[1] These departing in good order of battell out of Pa|ris, [page 600] came to Genuille in Beausse, and in a morning earlie, in a great frost, they departed from thence to|ward the siege; and when they came to a towne called Rowraie, in the lands of Beausse, they perceiued their enimies comming towards them, being to the number of nine or ten thousand of Frenchmen and Scots, of whome were capteins Charles of Clere|mont, sonne to the duke of Bourbon then being pri|soner in England; sir William Steward constable of Scotland, a little before deliuered out of captiui|tie, the earle of Perdriake, the lord Iohn Uandosine, the Uidame of Chartres, the lord of Toures, the lord of Lohar, the lord of Eglere, the lord of Beauiew, the bastard Tremoile, and manie other valiant cap|teins.