Philip III, Duke of Burgundy (Philip the Good or Philippe le Bon) (1396–1467) was Duke of Burgundy from 1419 until his death. He was a member of the Valois family.
Born in Dijon, he was son of John the Fearless and Margaret of Bavaria. He became duke when his father was assassinated in 1419. Philip accused Charles, the Dauphin of France of killing his father during a meeting between the two, and in 1420 Philip allied with Henry V of England under the Treaty of Troyes. In 1423 the alliance was strengthened by the marriage of his sister Anne to John, Duke of Bedford, regent for Henry VI of England. In 1430 Philip's troops captured Joan of Arc and handed her over to the English to be tried for heresy. The alliance with England was broken in 1435 when Philip attacked Calais and, under the Treaty of Arras, recognized Charles as king of France. This alliance was broken in 1439, and in 1440 he supported the revolt of the French nobles and sheltered the Dauphin Louis.
Philip was considered an extravagant ruler who embodied the qualities of chivalry. He declined membership in the English Order of the Garter in 1422, but created his own order in 1430, the Order of the Golden Fleece, supposedly based on the Knights of the Round Table. He had no fixed capital and set up court in various places, usually Brussels, Bruges, or Lille. He held grand feasts to show off his power to his subjects, and the knights of his Order frequently travelled through his territory participating in tournaments. In 1454 he also planned a crusade against the Ottoman Empire, but this plan never materialized.
He was also a patron of the arts, commissioning many tapestries and other works of art. In 1428Jan van Eyck travelled to Portugal to paint King John I's daughter Isabella before Philip married her. With help from more experienced Portuguese shipbuilders Philip established a shipyard in Bruges. Roger van der Weyden painted his portrait (illustration, above left) wearing the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece..
In 1463 Philip returned some of his territory to Louis XI. That year he also created an Estates-General on the French model. Philip died in Bruges in 1467 and was succeeded by his son Charles the Bold.
Brief Profile (http://dijoon.free.fr/bestof/philgood.htm) - Contains a short biography of Philip.
EHistory page (http://www.ehistory.com/middleages/PeopleView.cfm?PID=311) - Short sketch of the Duke's life.
Joan of Arc's First Letter to Philip (http://archive.joan-of-arc.org/joanofarc_letter_June_1429.html) - Mention of a letter dictated by Joan of Arc to Duke Philip in June of 1429.
Joan of Arc's Second Letter to Philip (http://archive.joan-of-arc.org/joanofarc_letter_july_17_1429.html) - Translation of a letter dictated by Joan of Arc to Duke Philip on 17 July 1429.
PHILIP THE GOOD (1396-1467), duke of Burgundy, son of John the Fearless, duke of Burgundy, and Margaret of Bavaria, was born at Dijon on the 13th of June 1396, and succeeded his father on the loth of September 1419.
By a treaty concluded by Philip at Amiens in April 1423 with the dukes of Brittany and Bedford, John, duke of Bedford, married Philip's sister Anne, and Arthur of Brittany, earl of Richmond, became the husband of Philip's sister Margaret.
Philip, however, himself claimed Brabant as having been bequeathed to him by his cousin Philip, the late duke, with the result that the Burgundians repulsed the troops of the duke of Gloucester, and Jacqueline was forced to recognize the duke of Burgundy as her lieutenant and heir.
In 561 the kingdom of Burgundy was reconstructed by Guntram, son of Clotaire I., and until 613 it formed a separate state under the government of a prince of the Merovingian family.
After 613 Burgundy was one of the provinces of the Frankish kingdom, but in the redistributions that followed the reign of Charlemagne the various parts of the ancient kingdom had different fortunes.
In 888 the kingdom of Juran Burgundy was founded by Rudolph I., son of Conrad, count of Auxerre, and the German king Arnulf could not succeed in expelling the usurper, whose authority was recognized in the diocese of Besancon, Basel, Lausanne, Geneva and Sion.