Relates the colourful life of ‘enlightened despot’ Gaston III, count of Foix, an enigmatic and brilliant figure in a turbulent period.
The reign of Gaston III, Count of Foix and self-proclaimed sovereign Lord of Béarn, stands out as one of the rare success stories of the `calamitous’ fourteenth century. By playing a skilful game of shifting allegiances and timelydefiance, he avoided being drawn into the conflicts between his more powerful neighbours – France and English Aquitaine, Aragon and Castile — thus sparing his domains the devastations of warfare. Best known as a patron of thearts, and the author of a celebrated
Book of the Hunt, Fébus – as he styled himself – also prefigures the eighteenth-century `enlightened despots’ with his effort to centralize government, protect natural resources and promote enterprise. But a sequence of mysterious tragedies — the abrupt dismissal of his wife, the slaying of his only legitimate son – reveal the dark side of the brilliant and enigmatic `Sun Prince of the Pyrenees’.
RICHARD VERNIER is Professor Emeritus of Romance Languages and Literatures, Wayne State University. He is the author of
The Flower of Chivalry: Bertrand du Guesclin and the Hundred Years War.
विषयसूची
Inheritance
Apprenticeship
Trials and Tribulations
Fébus Revealed
Challenges and Designs
Governing Wisely
Fébus at Home
Fébus, the Author
The Orthez Mystery
Endgame
Death, and the Spoils
Appendix I: Bernard de Béarn, Count of Medinaceli
Bibliography