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St. Joan of Arc
In French Jeanne d'Arc; by her contemporaries commonly known as la Pucelle (the Maid).
Born at Domremy in Champagne, probably on 6 January, 1412; died at Rouen, 30 May, 1431. The village of Domremy lay upon the confines of territory which recognized the suzerainty of the Duke of Burgundy, but in the protracted conflict between the Armagnacs (the party of Charles VII, King of France), on the one hand, and the Burgundians in alliance with the English, on the other, Domremy had always remained loyal to Charles.
Jacques d'Arc, Joan's father, was a small peasant farmer, poor but not needy.
Joan seems to have been the youngest of a family of five. She never learned to
read or write but was skilled in sewing and spinning, and the popular idea that
she spent the days of her childhood in the pastures, alone with the sheep and
cattle, is quite unfounded. All the witnesses in the process of rehabilitation
spoke of her as a singularly pious child, grave beyond her years, who often
knelt in the church absorbed in prayer, and loved the poor tenderly. Great
attempts were made at Joan's trial to connect her with some superstitious
practices supposed to have been performed round a certain tree, popularly known
as the Fairy Tree
(l'Arbre des Dames), but the sincerity of her answers
baffled her judges. She had sung and danced there with the other children, and
had woven wreaths for Our Lady's statue, but since she was twelve years old she
had held aloof from such diversions.
It was at the age of thirteen and a half, in the summer of 1425, that Joan
first became conscious of that manifestation, whose supernatural character it
would now be rash to question, which she afterwards came to call her voices
or
her counsel.
It was at first simply a voice, as if someone had spoken quite
close to her, but it seems also clear that a blaze of light accompanied it, and
that later on she clearly discerned in some way the appearance of those who
spoke to her, recognizing them individually as St. Michael (who was accompanied
by other angels), St. Margaret, St. Catherine, and others. Joan was always
reluctant to speak of her voices. She said nothing about them to her confessor,
and constantly refused, at her trial, to be inveigled into descriptions of the
appearance of the saints and to explain how she recognized them. None the less,
she told her judges: I saw them with these very eyes, as well as I see you.
Great efforts have been made by rationalistic historians, such as M. Anatole France, to explain these voices as the result of a condition of religious and hysterical exaltation which had been fostered in Joan by priestly influence, combined with certain prophecies current in the countryside of a maiden from the bois chesnu (oak wood), near which the Fairy Tree was situated, who was to save France by a miracle. But the baselessness of this analysis of the phenomena has been fully exposed by many non-Catholic writers. There is not a shadow of evidence to support this theory of priestly advisers coaching Joan in a part, but much which contradicts it. Moreover, unless we accuse the Maid of deliberate falsehood, which no one is prepared to do, it was the voices which created the state of patriotic exaltation, and not the exaltation which preceded the voices. Her evidence on these points is clear.
Although Joan never made any statement as to the date at which the voices
revealed her mission, it seems certain that the call of God was only made known
to her gradually. But by May, 1428, she no longer doubted that she was bidden to
go to the help of the king, and the voices became insistent, urging her to
present herself to Robert Baudricourt, who commanded for Charles VII in the
neighbouring town of Vaucouleurs. This journey she eventually accomplished a
month later, but Baudricourt, a rude and dissolute soldier, treated her and her
mission with scant respect, saying to the cousin who accompanied her: Take her
home to her father and give her a good whipping.
Meanwhile the military situation of King Charles and his supporters was
growing more desperate. Orléans was invested (12 October, 1428), and by the
close of the year complete defeat seemed imminent. Joan's voices became urgent,
and even threatening. It was in vain that she resisted, saying to them: I am a
poor girl; I do not know how to ride or fight.
The voices only reiterated: It
is God who commands it.
Yielding at last, she left Domremy in January, 1429,
and again visited Vaucouleurs.
Baudricourt was still skeptical, but, as she stayed on in the town, her persistence gradually made an impression on him. On 17 February she announced a great defeat which had befallen the French arms outside Orléans (the Battle of the Herrings). As this statement was officially confirmed a few days later, her cause gained ground. Finally she was suffered to seek the king at Chinon, and she made her way there with a slender escort of three men-at-arms, she being attired, at her own request, in male costume - undoubtedly as a protection to her modesty in the rough life of the camp. She always slept fully dressed, and all those who were intimate with her declared that there was something about her which repressed every unseemly thought in her regard.
She reached Chinon on 6 March, and two days later was admitted into the
presence of Charles VII. To test her, the king had disguised himself, but she at
once saluted him without hesitation amidst a group of attendants. From the
beginning a strong party at the court - La Trémoille, the royal favourite,
foremost among them - opposed her as a crazy visionary, but a secret sign,
communicated to her by her voices, which she made known to Charles, led the king,
somewhat half-heartedly, to believe in her mission. What this sign was, Joan
never revealed, but it is now most commonly believed that this secret of the
king
was a doubt Charles had conceived of the legitimacy of his birth, and
which Joan had been supernaturally authorized to set at rest.
Still, before Joan could be employed in military operations she was sent to Poitiers to be examined by a numerous committee of learned bishops and doctors. The examination was of the most searching and formal character. It is regrettable in the extreme that the minutes of the proceedings, to which Joan frequently appealed later on at her trial, have altogether perished. All that we know is that her ardent faith, simplicity, and honesty made a favourable impression. The theologians found nothing heretical in her claims to supernatural guidance, and, without pronouncing upon the reality of her mission, they thought that she might be safely employed and further tested.
Returning to Chinon, Joan made her preparations for the campaign. Instead of the sword the king offered her, she begged that search might be made for an ancient sword buried, as she averred, behind the altar in the chapel of Ste-Catherine-de-Fierbois. It was found in the very spot her voices indicated. There was made for her at the same time a standard bearing the words Jesus, Maria, with a picture of God the Father, and kneeling angels presenting a fleur-de-lis.
But perhaps the most interesting fact connected with this early stage of her
mission is a letter of one Sire de Rotslaer written from Lyons on 22 April, 1429,
which was delivered at Brussels and duly registered, as the manuscript to this
day attests, before any of the events referred to received their fulfilment. The
Maid, he reports, said that she would save Orléans and would compel the English
to raise the siege, that she herself in a battle before Orléans would be wounded
by a shaft but would not die of it, and that the King, in the course of the
coming summer, would be crowned at Reims, together with other things which the
King keeps secret.
Before entering upon her campaign, Joan summoned the King of England to
withdraw his troops from French soil. The English commanders were furious at the
audacity of the demand, but Joan by a rapid movement entered Orléans on 30 April.
Her presence there at once worked wonders. By 8 May the English forts which
encircled the city had all been captured, and the siege raised, though on the
7th Joan was wounded in the breast by an arrow. So far as the Maid went she
wished to follow up these successes with all speed, partly from a sound warlike
instinct, partly because her voices had already told her that she had only a
year to last. But the king and his advisers, especially La Trémoille and the
Archbishop of Reims, were slow to move. However, at Joan's earnest entreaty a
short campaign was begun upon the Loire, which, after a series of successes,
ended on 18 June with a great victory at Patay, where the English reinforcements
sent from Paris under Sir John Fastolf were completely routed. The way to Reims
was now practically open, but the Maid had the greatest difficulty in persuading
the commanders not to retire before Troyes, which was at first closed against
them. They captured the town and then, still reluctantly, followed her to Reims,
where, on Sunday, 17 July, 1429, Charles VII was solemnly crowned, the Maid
standing by with her standard, for - as she explained - as it had shared in the
toil, it was just that it should share in the victory.
The principal aim of Joan's mission was thus attained, and some authorities assert that it was now her wish to return home, but that she was detained with the army against her will. The evidence is to some extent conflicting, and it is probable that Joan herself did not always speak in the same tone. Probably she saw clearly how much might have been done to bring about the speedy expulsion of the English from French soil, but on the other hand she was constantly oppressed by the apathy of the king and his advisers, and by the suicidal policy which snatched at every diplomatic bait thrown out by the Duke of Burgundy.
An abortive attempt on Paris was made at the end of August. Though St-Denis was occupied without opposition, the assault which was made on the city on 8 September was not seriously supported, and Joan, while heroically cheering on her men to fill the moat, was shot through the thigh with a bolt from a crossbow. The Duc d'Alençon removed her almost by force, and the assault was abandoned. The reverse unquestionably impaired Joan's prestige, and shortly afterwards, when, through Charles' political counsellors, a truce was signed with the Duke of Burgundy, she sadly laid down her arms upon the altar of St-Denis.
The inactivity of the following winter, mostly spent amid the worldliness and the jealousy of the Court, must have been a miserable experience for Joan. It may have been with the idea of consoling her that Charles, on 29 December, 1429, ennobled the Maid and all her family, who henceforward, from the lilies on their coat of arms, were known by the name of Du Lis. It was April before Joan was able to take the field again at the conclusion of the truce, and at Melun her voices made known to her that she would be taken prisoner before Midsummer Day. Neither was the fulfilment of this prediction long delayed. It seems that she had thrown herself into Compiègne on 24 May at sunrise to defend the town against Burgundian attack. In the evening she resolved to attempt a sortie, but her little troop of some five hundred encountered a much superior force. Her followers were driven back and retired desperately fighting. By some mistake or panic of Guillaume de Flavy, who commanded in Compiègne, the drawbridge was raised while still many of those who had made the sortie remained outside, Joan amongst the number. She was pulled down from her horse and became the prisoner of a follower of John of Luxemburg. Guillaume de Flavy has been accused of deliberate treachery, but there seems no adequate reason to suppose this. He continued to hold Compiègne resolutely for his king, while Joan's constant thought during the early months of her captivity was to escape and come to assist him in this task of defending the town.
No words can adequately describe the disgraceful ingratitude and apathy of Charles and his advisers in leaving the Maid to her fate. If military force had not availed, they had prisoners like the Earl of Suffolk in their hands, for whom she could have been exchanged. Joan was sold by John of Luxembourg to the English for a sum which would amount to several hundred thousand dollars in modern money. There can be no doubt that the English, partly because they feared their prisoner with a superstitious terror, partly because they were ashamed of the dread which she inspired, were determined at all costs to take her life. They could not put her to death for having beaten them, but they could get her sentenced as a witch and a heretic.
Moreover, they had a tool ready to their hand in Pierre Cauchon, the Bishop of Beauvais, an unscrupulous and ambitious man who was the creature of the Burgundian party. A pretext for invoking his authority was found in the fact that Compiègne, where Joan was captured, lay in the Diocese of Beauvais. Still, as Beauvais was in the hands of the French, the trial took place at Rouen - the latter see being at that time vacant. This raised many points of technical legality which were summarily settled by the parties interested.
The Vicar of the Inquisition at first, upon some scruple of jurisdiction, refused to attend, but this difficulty was overcome before the trial ended. Throughout the trial Cauchon's assessors consisted almost entirely of Frenchmen, for the most part theologians and doctors of the University of Paris. Preliminary meetings of the court took place in January, but it was only on 21 February, 1431, that Joan appeared for the first time before her judges. She was not allowed an advocate, and, though accused in an ecclesiastical court, she was throughout illegally confined in the Castle of Rouen, a secular prison, where she was guarded by dissolute English soldiers. Joan bitterly complained of this. She asked to be in the church prison, where she would have had female attendants. It was undoubtedly for the better protection of her modesty under such conditions that she persisted in retaining her male attire. Before she had been handed over to the English, she had attempted to escape by desperately throwing herself from the window of the tower of Beaurevoir, an act of seeming presumption for which she was much browbeaten by her judges. This also served as a pretext for the harshness shown regarding her confinement at Rouen, where she was at first kept in an iron cage, chained by the neck, hands, and feet. On the other hand she was allowed no spiritual privileges - e.g. attendance at Mass - on account of the charge of heresy and the monstrous dress (difformitate habitus) she was wearing.
As regards the official record of the trial, which, so far as the Latin
version goes, seems to be preserved entire, we may probably trust its accuracy
in all that relates to the questions asked and the answers returned by the
prisoner. These answers are in every way favourable to Joan. Her simplicity,
piety, and good sense appear at every turn, despite the attempts of the judges
to confuse her. They pressed her regarding her visions, but upon many points she
refused to answer. Her attitude was always fearless, and, upon 1 March, Joan
boldly announced that within seven years' space the English would have to
forfeit a bigger prize than Orléans.
In point of fact Paris was lost to Henry
VI on 12 November, 1437 - six years and eight months afterwards. It was
probably because the Maid's answers perceptibly won sympathizers for her in a
large assembly that Cauchon decided to conduct the rest of the inquiry before a
small committee of judges in the prison itself. We may remark that the only
matter in which any charge of prevarication can be reasonably urged against
Joan's replies occurs especially in this stage of the inquiry. Joan, pressed
about the secret sign given to the king, declared that an angel brought him a
golden crown, but on further questioning she seems to have grown confused and to
have contradicted herself. Most authorities (like, e.g., M. Petit de Julleville
and Mr. Andrew Lang) are agreed that she was trying to guard the king's secret
behind an allegory, she herself being the angel; but others - for instance P.
Ayroles and Canon Dunand - insinuate that the accuracy of the procès-verbal
cannot be trusted. On another point she was prejudiced by her lack of education.
The judges asked her to submit herself to the Church Militant.
Joan clearly
did not understand the phrase and, though willing and anxious to appeal to the
pope, grew puzzled and confused. It was asserted later that Joan's reluctance to
pledge herself to a simple acceptance of the Church's decisions was due to some
insidious advice treacherously imparted to her to work her ruin. But the
accounts of this alleged perfidy are contradictory and improbable.
The examinations terminated on 17 March. Seventy propositions were then drawn
up, forming a very disorderly and unfair presentment of Joan's crimes,
but,
after she had been permitted to hear and reply to these, another set of twelve
were drafted, better arranged and less extravagantly worded. With this summary
of her misdeeds before them, a large majority of the twenty-two judges who took
part in the deliberations declared Joan's visions and voices to be false and
diabolical,
and they decided that if she refused to retract she was to be
handed over to the secular arm - which was the same as saying that she was to
be burned. Certain formal admonitions, at first private, and then public, were
administered to the poor victim (18 April and 2 May), but she refused to make
any submission which the judges could have considered satisfactory. On 9 May she
was threatened with torture, but she still held firm. Meanwhile, the twelve
propositions were submitted to the University of Paris, which, being
extravagantly English in sympathy, denounced the Maid in violent terms. Strong
in this approval, the judges, forty-seven in number, held a final deliberation,
and forty-two reaffirmed that Joan ought to be declared heretical and handed
over to the civil power, if she still refused to retract. Another admonition
followed in the prison on 22 May, but Joan remained unshaken. The next day a
stake was erected in the cemetery of St-Ouen, and in the presence of a great
crowd she was solemnly admonished for the last time. After a courageous protest
against the preacher's insulting reflections on her king, Charles VII, the
accessories of the scene seem at last to have worked upon mind and body worn out
by so many struggles. Her courage for once failed her. She consented to sign
some sort of retraction, but what the precise terms of that retraction were will
never be known. In the official record of the process a form of retraction is in
inserted which is most humiliating in every particular. It is a long document
which would have taken half an hour to read. What was read aloud to Joan and was
signed by her must have been something quite different, for five witnesses at
the rehabilitation trial, including Jean Massieu, the official who had himself
read it aloud, declared that it was only a matter of a few lines. Even so, the
poor victim did not sign unconditionally, but plainly declared that she only
retracted in so far as it was God's will. However, in virtue of this concession,
Joan was not then burned, but conducted back to prison.
The English and Burgundians were furious, but Cauchon, it seems, placated
them by saying, We shall have her yet.
Undoubtedly her position would now, in
case of a relapse, be worse than before, for no second retractation could save
her from the flames. Moreover, as one of the points upon which she had been
condemned was the wearing of male apparel, a resumption of that attire would
alone constitute a relapse into heresy, and this within a few days happened,
owing, it was afterwards alleged, to a trap deliberately laid by her jailers
with the connivance of Cauchon. Joan, either to defend her modesty from outrage,
or because her women's garments were taken from her, or, perhaps, simply because
she was weary of the struggle and was convinced that her enemies were determined
to have her blood upon some pretext, once more put on the man's dress which had
been purposely left in her way. The end now came soon. On 29 May a court of
thirty-seven judges decided unanimously that the Maid must be treated as a
relapsed heretic, and this sentence was actually carried out the next day (30
May, 1431) amid circumstances of intense pathos. She is said, when the judges
visited her early in the morning, first to have charged Cauchon with the
responsibility of her death, solemnly appealing from him to God, and afterwards
to have declared that her voices had deceived her.
About this last speech a
doubt must always be felt. We cannot be sure whether such words were ever used,
and, even if they were, the meaning is not plain. She was, however, allowed to
make her confession and to receive Communion. Her demeanour at the stake was
such as to move even her bitter enemies to tears. She asked for a cross, which,
after she had embraced it, was held up before her while she called continuously
upon the name of Jesus. Until the last,
said Manchon, the recorder at the
trial, she declared that her voices came from God and had not deceived her.
After death her ashes were thrown into the Seine.
Twenty-four years later a revision of her trial, the procès de réhabilitation,
was opened at Paris with the consent of the Holy See. The popular feeling was
then very different, and, with but the rarest exceptions, all the witnesses were
eager to render their tribute to the virtues and supernatural gifts of the Maid.
The first trial had been conducted without reference to the pope, indeed it was
carried out in defiance of St. Joan's appeal to the head of the Church. Now an
appellate court constituted by the pope, after long inquiry and examination of
witnesses, reversed and annulled the sentence pronounced by a local tribunal
under Cauchon's presidency. The illegality of the former proceedings was made
clear, and it speaks well for the sincerity of this new inquiry that it could
not be made without inflicting some degree of reproach upon both the King of
France and the Church at large, seeing that so great an injustice had been done
and had so long been suffered to continue unredressed. Even before the
rehabilitation trial, keen observers, like Eneas Sylvius Piccolomini (afterwards
Pope Pius II), though still in doubt as to her mission, had discerned something
of the heavenly character of the Maid. In Shakespeare's day she was still
regarded in England as a witch in league with the fiends of hell, but a juster
estimate had begun to prevail even in the pages of Speed's History of Great
Britaine
(1611). By the beginning of the nineteenth century the sympathy for
her even in England was general. Such writers as Southey, Hallam, Sharon Turner,
Carlyle, Landor, and, above all, De Quincey greeted the Maid with a tribute of
respect which was not surpassed even in her own native land. Among her Catholic
fellow-countrymen she had been regarded, even in her lifetime, as Divinely
inspired.
At last the cause of her beatification was introduced upon occasion of an
appeal addressed to the Holy See, in 1869, by Mgr Dupanloup, Bishop of Orléans,
and, after passing through all its stages and being duly confirmed by the
necessary miracles, the process ended in the decree being published by Pius X on
11 April, 1909. A Mass and Office of St. Joan, taken from the Commune Virginum
,
with proper
prayers, have been approved by the Holy See for use in the Diocese
of Orléans.
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