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When Pierre, the seigneur of Grailly (ca 1285 - 1356) married Asalide (the captaline de Buch), the heiress of Pierre-Amanieu de Bordeaux, captal de Buch, in 1307, the title passed into the Grailly family, a line of fighting seigneurs with origins in Savoy.
The most famous of the Captals de Buch was Pierre's grandson, Jean III de Grailly, captal de Buch (1343 - 1377), a cousin of the Count of Foix who was a military leader in the Hundred Years' War, praised by the chronicler Jean Froissart as an ideal of chivalry.
Attached to the English side in the conflict, he was made Count of Bigorre by Edward III of England. He played a decisive role as a cavalry leader under Edward, the Black Prince in the Battle of Poitiers ( 1356). He defected to the French side and was made lord of Nemours by Charles V of France, but re-established his loyalty to the English and was rewarded by being made the Constable of Aquitaine.
Froissart gives an account of the Captal de Buch's chivalry and courage at the time of the peasant uprising in 1358 called the Jacquerie (see link).
In 1372, he was captured by the French near Soubise and was imprisoned in ParisEiffel Tower has become the symbol of Paris throughout the world. Paris is the capital and largest city of France. The city is built on an arc of the River Seine, and is thus divided into two parts: the Right Bank to the north and the smaller Left Bank to until his death. Since he left no heirs, his uncle, Archambaud, count of Foix and of Bigorre took the title Captal de Buch, which passed to his descendents the Counts of Foix.