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I Take History With My Coffee
Bruce Boyce
87 episodes
2 weeks ago
When Mary of Burgundy died in a riding accident in March 1482, she left a four-year-old heir and a succession crisis that would tear apart the richest territories in northern Europe. Her widower, Maximilian of Austria, claimed the regency—but the powerful cities of Flanders had other plans. For the next decade, two rival governments ruled in the name of young Philip the Fair. The regency council, backed by Ghent and Bruges, issued decrees, minted coins, and commanded armies. Maximilian...
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When Mary of Burgundy died in a riding accident in March 1482, she left a four-year-old heir and a succession crisis that would tear apart the richest territories in northern Europe. Her widower, Maximilian of Austria, claimed the regency—but the powerful cities of Flanders had other plans. For the next decade, two rival governments ruled in the name of young Philip the Fair. The regency council, backed by Ghent and Bruges, issued decrees, minted coins, and commanded armies. Maximilian...
Show more...
History
Education,
Society & Culture
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/39/30/a5/3930a588-7331-9ff3-2051-8a4e84ae969a/mza_12363141324456836619.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
85: The Great Privilege: Mary of Burgundy and the Crisis of 1477
I Take History With My Coffee
33 minutes
4 weeks ago
85: The Great Privilege: Mary of Burgundy and the Crisis of 1477
On January 5, 1477, Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, died on a frozen battlefield outside Nancy. His death sparked one of the most intense constitutional crises of the fifteenth century. Charles left behind his nineteen-year-old daughter Mary, an empty treasury, a destroyed army, and a state on the brink of collapse. Within weeks, French forces began invading Burgundian lands as internal revolts erupted across the Low Countries. To secure recognition as her father's successor, Mary ...
I Take History With My Coffee
When Mary of Burgundy died in a riding accident in March 1482, she left a four-year-old heir and a succession crisis that would tear apart the richest territories in northern Europe. Her widower, Maximilian of Austria, claimed the regency—but the powerful cities of Flanders had other plans. For the next decade, two rival governments ruled in the name of young Philip the Fair. The regency council, backed by Ghent and Bruges, issued decrees, minted coins, and commanded armies. Maximilian...