R
esearch for this book was facilitated by the use of libraries at Eton College and above all by the resources of Cambridge University Library. That research has involved reading texts in English, French and Latin, but not alas in German. Anyone hoping for an adequate literary discussion of the styles of Schiller and Brecht must look elsewhere, as too must anyone in search of a subtle analysis of the relevance of Joan of Arc to Franco-German tensions over Alsace-Lorraine after France’s defeat in the Franco-Prussian War.
Like all English writers on French history, I have pursued an inconsistent policy in the forms I have given to French names. Names of prominent people, such as kings, dukes and counts, are usually anglicised; it would be pedantic to say ‘Bourgogne’ instead of Burgundy, but in an age when Reims is familiar as a centre of the manufacture of champagne rather than as home to a certain jackdaw, I have spelt the city without an ‘h’. In a household where Franglais is common, I have kept the acute accent in Orléans, but not in Domremy (as in the latter the word was originally spelt without one). In some cases it seems natural to write ‘Jean’, in others ‘John’, and my protagonist is not Jehanne, nor Jeanne, but Joan – I am sure somebody will disagree with me.
It is a pleasure to recall the genesis of a book. Thanks to my late parents a family holiday in 1957 ended with a meal in the Vieux-Marché in Rouen, the square where Joan was burnt to death; and I found and still have a picture book,
Dans les pas de Jeanne d’Arc
, by the late Régine Pernoud, later doyenne of Johannic studies. Forty years on I began to revisit Rouen in my imagination. A generous grant by the Authors’ Foundation, through the good offices of the Society of Authors, has helped me to trace some of Joan’s footsteps as Régine Pernoud recommended. I thank Ben Glazebrook and Christopher Foley of Lane Fine Art for their helpfulness respectively at the beginning and the end of this project. One or two key pieces of information I owe to the tireless Virginia Frohlick. In technical matters concerning Joan’s various ‘trials’ I have relied on articles by Emeritus Professor Andy Kelly of the University of California, and little of this book could have been written without the labours of many other distinguished scholars. Among these people I must single out people at the Centre Jeanne d’Arc in Orléans both for help in the centre and for help received by e-mail. My special contribution has been my references to the ideas of certain Catholic philosophers and theologians, especially when their works have not been translated into English. For technical expertise in the art of computing I have relied on Nick Kulkarni of Home & Business Computing and I owe a continuing debt to the perceptiveness and encouragement of Laura Longrigg, my agent, and to the incisive comments of Jaqueline Mitchell, my editor at Sutton Publishing, and Anne Bennett. I thank Bow Watkinson, too, who has drawn the maps. Navigating in the unfamiliar world of picture research has been much facilitated by Jane Entrican at Sutton and several friendly voices at various picture libraries. All mistakes, naturally, are my own.
Looking through my late mother-in-law’s possessions after her death, I discovered pages of a liturgy of Joan of Arc that must date from the early 1920s. To my late mother-in-law, Odette Starrett, and my wife Pam a mere Englishman owes insights into France and Anglo-French relations he would not otherwise have. I dedicate this book to them both.
Timothy Wilson-Smith
496 | Clovis, King of the Franks, baptised by St Remigius |
800 | Charlemagne, King of the Franks, crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope Leo II |
1066 | William, Duke of Normandy, becomes King of England |
1154 | Henry II, Count of Anjou, Duke of Normandy and (by his wife) Duke of Aquitaine, becomes King of England |
1200–4 | Philip II Augustus, King of France, conquers Angevin and Norman lands |
1258 | Louis IX (St Louis) becomes suzerain of Henry III as Duke of Guyenne |
1309 | In the reign of Philip IV, Pope Clement V moves the papacy to Avignon |
1328 | Failure of direct line royal line: Philip, Count of Valois, chosen as king; he becomes King Philip VI (1328–50) |
1327–77 | Reign of Edward III, son of Isabella of France, in England |
1337 | Edward III claims throne of France |
1346 | English victory at Crécy |
1347 | The English capture Calais |
1350–64 | Reign of John II, King of France |
1356 | English victory at Poitiers |
1361 | Treaty of Brétigny: France surrenders sovereignty of Aquitaine to England |
1369 | Charles V (1364–80) reclaims Aquitaine |
1377–99 | Richard II, King of England, marries Isabella (1396), eldest daughter of Charles VI, King of France (1380–1422) |
1407 | Louis, Duke of Orléans murdered by men loyal to John, Duke of Burgundy |
1413 | Joan of Arc born at Domremy; death of Henry IV, King of England |
1415 | Henry V wins battle of Agincourt and captures Charles, Duke of Orléans |
1417–19 | Henry V conquers Normandy |
1420 | Treaty of Troyes: the Dauphin Charles disinherited in favour of Henry V (soon married to Charles’s sister Catherine) and of Henry’s heirs |
1422 | Deaths of Henry V and Charles VI: Henry VI, as King of England, and Henry II, as King of France, succeeds his father and grandfather |
1428 | Joan of Arc’s first journey to Vaucouleurs; the Earl of Salisbury in command at Orléans |
1429 | Joan returns to Vaucouleurs |
| 6 February: Joan visits Nancy and meets Charles II of Lorraine |
| 12 February: battle of Rouvray (‘Battle of the Herrings’) |
| 23 February: Joan leaves for Chinon |
| 4–5 March: Joan at Ste-Catherine-de-Fierbois |
| 6 March: Joan arrives at Chinon |
| c. 9 March: Joan meets Charles VII |
| 21 March: Joan in Poitiers |
| 29 April: Joan enters Orléans |
| 4 May: Bastard of Orléans returns to Orléans; fall of St-Loup |
| 6 May: the French capture Les Augustins |
| 7 May: the French capture Les Tourelles |
| 8 May: the English fall back on Meung |
| 11–12 June: the French capture Jargeau |
| 15 June: Joan at Meung-sur-Loire |
| 16–17 June: the French capture Beaugency |
| 18 June: battle of Patay |
| 30 June: Joan travels towards Reims |
| Early July: Joan near Auxerre |
| 5–11 July: Joan near Troyes |
| 17 July: coronation of Charles VII at Reims |
| 8 September: Joan leads attack on Paris |
| 10–13 September: Joan at St-Denis |
| October and early November: Joan at St-Pierre-le-Moûtier |
| 24 November: Joan leads attack on La Charité-sur-Loire |
| 29 December: Joan and her family are ennobled |
1430 | 23 May: Joan is captured at Compiègne |
| Late May–July: Joan held prisoner at Beaulieu |
| Mid-July–mid-November: Joan at Beaurevoir |
1431 | 3 January: Joan transferred to the custody of Bishop Cauchon |
| 9 January: beginning of the first trial |
| 21 February: first public session of the trial |
| 10–17 March: closed sessions of the trial |
| 18 April: Joan admonished to recant |
| 19 May: reading of the condemnation of the University of Paris |
| 30 May: Joan executed |
1435 | Treaty of Arras between Charles VII and Philip, Duke of Burgundy |
1436 | Paris surrenders to the French |
1440 | Release of Charles, Duke of Orléans, from prison in England |
1449 | French invasion of Normandy; capture of Rouen |
1450 | Charles VII authorises investigation into trial of Joan of Arc |
1452 | Pope Nicholas V authorises Joan of Arc’s retrial process; Cardinal d’Estouteville and the Inquisitor Jean Bréhal preside |
1453 | English finally driven out of Guyenne |
1455 | Pope Calixtus III authorises Joan’s mother, Isabelle, to appeal; 7 November : opening session of the retrial held at Notre-Dame, Paris |
1456 | 7 July: public announcement of the judgment of the court: the original verdict is nullified |
1589 | End of the Valois line: Henry IV becomes first Bourbon King of France by reason of the Salic Law of inheritance |
1789 | Outbreak of the French Revolution |
1793 | Suspension of the feast of Joan of Arc in Orléans |
1801 | Napoleon concludes the Concordat with Pope Pius VII |
1803 | Napoleon allows revival of festival of Joan in Orléans |
1804 | Napoleon crowned Emperor of the French in Notre-Dame |
1825 | Charles X consecrated and crowned at Reims: the last king of France to be so |
1869 | Dupanloup, Bishop of Orléans, begins process of canonising Joan |
1870–1 | Franco-Prussian War leads to loss of part of Lorraine and creation of the Third Republic |
1878–1903 | Papacy of Leo XII |
1894 | Joan declared Venerable; Alfred Dreyfus court-martialled for forgery |
1898 | Founding of Action Française |
1903 | Formal proposal for canonisation of Joan |
1909 | 11 April: Joan beatified by Pius X (Pope 1903–14) |
1920 | 16 May: Joan canonised by Pope Benedict XV; Joan given a national feast day |
1922–39 | Papacy of Pius XI |
1926 | Action Française placed on the Index |
1931 | 30 May: five hundredth anniversary of the death of Joan |
1939 | Pius XII (1939–58) lifts ban on Action Française |
1940–4 | Vichy France and Free French dispute devotion to Joan |
1945 | 6 February: execution of Robert Brasillach |
| 8 May: Feast of St Joan of Arc; VE Day |
1959 | As First President of the Fifth Republic, de Gaulle presides over the ceremonies at Orléans |
1974 | The Centre Jeanne d’Arc in Orléans founded by Régine Pernoud, with the encouragement of de Gaulle’s former minister of culture, André Malraux |
1980 | 1 May: the first meeting of the Front National to celebrate its feast of St Joan |
1989 | In the bicentenary year of the French Revolution, President Mitterrand presides over the ceremonies at Orléans for the second time. |
I
n the Middle Ages the principal sources of abnormal psychology are found in the archives of the Catholic Church. The Church maintained that in and through Christ it revealed God to man, but the Church was also a human institution, with all the faults that institutions have, and above all a concern with self-preservation and self-aggrandisement. Its rulers were ordained clerics, who by accidents of history were at one stage almost the only educated people in Western Europe, conscious that few kings, dukes and counts could read any language, let alone the Latin in which the clergy thought, wrote and prayed. Literacy spread slowly, but as it did so a spirit of criticism and independent thought evolved. There also emerged professional lay lawyers, lay merchants and eventually a large element of the lay upper class, all of whom felt that their voices should be heard. But most of the population, even in northern Italy or the Netherlands, homes to many prosperous towns, were peasants whose only education came from local folk customs and Latin prayers learnt by rote and whose acquaintance with the world hardly reached beyond the next village. A sophisticated celibate male cleric found such people virtually incomprehensible, especially if the person were a woman and one who claimed to have had unusual religious experiences beyond their ken.
Joan first heard a voice, she said, while aged thirteen as she was running with her friends in the fields near her home in Domremy. In the next few years she came to hear voices several times a day and slowly she came to identify them. One was St Margaret of Antioch and one St Catherine of Alexandria, both revered as virgin martyrs, and the third St Michael, archangel patron of France, whose famous shrine
au péril de la mer
, better known now as Mont-St-Michel, lay off the country’s northern coast.