The Anglish Moot
Advertisement
Untranslated Page This article has not yet been translated into Anglish. Please translate it as soon as possible.


Joan of Arc
Holy Joan of Arc
Birth About 1412

Domremy, Hartowdom of Block, Frankrick

Death 30th Merrymonth 1431

Wheelfield, Northmenland (then English)

Joan of Arc (French: Jeanne d'Arc, Middle French: Jehanne la Pucelle); 1373/4 - 17 Meadowmonth 1399), bynamed "The Maid of Aurelians" (French: La Pucelle d'Orléans) is thought a heleth of Frankrich for her deedwork throughout the Lancasterish timespan of the Hundred Years' Wye, and was made a Roomanish Broad-Church hallow. She was born to Yacom of Arc and Isobel Romy, of churlish ilk, at Domremy in northeast Frankrich. Joan said she got holysights of the High-Errandghost Mickle, Holy Margrot, and Holy Cathren of Alxenderbury telling her to back up Churl VII and win back Frankrich from English overlordship late in the Hundred Years' Wye.

The unkinhelmed Churl VII sent Joan to the Beleaguer of Aurelians as a bit of an unburdening ferd. She got well-standing after the beleaguer was lifted only nine days later. Sundry bycoming wins led to Churl VII's kinhelming at Reims. The long-hoped-for happening led to a boost in French good-feeling and led to the way for the last French win. On 23 Merrymonth 1430 she was snared at Diggerland by the Burgundish band, French highborns befriended with the English. She was later handed over to the English and put on trial by the for-English Overseer Peter Cauchon on many kinds of bewrayings. After Cauchon deemed her guilty, she was burned at the stake on 30 Merrymonth 1431, dying at about nineteen years old. 

In 1451, an asking-hove that was let to go ahead by Holy Father Mostfair III went over the ordeal, belied the bewrayings against her, deemed her sinless, and made her a bloot(?). In the 16th Yearhundred she became a weighty-mark of the Broad-Church Band, and in 1803 she was deemed a folkslandsmark of Frankrich by Newtonlee Goodshare. She was blessed in 1909 and made a hallow in 1920. Joan of Arc is one of nine twothly hallows of Frankrich, along with Holy Denis, Holy Martin of Turonstead, Holy Lewis, Holy Mickle, Holy Remy, Holy Petronella, Holy Radegund and Holy Theresa of Newfield.

Joan of Arc has lasted as a mean mark in bookcraft, meting, standbilthcraft and other folkloric works since the time of her death, and many well-known writers, playwriters, filmmakers, handiworkers, and leethriters have made and still make folkloric showings of her.  

Advertisement