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29 May 2025
- 22:3522:35, 29 May 2025 Saint Joan of Arc quiz (hist | edit) [17,846 bytes] Michael Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Test your Saint Joan of Arc knowledge!''' What century did Saint Joan of Arc live in? What century was she canonized? What war did she fight in? Who were the three combatants in that war? How did she die? Where did she die? Why was she killed? What city did she liberate? Where did she crown the King of France? Who did she crown as King of France? What was her response to the question, "Are you in a state of Grace?"")
17 May 2025
- 12:3212:32, 17 May 2025 Joan of Arc Letter to the Duke of Burgundy (hist | edit) [6,073 bytes] Michael Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "On July 17, 1429, Saint Joan of Arc sent a letter to the Duke of Burgundy, who was allied with the English in this part of the Hundred Years War. Texts from Jules Quicherat, [https://archive.org/details/procsdecondamn05joanuoft/page/126/mode/2up?view=theater Proces, Vol V p. 126-127] == Introduction by Quicherat == <blockquote>'''LETTER FROM THE MAID TO THE DUKE OF BURGUNDY. 17 July 1429.''' Published twice as if it were previously unknown: first by the archivist God...") Tag: Visual edit
17 April 2025
- 17:0717:07, 17 April 2025 Joan of Arc Letter to the Hussites (hist | edit) [10,434 bytes] Michael Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Saint Joan of Arc's "Letter to the Hussites" On March 23, 1430, Joan dictated a letter to the Hussites, a proto-Protestant movement that challenged Catholic and papal authority in Bohemia. We do not know to whom the letter was sent, but it was likely sent to the King of Hungry, Sigismund of Luxembourg, who was prosecuting the Crusade against the Hussites at the time. == Letter to the Hussites == <center> Jhesus † Maria </center>For a long time now, common knowledge...") Tag: Visual edit originally created as "Letter to the Hussites"
16 April 2025
- 18:0718:07, 16 April 2025 Final Sentence (hist | edit) [17,097 bytes] Michael Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "From the Trial of Condemnation official transcript as translated by Barrett: == Final Sentence == === Final sentence pronounced before the people === Afterwards towards nine o’clock in the morning of the same day we the said judges repaired to the Old Market of Rouen, near the church of St Sauveur, in the presence of and assisted by the reverend fathers in Christ the lord bishops of Thirouanne and of Noyon, masters Jean de Chatillon, André Marguerie, Nicolas de Vend...") Tag: Visual edit
18 March 2025
- 17:4617:46, 18 March 2025 The Abjuration Cedula (hist | edit) [6,997 bytes] Michael Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "On Thursday, May 25, 1431, after a public sermon violently admonishing her, and sat upon a platform as a clear reference to a stake, Joan signed a statement of "Abjuration" that admitted her errors. The problem is that the document presented by the Rouen Trial of Condemnation Court was not the one Joan signed. What she signed was short, perhaps six or seven lines long, according to a Trial notary, or no longer than a Pater Noster, according to another witness.<ref>See Pe...") Tag: Visual edit
17 March 2025
- 19:4919:49, 17 March 2025 Trials of Joan of Arc (hist | edit) [417 bytes] Michael Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Trial Transcripts: == Trials of Condemnation and Rehabilitation by T. Douglas Murray == Posted on this website here: Jeanne d'Arc, maid of Orleans, deliverer of France, by Douglas T. Murray, 1902 * from Archive.org") Tag: Visual edit
14 March 2025
- 13:0613:06, 14 March 2025 Trial of Condemnation: the Sentence (hist | edit) [4,353 bytes] Michael Bromley (talk | contribs) (Created page with "From Murray, pp. 132-134 == The Sentence == After her revocation and her abjuration had been, as has just been said, received by us, the Judges, We, the Bishop, did finally deliver our sentence in these terms : [Biographher note: The sentence then follows as given above up to the words " thy Trial," and then proceeds :] ... all that therein occurred, principally thine answers, thine avowals, and thine affirmations ; after having seen the most renowned decision of the...")