacFarlane. "The Pictorial History of England: Being a History of the People, as Well as a History of the Kingdom". Charles Knight and Company, 1841 (Original from the New York Public Library).
*Herbert Albert Laurens Fisher . "The History of England, from the Accession of Henry VII, to the Death of Henry VIII, 1485-1547" (Volume V). Longmans, Green, and Co., 1906.External links
* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-626030/Treaty-of-Le-Verger Encyclopedia Britannica - Treaty of Le Verger (France 1488)]
* [http://www.zum.de/whkmla/military/15cen/bretagne14871488.html WHKMLA - Franco-Breton War, 1487-1488]
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