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  1. Died. 21 June 1421. (1421-06-21) (aged 54) Yorkshire. Jean II Le Maingre ( Old French: Jehan le Meingre), also known as Boucicaut (28 August 1366 – 21 June 1421), was a French knight and military leader. Renowned for his military skill and embodiment of chivalry, he was made a marshal of France .

  2. Jean II Le Meingre [n 1], surnommé Boucicaut [n 2] né en 1364 à Tours - mort en Angleterre dans le Yorkshire, probablement le 25 juin 1421 [1], fut maréchal de France. Il ne doit pas être confondu avec Jean I er Le Meingre, dit Boucicaut, son père.

  3. Died: 1421, Yorkshire, Eng. Role In: Battle of Agincourt. Hundred Years’ War. Jean II le Meingre Boucicaut (born c. 1366—died 1421, Yorkshire, Eng.) was a marshal of France, a French soldier, and a champion of the ideals of chivalry. (Read Sir Walter Scott’s 1824 Britannica essay on chivalry.)

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Jean I Le Meingre was a famous soldier, diplomat and royal councillor to King Jean II and King Charles V who was appointed marshal of France on 21 October 1356. His wife was Fleurie de Linières, daughter of Godemart I de Linières, one of the oldest noble families in Berry.

  5. 978-1-78204-901-2. History. Jean le Meingre, Maréchal Boucicaut (1364-1421), was the very flower of chivalry. From his earliest years at the royal court in Paris, he distinguished himself ...

    • NED-New Edition
  6. This anonymous work was completed on 9 April 1409, thirteen years before the death of its subject, Jean II Le Meingre, known by the sobriquet Boucicaut (1366–1421). It survives in just one manuscript, BNF fr. 11432, a fine, large folio volume of 125 parchment leaves.

  7. Here lies my noble lord Jehan Le Meingre, known as Boucicaut the son, marshal of France, great constable of the emperor and of the empire of Constantinople, governor of Genoa for the king, count of Beaufort, of Clux, of Alest, and viscount of Turenne,...