Histoire de France 1364-1415 (Volume 5/19) by Jules Michelet
Jules Michelet's fifth volume covering 1364 to 1415 is where medieval France truly starts to unravel. It begins with the reign of Charles V, "the Wise," a period of fragile recovery, but the stability is an illusion. The core of the book charts the catastrophic reign of his son, Charles VI, whose descent into madness plunges the kingdom into a power vacuum. Two rival factions—the Burgundians and the Armagnacs—turn the royal court into a snake pit of intrigue and violence, while English armies, led by Henry V, exploit the division with terrifying efficiency.
The Story
The narrative follows France's spiral from a recovering kingdom into a nation on the brink of collapse. Michelet walks you through the political murders, the disastrous defeat at Agincourt, and the civil war that made foreign invasion possible. But this isn't just a chronicle of kings and dukes. The real story is the disintegration of the state itself and the suffering of the people caught in the middle. The volume builds toward its astonishing conclusion: the arrival of Joan of Arc. Michelet presents her not as a polished saint, but as a sudden, inexplicable force of nature—a direct response to the total failure of the ruling class.
Why You Should Read It
What makes this book special is Michelet's voice. He's not a detached observer; he's in the trenches with his subjects. He makes you feel the collective panic of a country losing its mind, both literally and figuratively. His Charles VI is a tragically human figure, not just a historical footnote. You understand the factions not as abstract political blocs, but as families driven by hatred and ambition. And his Joan is breathtaking—he captures the sheer, world-altering shock of her appearance. Reading this, you don't just learn about the Hundred Years' War; you experience the emotional weight of a national nightmare and the spark of impossible hope.
Final Verdict
This is for anyone who finds most history books too cold. It's perfect for readers who love character-driven narratives, even in nonfiction. If you enjoy epic stories of downfall and resilience, like Shakespeare's history plays or George R.R. Martin's Game of Thrones (which drew heavily from this period), Michelet is your original source material, written with just as much drama. Be prepared for a passionate, opinionated, and deeply human tour through one of history's most intense chapters. It's history that feels alive.
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