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・ Jacques Bino
・ Jacques Bins, comte de Saint-Victor
・ Jacques Bittner
・ Jacques Bizard
・ Jacquelynn Berube
・ Jacquelynne Eccles
・ Jacquelynne Fontaine
・ Jacquemart
・ Jacquemart (bellstriker)
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・ Jacquemart Island
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・ Jacquemontia reclinata
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Jacquerie
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・ Jacques (album)
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・ Jacques (disambiguation)
・ Jacques (Jac) van Rees
・ Jacques (novel)
・ Jacques a dit
・ Jacques Abady
・ Jacques Abardonado
・ Jacques Abram
・ Jacques Accambray
・ Jacques Adam
・ Jacques Adiahénot


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Jacquerie : ウィキペディア英語版
Jacquerie

:''This article is about a specific 14th century French peasant uprising. For the general concept, see List of peasant revolts.
The Jacquerie was a popular revolt by peasants that took place in northern France in the early summer of 1358 during the Hundred Years' War.〔Froissart's date of November 1357, is erroneous; the first incidents occurred on 28 May 1358 at Saint-Leu-d'Esserent and neighbouring villages (J. Flammermont, ‘La Jacquerie en Beauvaisis’, ''Revue
historique'', 9 (1879): 123-43.)〕 The revolt was centered in the valley of the Oise north of Paris and was suppressed after a few weeks of violence. This rebellion became known as "the Jacquerie" because the nobles derided peasants as "Jacques" or "Jacques Bonhomme" for their padded surplice, called a "jacque". The aristocratic chronicler Jean Froissart and his source, the chronicle of Jean le Bel, referred to the leader of the revolt as Jacque Bonhomme ("Jack Goodfellow"), though in fact the Jacquerie 'great captain' was named Guillaume Cale. The word ''jacquerie'' became a synonym of peasant uprisings in general in both English and French.〔While there is some dispute over whether the term "Jacquerie" in respect of popular uprisings preceded the outbreak of 1357, the first surviving record of its use is in the "Chronicles and Annals of France" published in 1492.〕
==Background==
After the capture of the French king (John II, Froissart's ''bon roi Jean'' "John the Good") by the English during the Battle of Poitiers in September 1356, power in France devolved fruitlessly among the Estates-General, King Charles II of Navarre and John's son, the Dauphin, later Charles V.
The Estates-General was too divided to provide effective government, however, and the disputes between the two rulers provoked disunity amongst the nobles. Consequently, the prestige of the French nobility had sunk to a new low. The century had begun poorly for the nobles at Courtrai (the "Battle of the Golden Spurs"), where they fled the field and left their infantry to be hacked to pieces; they had also given up their king at the Battle of Poitiers. To secure their rights, the French privileged classes — the nobility, the merchant elite, and the clergy — forced the peasantry to pay ever-increasing taxes (for example, the taille) and to repair their war-damaged properties under ''corvée'' — without compensation. The passage of a law that required the peasants to defend the ''châteaux'' that were emblems of their oppression was the immediate cause of the spontaneous uprising. The law was particularly onerous as many commoners already blamed the nobility for the defeat at Poitiers. The chronicle of Jean de Venette articulates the perceived problems between the nobility and the peasants, yet some historians, such as Samuel K. Cohn, see the Jacquerie revolts as a reaction to a combination of short- and long-term effects dating from as early as the grain crisis and famine of 1315.
In addition, bands of English, Gascon, German, and Spanish ''routiers'' — unemployed mercenaries and bandits employed by the English during outbreaks of the Hundred Years' War — were left uncontrolled to loot, rape, and plunder the lands of northern France almost at will, with the Estates-General powerless to stop them. Many peasants questioned why they should work for an upper class that could not meet its implied obligation to provide protection for them.

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