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Martyr, saint and military leader Joan of Arc, acting under divine guidance, led the French army to victory over the British during the Hundred Years' War.
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Joan of Arc, nicknamed "The Maid of Orléans," was born in 1412 in Domrémy, Bar, France. A national heroine of France, Joan of Arc led the French army to victory over the British at Orléans, at age 18. Captured a year later, Joan was burned by the English and their French collaborators as a heretic. She was canonized as a Roman Catholic saint 500 years later, on May 16, 1920.
Early Years
In 1412 (on January 6, according to some sources), Joan of
Arc was born into the French peasant class to devoutly religious parents
in the village of Domremy. Beginning around age 12, she heard voices:
those of St. Michael, St. Catherine, and St. Margaret. She also
possessed many characteristics common to her contemporary female
visionaries, who were a notable fixture of her time—extreme piety,
claims of direct communication with the saints, and a reliance on
individual experience, as opposed to that found through the institutions
of the church, of the presence of God.
As history would prove, beyond these traits, she also possessed remarkable mental and physical courage.
Historical Background
The crown of France during Joan’s time was in dispute between
the dauphin, Charles (later Charles VII), and the English
king, Henry VI. Henry's armies were occupying much of the northern
part of the kingdom with the Burgundians (loyal to the Duke of Burgundy
and allied to the English), and the dauphin's state was more tenuous
yet, since, five years after his father's death, he still had not been
crowned king of France.
Joan's village was on the frontier
between the two factions, and villagers had already had to abandon their
homes. Led by the voices of the saints, in May 1428 Joan traveled to
Vaucouleurs, where she asked for permission to join the dauphin and his
cause. She and her visions were promptly dismissed, and the 16-year-old
Joan went home. The next year, undeterred, she returned.
At Orléans
That April, the dauphin provided Joan with several military
men, and she was joined in her fight by her brothers Jean and Pierre.
Her standard was painted with an image of Christ in judgment, and the
banner she would carry into battle bore the name of Jesus. When
questioned about the sword she would wield, Joan said that it would be
discovered in the church of Sainte-Catherine-de-Fierbois, and one was
indeed found there.
Her ensuing strategy was underpinned with
rejecting the guarded, nonaggressive strategy that characterized French
leadership during the war before her arrival. The cautious approach
clearly had not been effective, and Joan sought to change the approach
and the tide of the war.
On May 4, led by Joan, the French
attacked and captured the fortress of Saint Loup, and the next day Joan
led a march to a second fortress called Saint Jean le Blanc.
Soon
in front of the war council, Joan demanded another offensive, but she
was rebuked and the city gates locked to prevent her from launching an
attack. But Joan and a group of soldiers and townsmen unbolted the gate,
and she led a charge against the main English stronghold of Les
Tourelles on May 7. During the siege, Joan was shot through
the neck with an arrow, but she quickly returned to the fight, her
unstoppable spirit bolstering the French resolve until the English
capitulated.
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Ingrid Bergman portrayed Joan of Arc
Milla Jovovich played Joan of Arc
Christine de Pisan wrote about Joan of Arc
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