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by Allen Williamson
"She was
therefore right to always trust in her [Voices]; for in truth Joan was
liberated, as they promised, from the prison of the body by martyrdom and
a great victory of patience." - Inquisitor Jean Bréhal, the judge who
established her innocence during the Rehabilitation Trial; from his 'Recollectio'
(June 1456)
Joan of Arc,
in French, Jeanne d'Arc, also called the Maid of Orleans, a patron saint
of France and a national heroine, led the resistance to the English
invasion of France in the Hundred Years War. She was born the third of
five children to a farmer, Jacques Darc and his wife Isabelle de Vouthon
in the town of Domremy on the border of provinces of Champagne and
Lorraine. Her childhood was spent attending her father's herds in the
fields and learning religion and housekeeping skills from her mother.
When Joan was about 12 years old, she began hearing "voices" of St.
Michael, St. Catherine, and St. Margaret believing them to have been sent
by God. These voices told her that it was her divine mission to free her
country from the English and help the dauphin gain the French throne. They
told her to cut her hair, dress in man's uniform and to pick up the arms.
By 1429 the English with the help of their Burgundian allies occupied
Paris and all of France north of the Loire. The resistance was minimal due
to lack of leadership and a sense of hopelessness. Henry VI of England was
claiming the French throne.
Joan convinced the captain of the dauphin's forces, and then the dauphin
himself of her calling. After passing an examination by a board of
theologians, she was given troops to command and the rank of captain.
At the battle of Orleans in May 1429, Joan led the troops to a miraculous
victory over the English. She continued fighting the enemy in other
locations along the Loire. Fear of troops under her leadership was so
formidable that when she approached Lord Talbot's army at Patay, most of
the English troops and Commander Sir John Fastolfe fled the battlefield.
Fastolfe was later stripped of his Order of the Garter for this act of
cowardice. Although Lord Talbot stood his ground, he lost the battle and
was captured along with a hundred English noblemen and lost 1800 of his
soldiers.
Charles VII was crowned king of France on July 17, 1429 in Reims
Cathedral. At the coronation, Joan was given a place of honor next to the
king. Later, she was ennobled for her services to the country.
In 1430 she was captured by the Burgundians while defending Compiegne near
Paris and was sold to the English. The English, in turn, handed her over
to the ecclesiastical court at Rouen led by Pierre Cauchon, a pro-English
Bishop of Beauvais, to be tried for witchcraft and heresy. Much was made
of her insistence on wearing male clothing. She was told that for a woman
to wear men's clothing was a crime against God. Her determination to
continue wearing it (because her voices hadn't yet told her to change, as
well as for protection from sexual abuse by her jailors) was seen as
defiance and finally sealed her fate. Joan was convicted after a
fourteen-month interrogation and on May 30, 1431 she was burned at the
stake in the Rouen marketplace. She was nineteen years old. Charles VII
made no attempt to come to her rescue.
In 1456 a second trial was held and she was pronounced innocent of the
charges against her. She was beatified in 1909 and canonized in 1920 by
Pope Benedict XV.
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