Today in History: May 30th
JOAN OF
ARC MARTYRED:
May 30, 1431
At Rouen in English-controlled Normandy,
Joan of Arc, the peasant girl who
became the savior of France, is burned at
the stake for heresy.Joan was born in
1412, the daughter of a tenant farmer
at Domrýmy, on the borders of the duchies
of Bar and Lorraine. In 1415, the
Hundred Years War between England and France
entered a crucial phase when the
young King Henry V of England invaded France
and won a series of decisive
victories against the forces of King Charles VI. By
the time of Henry's death
in August 1422, the English and their
French-Burgundian allies controlled
Aquitaine and most of northern France,
including Paris. Charles VI, long
incapacitated, died one month later, and his
son, Charles, regent from 1418,
prepared to take the throne. However, Reims, the
traditional city of French
coronation, was held by the Anglo-Burgundians, and
the Dauphin (heir apparent
to the French throne) remained uncrowned. Meanwhile,
King Henry VI of
England, the infant son of Henry V and Catherine of Valois, the
daughter of
Charles VI, was proclaimed king of France by the English.Joan's
village of
Domrýmy lay on the frontier between the France of the Dauphin and
that of the
Anglo-Burgundians. In the midst of this unstable environment, Joan
began
hearing "voices" of three Christian saints--St. Michael, St. Catherine,
and
St. Margaret. When she was about 16, these voices exhorted her to aid
the
Dauphin in capturing Reims and therefore the French throne. In May 1428,
she
traveled to Vaucouleurs, a stronghold of the Dauphin, and told the
captain of
the garrison of her visions. Disbelieving the young peasant girl,
he sent her
home. In January 1429, she returned, and the captain, impressed
by her piety and
determination, agreed to allow her passage to the Dauphin at
Chinon.Dressed in
men's clothes and accompanied by six soldiers, she reached
the Dauphin's castle
at Chinon in February 1429 and was granted an audience.
Charles hid himself
among his courtiers, but Joan immediately picked him out
and informed him of her
divine mission. For several weeks, Charles had Joan
questioned by theologians at
Poitiers, who concluded that, given his
desperate straits, the Dauphin would be
well-advised to make use of this
strange and charismatic girl.Charles furnished
her with a small army, and on
April 27, 1429, she set out for Orlýans, besieged
by the English since
October 1428. On April 29, as a French sortie distracted
the English troops
on the west side of Orlýans, Joan entered unopposed by its
eastern gate. She
brought greatly needed supplies and reinforcements and
inspired the French to
a passionate resistance. She personally led the charge in
several battles and
on May 7 was struck by an arrow. After quickly dressing her
wound, she
returned to the fight, and the French won the day. On May 8, the
English
retreated from Orlýans.During the next five weeks, Joan and the
French
commanders led the French into a string of stunning victories over the
English.
On July 16, the royal army reached Reims, which opened its gates to
Joan and the
Dauphin. The next day, Charles VII was crowned king of France,
with Joan
standing nearby holding up her standard: an image of Christ in
judgment. After
the ceremony, she knelt before Charles, joyously calling him
king for the first
time.On September 8, the king and Joan attacked Paris.
During the battle, Joan
carried her standard up to the earthworks and called
on the Parisians to
surrender the city to the king of France. She was wounded
but continued to rally
the king's troops until Charles ordered an end to the
unsuccessful siege. That
year, she led several more small campaigns,
capturing the town of
Saint-Pierre-le-Moýtier. In December, Charles ennobled
Joan, her parents, and
her brothers.In May 1430, the Burgundians laid siege
to Compiýgne, and Joan
stole into the town under the cover of darkness to aid
in its defense. On May
23, while leading a sortie against the Burgundians,
she was captured. The
Burgundians sold her to the English, and in March 1431
she went on trial before
ecclesiastical authorities in Rouen on charges of
heresy. Her most serious
crime, according to the tribunal, was her rejection
of church authority in favor
of direct inspiration from God. After refusing
to submit to the church, her
sentence was read on May 24: She was to be
turned over to secular authorities
and executed. Reacting with horror to the
pronouncement, Joan agreed to recant
and was condemned instead to perpetual
imprisonment.Ordered to put on women's
clothes, she obeyed, but a few days
later the judges went to her cell and found
her dressed again in male attire.
Questioned, she told them that St. Catherine
and St. Margaret had reproached
her for giving in to the church against their
will. She was found to be a
relapsed heretic and on May 29 ordered handed over
to secular officials. On
May 30, Joan, 19 years old, was burned at the stake at
the Place du
Vieux-Marchý in Rouen. Before the pyre was lit, she instructed a
priest to
hold high a crucifix for her to see and to shout out prayers loud
enough to
be heard above the roar of the flames.As a source of military
inspiration,
Joan of Arc helped turn the Hundred Years War firmly in France's
favor. By
1453, Charles VII had reconquered all of France except for Calais,
which the
English relinquished in 1558. In 1920, Joan of Arc, one of the great
heroes
of French history, was recognized as a Christian saint by the Roman
Catholic
Church. Her feast day is May
30.
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