Good work overall: rich and well documented. The author studies the multiple aspects of this complex war and unravels for us in the son one by one: eg Scottish war is much better treated than in the work of Jean Favier. Two minor drawbacks, however: firstly the author seems to confuse a little in the genealogies (eg Joan of Navarre did not take the kingdom from his mother Margaret of Burgundy but his grandmother Joan of Navarre, wife Philip the handsome; these are well-known facts and such negligence surprise in a work of this quality) Moreover, the case Jeanne d'Arc is oddly processed. It is easy to say that this is a fabricated character of any room and exalted by the hagiography, which n 'had no real importance. The trouble is that we never managed to make one second Joan of Arc (and it was not for lack of trying). Let therefore he, no doubt, a communication operation but grafted on personality and extraordinary destiny. The second essential book on the Hundred Years War to supplement that of Jean Favier.