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Philip, however, was a master of the long game. He married Margaret of Flanders, the heiress to the wealthy counties of Flanders, Artois, and Burgundy (the Free County, technically part of the Empire). With this single marriage, the Duke of Burgundy suddenly controlled not only his French duchy but also the great cloth-producing cities of Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres. He held the purse strings of Europe.
In the end, Burgundy was not a nation. It was a moment of brilliant, unsustainable intensity—a shooting star that burned brighter than any kingdom, only to shatter into the soil of Nancy. duchy of burgundy
Their territory was long and thin, stretching from the hills of Burgundy proper in the south, up through the Low Countries to the North Sea. It was disconnected and difficult to defend. The Dukes dreamed of linking their northern and southern lands, potentially absorbing Lorraine and Alsace to create a contiguous "Middle Kingdom." Philip, however, was a master of the long game
Masters like Jan van Eyck and Rogier van der Weyden were employed by the court. He held the purse strings of Europe
Philip the Good founded the , an exclusive club of the continent’s most powerful nobles, sworn to defend the faith and the duke’s honor. Its banquets were legendary: tables groaned under gilded centerpieces, fountains flowed with wine, and whole roasted beasts were dressed as mythical creatures. The court’s fashion—silk, velvet, dagged sleeves, and the famous hennin (pointed hats)—was copied from London to Vienna.
The Burgundian court was the trendsetter of the 15th century. Because the Dukes were fabulously wealthy from Flemish cloth trade taxes, they became the greatest patrons of the .
They didn’t just want land; they wanted a crown.