Background
He was born into the minor nobility at Lot-et-Garonne in the Périgord somehere around the year 1300.
He was born into the minor nobility at Lot-et-Garonne in the Périgord somehere around the year 1300.
Even though a layman, he possessed the ecclesiastical fief of Velines in Dordogne. Because of it he was called the Archpriest of Vélines (Archiprêtre de Velines). He was deprived of his benefice by the archbishop of Bordeux because he was mixing "with brigands and men of base extraction".
The Archpriest quickly made a name in the world of mercenaries specializing in scaling castle walls.
His meteoric rise, despite his noble status, astonished his contemporaries. In the early 1350s, Arnaud commanded a band of 80 men in South-West France, and was known for his skill at taking walled cities and castles by escalade (ladders).
He was equally known for repeatedly crossing line between military service and banditry. In 1356, he was wounded and captured after fighting in the forces of the Count of Alençon at the Battle of Poitiers.
In 1357 Arnaud was elected commander of the "Great Company", a loose collection of companies of freebooters of various nationalities.
While most ordinary companies numbered no more than a few hundred men, the shifting membership brought at its height made up an army of about 2700 mentor The Dauphin Charles draws in his service until the Peace of Brétigny (1360). In 1363, after the Treaty of Brétigny, Arnaud de Cervole and his men began to pillage the countryside.
His was one of the many so called Tard-Venus bands, groups of mecanries left without employment by the end of hostilities.
His troops attacked Avignon and ransomed the Pope. They then plundered Burgundy.
They crossed the Rhone on July 13, 1357. In 1362, he was hired by the French king John II to deal with English brigands, dispatching him with a small royal army led by the Comte de Tancarville and the Comte de la Marche.
This army was defeated at the, where Arnaud was captured.
Here the troops raised by the king were routed due to the betrayal of the Archpriest. In 1365, the Duke of Burgundy offers to lead a major crusade against the Turks in Hungary (to take out the companies of the kingdom of France). The crusade has the support of the Pope who wants to get rid of tard-Venus companies now operating in the Rhone Valley, but never eventuated
In 1365, he was approached by Pope Urban V to lead a new Crusade to the Holy Land.
The purpose was to clear the Pope"s domains of mercenary bands with the added benefit of striking a blow against the Turks.
Although the Archpriest did set about collecting mercenaries together, the project progressed slowly and many had dispersed again by the end of the year. A fresh attempt was made in 1366 but supply problems caused discontent.
On 25 May 1366, Arnaud de Cervole was murdered by his own men, May 25, 1366 as his army camped near Macon, before passing the Saône. Arnaud (as "L"archprestre et ses Bretons") is mentioned repeatedly in Guillaume de Machaut"s Le livre dou voir dit.
Arnaud (as Arnaut) appears as a character in Michael Crichton"s novel Timeline and its film adaptation, where he is played by Lambert Wilson.