A fanciful depiction of the Lioness of Brittany in action. |
There
is something about a female pirate that
stirs the imagination—and evidently
the loins. Googling
women pirates turns up a torrent of pictures—heaving breasts straining
against thin shirts, hair flowing in the wind, cutlass or pistol held
menacingly sometimes with a cringing victim at her feet. There are drawings old and new, woodcut
prints, fantasy painting, and plenty of posed photos, some with even less
clothing. In fact there were,
indeed famous lady buccaneers most
famously Grace O’Malley, the Queen of Umaill and Chieftain of the Irish Ó Máille clan of Elizabethan times and several who plied
and plundered the Spanish Main including
Anne Dieu-le-Veut, Jacquotte Delahaye, and Anne Bonny—all portrayed as fiery red heads a la Maureen O’Hara.
But
none could hold a candle to Jeanne de
Clisson,
a noble woman of Brittany whose vengeance spawned career
on the seas that was un-matched for duration, ferocity, and merciless
brutality.
It
all began on August 2, 1343 when Olivier
de Clisson was found guilty of treason
and beheaded at Les Halles in Paris. His
seriously aggrieved widow, Jeanne de Clisson, decided to take matters into her
own hands the rest is history, grisly history.
Jeanne
was born in 1300 to Maurice IV of Belleville-Montaigu, a leading noble of
Britany At the age of 12 she was married to another noble lad, 19 year old Geoffrey de Châteaubriant. The marriage produce two children if
little passion and ended when Geoffrey up and died leaving a lovely 26 year old
widow.
A
woman of such high birth, wealth, and beauty was not destined to be a widow
long. In 1330 Jeanne married Olivier III de Clisson another nobleman
who held a castle at Clisson, a
house in Nantes and lands at Blain.
Between the two the new husband and wife were instantly among the
wealthiest and most influential couples in Brittany. But the marriage also seemed to be
particularly loving and close. The two
were about the same age and they had five children together—Maurice, Guillaume, Olivier, Isabeau, and Jeanne. The younger Olivier
would grow up to be a significant figure in French history on his own and once Constable of France.
Olivier was a descendent of English knights who were awarded
estates in Brittany to help preserve the claim of the English Crown on the province. But by this period he was a vassal of the King of France, Philip IV. When the Duke of Brittany died leaving no clear
heirs each of the two main claimants were backed by opposing sides in the great
chess game for control of most of
France known as the Hundred Years War. Philip backed Jeanne de Penthievre and Edward
III of England put his money on Jean de Montfort.
Despite
his ancestral ties to England, Olivier apparently loyal joined other important
nobles including Charles de Blois to
defend Brittany from the English and de Montfort in 1342. Unfortunately in the campaign to follow
Olivier failed to hold Vannes, an important
port through which the English could land still more troops. De Blois suspected treason in the surrender
of the port. When Olivier, blithely
unaware, decided to attend a tournament in
French territory, he was arrested and hauled to Paris for trial. He was tried before 15 noble peers including
his accuser de Blois and the King himself.
He was quickly found guilty and had his head separated from his body by
an axman. Olivier’s personal holdings
were confiscated—much of it ending up in the hands of de Blois. And to add to the ignominy, his severed head
was returned to Nantes to be displayed on a pole.
Twice
widowed Jeanne did not take this lightly.
She sold all of her considerable personal holdings—and according to some
accounts by less-than-friendly French chroniclers her 43 year old body—to raise
the cash needed to purchase the three largest and newest warships she could find. She
hired the best captains and crews—a mix
of Bretons, English, and rogue French and armed them well.
To
make her ships distinctive and to terrify her enemies, she had them pained
black and their sails dyed a deep crimson—itself an expensive proposition. Taking personal command of her fleet Jean
began her career as a pirate warring exclusively on French commerce from the refuge of the many often fog
enshrouded coves and inlets of the Britany coast.
Another victim falls to the Black Fleet. |
Hunting
in a pack or sometimes singly the Black
Fleet had no trouble overhauling and capturing the ships of King Philip,
his nobles, and wealthy merchants. After
boarding the helpless vessels Jeanne was merciless, executing the crew. Her preferred but messy method was to stab
them to death with daggers while they were bound and kneeling. Jeanne was said to personally join in the
slaughter of the captains and officers. Bodies were unceremoniously dumped overboard. But she was careful always to leave two or
three survivors who were put ashore with the instruction to report to the king
that Jeanne had struck.
Dozens
of ships were captured in this manner and Jeanne’s wealth began to grow. And so did her popularity in Brittany, among
the common people and the allies of Jean de Montfort who began to hail her as
the Lioness of Brittany.
Since
she was careful to leave English shipping undisturbed, Jeanne was effectively
the ally of Edward III and her depredations were bound to have an effect on his
on-going war with Philip. Not only did
she effectively sweep the Channel of French warships, but the supplies she
plundered helped sustain the English armies campaigning in France and some
historians credit her with thus contributing to the great and legendary English
victory at the Battle of Crécy in
1631.
Some
thought that Jeanne would end her rampage when Philip died in 1350, his kingdom
almost in ruins from defeats by the English and the Black Plague. They were
wrong. She turned with new gusto to
seeking out the ships of loyal French nobles.
When she found one on board she reportedly personally beheaded him with
an ax. This was something that even
strong men found difficult so it is likely her victims had to endure being
hacked several times before their heads rolled away.
After
thirteen years as the terror of the Channel, Jeanne retired and wed for a third
time to Sir Walter Bentley, a lieutenant to Edward III and retired to England
with her children including the younger Olivier. Later she returned to France where she lived
in luxury in Hennebont until she
died in 1359.
Here
son, Olivier IV de Clisson, made
quite a name for himself with important commands on both sides of the War of Breton Succession, that
long-running side show to the Hundred Years War. He was famous for ordering no quarter to his battle captives. The apple, it seems, did not fall far from
the tree.
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