The Siege of Quimper and the Massacre…
May 1344 CE
The Siege of Quimper and the Massacre of May 1344
In early March 1344, Charles of Blois, the French-backed claimant to Brittany, launched a siege against Quimper, aiming to cut off English communication between Brest and Vannes. The fall of Quimper on May 1, 1344, resulted in a brutal massacre, characteristic of medieval warfare, with thousands of civilians slaughtered.
The Siege and the Fall of Quimper (March–May 1344)
- Charles of Blois, with French and Breton troops, laid siege to Quimper, an important Montfortist stronghold.
- The city’s defenses collapsed on May 1, falling to French and Bloisian forces by assault.
- As was common in medieval siege warfare, the fall of a city taken by storm meant widespread civilian slaughter:
- Between 1,400 and 2,000 noncombatants were killed.
- Homes and churches were looted and burned.
Fate of the Captured Soldiers
- English prisoners were held for ransom, following the chivalric customs of war.
- Breton and Norman captives, however, were treated as traitors to the French Crown:
- They were sent to Paris under orders from Philip VI.
- There, they were executed for treason, signaling Philip’s determination to crush the Montfortist causeand prevent further Breton defiance.
Impact and Consequences
- The fall of Quimper secured French control over much of western Brittany, further isolating Montfortist-held Brest.
- The massacre of civilians and execution of Montfortist prisoners in Paris deepened the hatred between rival Breton factions, ensuring that the conflict would remain bitter and long-lasting.
- The war continued, with English reinforcements expected to intervene, preventing a final French victory in Brittany.
The siege and massacre at Quimper in 1344 was one of the most brutal episodes in the Breton War of Succession, reinforcing the total war mentality of the time and entrenching animosity between the rival factions.