Bertrand de Loque, author of Deux Traitéz: l'un de la guerre, l'autre du duel (Lyon: Iacob Ratoyre, 1589), Protestant minister, is said to be the same person as François de Saillans, who was born in Valence between 1540 and 1550. Loque was still alive in 1600.
Shakespeare used John Eliot's 1591 translation of Bertrand de Loque's Discourses of Warre and single Combat for inspiration and guidance in two plays, Henry V,[1] and The Reign of King Edward III.[2]
References
edit- ^ Alice Shalvi, ‘Introduction to Bertrand De Loque’, in Discourses of Warre and Single Combat, trans. John Eliot (1591), reproduced by the Israel Universities Press, Jerusalem (1968).
- ^ Ambrose Murphy, A Possible New Source for Shakespeare's The Reign of King Edward III, Notes and Queries, April 19 2024;, gjae046, https://doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjae046.
- For a translation into modern English, see Beatrice Heuser: The Strategy Makers: Thoughts on War and Society from Machiavelli to Clausewitz (Santa Monica, CA: Greenwood/Praeger, 2010) ISBN 978-0-275-99826-4, pp. 50–61