Badge of Office: Joyeuse
Badge of Office: Joyeuse
Badge of Office: Joyeuse
The badge of office was a highly elaborate sword called Joyeuse, after the legendary sword
of Charlemagne. Joyeuse was a sword made with fragments of different swords and used in the
Sacre of the French Kings since at least 1271. It was contained in a blue scabbard embellished with
royal symbol, the fleur-de-lis, in column order from hilt to point. Traditionally, the constable was
presented with the sword on taking his office by the King himself. [2]
Authority[edit]
After the abolition of the office of Sénéchal in 1191, the Connétable became the most important
officer in the army, and as First Officer of the Crown, he ranked in ceremonial precedence
immediately after the peers. He had the position of Lieutenant-general of the King within
the kingdom. The constable had under his command all military officers, including the
powerful maréchaux; he was also responsible for the financing of the army, and administering
military justice. The official name of the jurisdiction was la connétablie (the constabulary), which he
exercised with the assistance of the Maréchaux de France (Marshals of France). This paralleled
the Court of the Lord Constable, later called curia militaris of Court of Chivalry, which existed in
England at that time.[3]
Constables of France[edit]
Note that there are gaps in the dates as the position was not always filled following the demise of its
occupant.
Movies[edit]
If I Were King, 1938, with François Villon (played by Ronald Colman), who was appointed by Louis
XI, King of France (played by Basil Rathbone) to be Constable of France for one week.
Various versions of Shakespeare's play Henry V depict Constable Charles d'Albret, Comte de
Dreux, who was appointed by Charles VI of France and was killed in the Battle of Agincourt (1415).
He is played by Leo Genn in the 1944 film, by Richard Easton in the 1989 film, and by Maxime
Lefrancois in the 2012 film. In the 1944 film he dies in personal combat with King Henry. In the 1989
film he is depicted as falling from his horse into the mud (historical tradition holds he was drowned in
the mud due to the weight of his armour, disabled by having his horse fall on him). In the 2012 film
he is shot by a longbowman after stabbing the Duke of York in the back in woodland away from the
main battle.