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Effects: 1521
[td]The treaty was negotiated and signed by [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany|Duke of Albany]] and [[Charles IV, Duke of AlenΓ§on|Charles, Duke of AlenΓ§on]]. [[Gavin Douglas]], the [[Bishop of Dunkeld]], advised during negotiations at [[Rouen]]. The issue of the royal marriage was conditional and secondary to the main matter of the treaty which detailed undertakings and troop numbers to be provided in the case of English invasion of France or Scotland. Aid from France was including financial support (100 000 "louis soleil") and a contingent of 1500 [[landsknecht]]s, 500 [[infantry|foot soldiers]] and 200 archers. Scotland would send 6000 men. At the time of the treaty Francis's daughter was promised elsewhere.<ref>Denys Hay, ''The Letters of James V'' (HMSO, 1954), pp. 51-52.</ref>[/td] [td]==Effects==[/td]
[td]==Effects==[/td] [td][[John Stewart, Duke of Albany]], as Regent of Albany, ratified the treaty in 1521. In the renewed treaty, the name of [[Madeleine of Valois]] was included as the potential bride of James V.<ref>James Balfour Paul, "Matrimonial Adventures of James V", ''Transactions of the Glasgow Archaeological Society'', 5:2 (1906), p. 93.</ref>[/td] [td][/td] [td]In May 1524, when [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany]] made plans to return to France, and effectively gave up the Regency of Scotland, he told the assembled lords at Edinburgh's [[Old Tolbooth, Edinburgh|Tolbooth]] that they should keep the "bande that was made in Rowane", and not make a new treaty with England.<ref>Henry Ellis, ''Original Letters'', Series 1 vol. 1 (London, 1824) pp. 243β244.</ref>[/td]
[td]In May 1524, when [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany]] made plans to return to France, and effectively gave up the Regency of Scotland, he told the assembled lords at Edinburgh's [[Old Tolbooth, Edinburgh|Tolbooth]] that they should keep the "bande that was made in Rowane", and not make a new treaty with England.<ref>Henry Ellis, ''Original Letters'', Series 1 vol. 1 (London, 1824) pp. 243β244.</ref>[/td] [td][/td]
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[td]The treaty was negotiated and signed by [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany|Duke of Albany]] and [[Charles IV, Duke of AlenΓ§on|Charles, Duke of AlenΓ§on]]. [[Gavin Douglas]], the [[Bishop of Dunkeld]], advised during negotiations at [[Rouen]]. The issue of the royal marriage was conditional and secondary to the main matter of the treaty which detailed undertakings and troop numbers to be provided in the case of English invasion of France or Scotland. Aid from France was including financial support (100 000 "louis soleil") and a contingent of 1500 [[landsknecht]]s, 500 [[infantry|foot soldiers]] and 200 archers. Scotland would send 6000 men. At the time of the treaty Francis's daughter was promised elsewhere.<ref>Denys Hay, ''The Letters of James V'' (HMSO, 1954), pp. 51-52.</ref>[/td]Revision as of 08:35, 2 September 2025
[/td][td]The treaty was negotiated and signed by [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany|Duke of Albany]] and [[Charles IV, Duke of AlenΓ§on|Charles, Duke of AlenΓ§on]]. [[Gavin Douglas]], the [[Bishop of Dunkeld]], advised during negotiations at [[Rouen]]. The issue of the royal marriage was conditional and secondary to the main matter of the treaty which detailed undertakings and troop numbers to be provided in the case of English invasion of France or Scotland. Aid from France was including financial support (100 000 "louis soleil") and a contingent of 1500 [[landsknecht]]s, 500 [[infantry|foot soldiers]] and 200 archers. Scotland would send 6000 men. At the time of the treaty Francis's daughter was promised elsewhere.<ref>Denys Hay, ''The Letters of James V'' (HMSO, 1954), pp. 51-52.</ref>[/td] [td]==Effects==[/td]
[td]==Effects==[/td] [td][[John Stewart, Duke of Albany]], as Regent of Albany, ratified the treaty in 1521. In the renewed treaty, the name of [[Madeleine of Valois]] was included as the potential bride of James V.<ref>James Balfour Paul, "Matrimonial Adventures of James V", ''Transactions of the Glasgow Archaeological Society'', 5:2 (1906), p. 93.</ref>[/td] [td][/td] [td]In May 1524, when [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany]] made plans to return to France, and effectively gave up the Regency of Scotland, he told the assembled lords at Edinburgh's [[Old Tolbooth, Edinburgh|Tolbooth]] that they should keep the "bande that was made in Rowane", and not make a new treaty with England.<ref>Henry Ellis, ''Original Letters'', Series 1 vol. 1 (London, 1824) pp. 243β244.</ref>[/td]
[td]In May 1524, when [[John Stewart, Duke of Albany]] made plans to return to France, and effectively gave up the Regency of Scotland, he told the assembled lords at Edinburgh's [[Old Tolbooth, Edinburgh|Tolbooth]] that they should keep the "bande that was made in Rowane", and not make a new treaty with England.<ref>Henry Ellis, ''Original Letters'', Series 1 vol. 1 (London, 1824) pp. 243β244.</ref>[/td] [td][/td]
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