Gascon campaign (1294–1303)

Gascon Campaign (1294–1303)
Part of Gascon War
Date1294–1303
Location
Result Treaty of Paris: French occupation ended with royal marriages. Aquitaine becomes a Fief of France.
Belligerents
Kingdom of France Kingdom of England
Commanders and leaders
Philip IV of France
Robert II, Count of Artois
Charles, Count of Valois
Guy, Marshall of France
Raoul, Constable of France
Roger-Bernard, Count of Foix
Edward I of England
John St John
John of Brittany
Edmund of Lancaster
Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln
Bayonne
Bordeaux
Portsmouth
Pointe Saint-Mathieu
Paris
Toulouse
La Rochelle
Brussels (Flanders)
Île de Ré
Locations
Locations in Gascony and Aquitaine

The Gascon campaign of 1294 to 1303 was a military conflict between English and French forces over the Duchy of Aquitaine, including the Duchy of Gascony. The Duchy of Aquitaine was held in fief by King Edward I of England as a vassal of King Philip IV of France. Starting with a fishing fleet dispute and then naval warfare, the conflict escalated to open warfare between the two countries. In spite of a French military victory on the ground, the war ended when the Treaty of Paris was signed in 1303, which restored the status quo. The war was a premise to future tensions between the two nations culminating in the Hundred Years' War.