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Selected Poetry of Charles d' Orléans (1394-1465)


from Representative Poetry On-line
Prepared by members of the Department of English at the University of Toronto
from 1912 to the present and published by the University of Toronto Press from 1912 to 1967.
RPO Edited by Ian Lancashire
A UTEL (University of Toronto English Library) Edition
Published by the Web Development Group, Information Technology Services, University of Toronto Libraries
© 2009, Ian Lancashire for the Department of English, University of Toronto

Index to poems

  1. [Ballade 60]
  2. [Love's Renewal]
  3. Untitled
  4. Untitled
  5. Untitled
  6. Untitled


Notes on Life and Works

Charles was born on 24 November 1394, the first surviving son of Louis d'Orléans and Valentina Visconti of Milan. The Duchess Valentina was banished from court in 1396 and as a result, Charles and his siblings were brought up in their father's multiple châteaux along the Loire. From an early age he was tutored by Nicolas Garbet, his father learned secretary; the young Charles proved himself to be an excellent Latinist as well as a serious reader and writer. After his father's assassination by the Duke of Burgundy in 1407 and his mother's death soon afterward in 1408, Charles came into inheritance and became the Duke of Orléans. Seeking justice for his father's death, Charles allied himself with Bernard (VII), count of Armagnac. The ensuing movements from the Orleanist/Armagnac and Burgundian factions, as well as their variable alliances with the English monarchs are part of the history of the Hundred Years' War. On 25 October, 1415, Charles was captured at the battle of Agincourt and taken to England as a prisoner; as a prince of the French royal bloodline, he was seen as both a financial and a diplomatic asset. Charles would spend the next twenty-five years as a captive under the care of various noble wards. During the course of his captivity he frequently traveled to London with his keepers, many of whom owned houses in the city. These trips allowed Charles to acquire and commission books, and to eventually collect a large library during his time in England. This time also saw the duke composing a body of lyric poetry in both English and French; the former was influenced by the writings of Chaucer and his contemporaries. While his French poetry survives in many texts, his English works, which consist of many ballades and roundels, survive in a single manuscript. After his release from captivity in 1440, Charles settles down in Blois, France, where he was active as a diplomat and a renowned patron of the arts.

Biographical information

Given name: Charles
Family name: d' Orléans
Title: Duke of Orléans
Birth date: 24 November 1394
Death date: 4 January 1465
Nationality: French
Family relations
          father: Louis d' Orléans
          mother: Valentina Visconti
          wife: Bonne d'Armagnac (from 1410 to 1430)
          wife: Marie de Clèves (from 1440 to 1465)
          wife: Isabella of Valois (from 1406 to 1409)
          brother: Jean of Valois
          brother: Philippe of Valois
          sister: Marguerite of Valois
          sister: Marie of Valois
          son: Louis XII of France
          daughter: Anne d' Orléans
          daughter: Marie d' Orléans
          daughter: Jeanne of Valois
Languages
          English
          French
          Latin
Religion: Catholic
Literary period: Middle English
Residences
          Blois, France
          Paris, France: 1394 to 1415
          London, England: 1415 to 1440
Buried at: the church of Saint Saveur, Blois; reburied at the church of the Celestines, Paris (1504)
First RPO edition: 2009