Jean de Beaumanoir

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For the later marshall with the same name, see Jean de Beaumanoir (marquis).
Statue of Jean de Beaumanoir in Dinan.
Statue of Jean de Beaumanoir in Dinan.

Jean, or Jehan de Beaumanoir, marshal of Brittany for Charles of Blois, and captain of Josselin, is remembered for his share in the famous Combat of the Thirty during the War of Breton Succession between the partisans of competing claimants for the Dukedom.

Robert Bramborough, the English captain of Ploërmel, who supported the rival claimant John de Montfort, had been ignoring a truce in the district commanded by Jean de Beaumanoir. In 1351 Beaumanoir sent him a challenge, which resulted in an "emprise" — an arranged chivalric combat — which took place near Ploërmel, between picked combatants.

Beaumanoir commanded thirty Bretons, Bramborough a mixed force of twenty Englishmen (including Robert Knolles and Hugh Calveley), six German mercenaries and four Breton partisans of Montfort. The battle, fought with swords, daggers, spears, and axes, mounted or on foot, was extremely vicious. When de Beaumanoir was badly wounded and asked for water, his fellow combatant Geoffroy du Bois is supposed to have said to him "Drink your blood, Beaumanoir; your thirst will pass" (Bois ton sang, Beaumanoir, la soif te passera). De Beaumanoir's men emerged victorious, and he became an icon of medieval chivalry.

When his faction was eventually defeated at the Battle of Auray in 1365, de Beaumanoir helped to negotiate the Treaty of Guérande, which ended the war, receiving in return the title of Marshal of Brittany.

He married Marguerite de Rohan, daughter of Alain VII of Rohan and widow of Constable of Clisson. Their daughter Jeanne was the wife of Charles de Dinan, Lord of Montafilant and Châteaubriant.


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This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

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