Loading...

The Man Who Sacked Rome

Charles de Bourbon, Constable of France, 1490-1527

by Vincent Pitts (Author)
©1993 Others XII, 616 Pages
Series: American University Studies , Volume 142

Summary

This is the first general biography of Charles de Bourbon, Constable of France (1490-1527), to appear for some time. The events of Bourbon's life form a dramatic and compelling story, centering on his treasonable plot to dismember France in 1523; his victory at Pavia and capture of François I in 1525; and his command of the imperial troops who sacked Rome in 1527
The narrative, illuminated by the findings of modern scholarship, is integrated into the broader context of French and international history. The biographical idiom is used to examine the evolution of French social and political institutions in the first decades of the sixteenth century, the strains induced in the French and Hapsburg monarchies by the long struggle for primacy in Italy, and the rapid transformation of war and diplomacy in the period.

Details

Pages
XII, 616
Year
1993
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820424569
Language
English
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Frankfurt/M., Paris, Wien, 1993. XII, 616 pp., num. tab., maps and ills.

Biographical notes

Vincent Pitts (Author)

The Author: A graduate of Yale University, Mr. Pitts received his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees at Harvard. His previous publications include France and the German Problem: Politics and Economics in the Locarno Period (1987).

Previous

Title: The Man Who Sacked Rome