Friday, April 17, 2020
The Definition Of The Golden Rule Is That Those With The Gold Essays
  The definition of the Golden Rule is that those with the gold  make the rules. In other words, those with the gold have the power as  well as those with the power have the gold. History books will  discuss the general reasons for war such as freedom from adversity or  freedom from religion. But the real issue for any war is the thirst  for power and control; and the means to finance them are the economic  issues.    Nations will endure years of fighting for power and control.    France and England fought each other for more than a hundred years to  have control of the Channel trade routes. 1 This century of warring  was known as The Hundred Years' War and is the longest war in record  history. It began in 1337 when King Edward III invaded Normandy and  ended in 1453 when France won the Battle of Bordeaux. However, it was  not a hundred years of constant battle; there were periods of truces  in between. 2    One cause for the Hundred Years' War was the claim to the    French throne. The conflict began when the direct line of succession  died without a male heir and the nobles decided to pass the crown to a  cousin, Philip of Valois. But this left two other male cousins  equally deserving of the crown; Charles, King of Navarre and Edward    III, King of England. 3 Edward III claimed that he himself was  deserving of the throne because his mother was the sister of the late    French king, while Philip VI was only a cousin. But according to    French law, no women could inherit the throne, nor could the crown be  inherited through a woman. 4    "Philip of Valois chances of becoming King of France had been  remote and he had not been brought up as the future lieutenant of God  on Earth. Philip VI spent much of his resources on entertainment and  finery with gay abandon." 5 This caused conflict with the king's  subjects. Since the king was considered to be sacred and inviolable,  neither cousin would challenge Philip VI. However, they would exploit  the situation and King Edward III lost no time and invaded Normandy  with an army of 10,000  men. 6    This leads to another cause for The Hundred Years' War. The  land along the Channel and Atlantic coasts was England's first line of  defense against an invasion. England held claim to this territory  from the twelth century through the marriage of King Henry II and    Eleanor of Aquitaine. King Edward III was determined to gain control  of the French coastline while providing himself with a bridgehead for  future expeditions into France. 7    But the major cause of The Hundred Years' War was the economic  interest - the revenues to be gotten from this rich territory. Wine  was Gasgony's largest export product and major source of income to the  vassal. Wool was England's largest export product and the source of  its wealth. English pastures produced fleeces that were the envy of    Europe which Flanders depended on for its wool and linen market. 8    English sheep growers sold their long fine wool to weavers in    Flanders, across the English Channel. Flemish weavers as well as    English sheep growers depended on this trade for their business. In    1336, Philip VI arrested all the English merchants in Flanders and  took away all the privileges of the Flemish towns and the craft  guilds. Resulting in the Flemings revolting against the French  control and making an alliance with England. 9 Consequently, the  flourishing market of the industrial cities of Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp  and Ypres were naturally coveted by the Kings of France and England.    Moreover, the Bordeaux harbor was within the borders of    English Gascony and was the center of the shipping and trading  industry. Commodities such as grains, dairy products, dyes and salt  would be shipped into Bordeaux via the Dordogne and Garonne Rivers and  the merchants were charged a customs fee for these products. Also,    Bordeaux would receive duties on wine, whether shipped-in or grown on    Gascon soil. Consequently, the profits from the tolls and customs  made Bordeaux the economic capital of Gascony. Furthermore, control  of neighboring areas such as Guyenne and Calais were economically  vital. Their union with Bordeaux would ensure England with a monopoly  of the shipping and trading industry from Spain, Portugal and    Brittany. 10    France was the richest country in Europe and its army was much  larger than England's. In addition, France's army consisted of hired  mercenaries. Therefore, France should have quickly defeated England.    But France's army consisted of heavily armored knights who were less  mobile against the agile English swordsmen. The French military  leaders    
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