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4TH EARL OF THOMAS DE MONTACUTE SALIS...

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 78 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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4TH

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EARL OF THOMAS DE MONTACUTE SALISBURY (1388-1428)  , was son of John, the third
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earl, who was executed in 1400 as a supporter of Richard II . Thomas was granted
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part of his
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father's estates and summoned to parliament in 1409, though not fully restored till 1421 . He was
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present throughout the
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campaign of Agincourt in 1415, and at the
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naval engagement before
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Harfleur in 1416 . In the expedition of 1417-18 he served with increasing distinction, and especially at the siege of
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Rouen . During the spring of 1419 he held an
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independent command, capturing
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Fecamp,
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Honfleur and other towns, was appointed
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lieutenant-general of
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Normandy, and created earl of
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Perche . In 1420 he was in chief command in Maine, and defeated the Marechal de Rieux near Le Mans . When Henry V. went home next
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year Salisbury remained in France as the chief lieutenant of Thomas, duke of Clarence . The duke, through his own rashness, was defeated at Bauge on the 21st of March 1421 . Salisbury came up with the archers too
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late to retrieve the day,but recovered the bodies of the dead, and by a skilful retreat averted further disaster . He soon gathered a fresh force, and in
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June was able to report to the king " this part of your
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land stood in good
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plight never so well as now." (Foedera, x . 131) . Salisbury's success in Maine marked him out as John of
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Bedford's chief lieutenant in the war after Henry's
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death .

In 1423 he was appointed

governor of
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Champagne, and by his dash and vigour secured one of the chief victories of the war at Cravant on the 3oth of
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July . Subsequent operations completed the
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conquest of Champagne, and
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left Salisbury
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free to join Bedford at Verneuil . There on the 17th of August, 1424, it was his "
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judgment and valour " that won the day . During the next three years Salisbury was employed on the Norman border and in Maine . After a year's visit to England he returned to the chief command in the field in July, 1428 . Against the judgment of Bedford he determined to make Orleans his
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principal objective, and began the siege on the 12th of
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October . Prosecuting it with his wonted vigour he stormed Tourelles, the castle which protected the
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southern end of the
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bridge across the
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Loire, on the 24th of October . Three days later whilst
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surveying the city from a window in Tourelles he was wounded by a cannon-shot, and died on the 3rd of November 1428 . Salisbury was the most skilful soldier on the
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English side after the death of Henry V . Though employed on
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diplomatic missions both by Henry V. and Bedford, he took no part in politics save for a momentary support of Humphrey, duke of Gloucester, during his visit to England in 1427-1428 . He was a
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patron of John Lydgate, who presented to him his
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book The
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Pilgrim (now Harley MS . 4826, with a
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miniature of Salisbury, engraved in Strutt's
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Regal Antiquities) .

By his first wife Eleanor Holand, daughter of Thomas, earl of

Kent, Salisbury. had an only daughter Alice, in her right earl of Salisbury, who married Richard Neville, and was
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mother of Warwick the King-maker . His second wife Alice was
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grand-daughter of Geoffrey Chaucer, and after his death married William de la Pole, duke of Suffolk . The chief accounts of Salisbury's
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campaigns are to be found in the Gesta Henrici Quinti, edited by B . Williams for the Eng . Hist .
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Soc . (
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London, 185o) in the Vita Henrici Quinti (erroneously attributed to Thomas of Elmham), edited by T . Hearne (Oxford, 1727) ; the Chronique of E. de Monstrelet, edited by L . D. d'Arcq (Paris, 1857–1862) ; the Chroniques of Jehan de Waurin, edited by W. and E . L . C . P .

Hardy (London, 1864–1891); and the Chronique de la Pucelle of G . Cousinot, edited by Vallet de Viriville (Paris, 1859) . For
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modern accounts see
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Sir J . H . Ramsay, Lancaster and York (Oxford, 1892) ; and C .
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Oman,
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Political
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History of England, 1377–1485 (London, 1906) . (C . L .

End of Article: 4TH EARL OF THOMAS DE MONTACUTE SALISBURY (1388-1428)
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