Jonathan Sumption's Cursed Kings is the eagerly anticipated fourth
volume in what Allan Massie has called "one of the great historical
works of our time."
Cursed Kings tells the story of the destruction of France by the
madness of its king and the greed and violence of his family. In the
early fifteenth century France, Europe's strongest and most populous
state, suffered a complete internal collapse. As the warring parties
within fought for the spoils of the kingdom under the vacant gaze of the
mad King Charles VI, the country was left at the mercy of one of the
most remarkable rulers of the European Middle Ages: Henry V of England,
who had destroyed the French army on the field of Agincourt in October
1415 and left most of France's leadership dead.
Sumption recounts in extraordinary detail the relentless campaign of
conquest that brought Henry to the streets and palaces of Paris within
just a few years. He died at the age of thirty-six in a French royal
castle in 1422, just two months before he would have become king of
France.
Six centuries later, these extraordinary events are overlaid by the
resounding words of Shakespeare and the potent national myths of England
and France. In Cursed Kings, Jonathan Sumption strips away the layers
to rediscover the personalities and events that lie beneath.