Brittany's army arrived on the 13th of July at Beaugency and intended to join forces with the Burgundians and to attack the King's army with a force of 35,000 men.
He died on 28 February 1973 in a Polish Veterans Hospital in Lailly-en-Val near Beaugency, at the age of 88.
After the signing of the Treaty of Troyes during the Hundred Years' War, the Dauphin was left in possession of the cities of Orléans, Beaugency, Cléry, Vendôme, and Bourges.
The division then screened the Allied advance along the Loire River Valley, and accepted the surrender of 20,000 German troops at Beaugency.