Treaty of Mantes

The Treaty of Mantes was affirmed between Charles II of Navarre and John II of France on 22 February 1354. After Charles began negotiating with Edward the Black Prince and Henry of Grosmont, John II, in order to secure his alliance against England, sent Robert le Coq to Mantes to negotiate his own peace treaty with the king of Navarre. By the treaty, Charles was created Count of Beaumont-le-Roger and John made many concessions, but the peace he desired was not sustained. Charles concluded an alliance with Henry of Grosmont later that year. This forced new negotiations, which led to the Treaty of Valognes, the next year.

Sources

gollark: Before it spreads.
gollark: Okay, let's quarantine all Wojbies.
gollark: <@!509348730156220427> The command to change your preferred shell is `chsh`.
gollark: What about rugby™™™™?
gollark: Imagine not using a terminal which etches the output into a block of stone.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.