The rise of Bertrand du Guesclin ranks as one of the most spectacular adventures in a fourteenth century rich in heroic tales. A poor Breton squire ungainly and unlettered he came of age at the onset of the Hundred Years War. He spent two decades engaged in irregular warfare in his native province before he became a knight and was recognised by Charles V as the captain France needed. Du Guesclin fought on campaign from Normandy to Andalusia tasted victory was taken captive - and was finally victorious again over such famed adversaries as Sir John Chandos and the Black Prince. He won a dukedom in Spain but it was as Constable of France that he spearheaded the reconquest of French provinces lost after the defeat at Poitiers. His body was laid to rest among kings in the royal basilica of Saint-Denis enshrined as the Tenth Worthy hero of the last Old French epic but Du Guesclin's spirit lives on in literature and folk memory as flower of chivalry soldier's soldier patriot and liberator of his country. RICHARD VERNIER is Professor Emeritus Romance Languages and Literatures Wayne State University.
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