An illiterate 17-year-old peasant girl who had never held a sword turned the tide of a century-long war in just nine days, then was burned at the stake as a heretic by the age of 19. It sounds like a fantasy novel, but the trial transcripts reveal a story of political conspiracy, gender-defying bravery, and an intellectual battle of wits that outshines every cultural caricature.
This episode bypasses the myth to examine the documented reality of Joan of Arc. We trace the impossible mess of 15th-century France, the prophecy of an armed virgin savior, her relentless journey to the Dauphin’s court, the lifting of the siege of Orleans, and the brutal show trial in which she dismantled theological traps set by 131 hostile scholars.
- The Treaty of Troyes had handed the French crown to English heirs and disinherited the Dauphin before Joan even understood what a king was
- She wore men’s clothing out of necessity to survive travel and combat, and later in prison to deter assault by her guards
- At Orleans she took an arrow between neck and shoulder, then returned to the trench, and the English abandoned the siege in nine days
- Asked if she was in God’s grace, a lose-lose trap, she answered so flawlessly the interrogators were stunned into pausing the trial
- King Charles VII, whom she had crowned, made no effort to ransom or rescue her; a 1456 retrial later nullified the verdict and she was canonized in 1920
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