Joan of Arc/Timelines: Difference between revisions
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==1412 (?)== | ==1412 (?)== | ||
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*July 7: Rouen. Rehabilitation trial adjourns, declaring the 1431 conviction null on the basis of procedural flaws | *July 7: Rouen. Rehabilitation trial adjourns, declaring the 1431 conviction null on the basis of procedural flaws | ||
Revision as of 22:44, 3 November 2007
1412 (?)
- January 6 (?): Joan's birth at Domrémy
1415
- October 25: Battle of Agincourt. French forces routed by English
1420
- May 21: Treaty of Troyes was signed between Henry V of England and Charles VI of France making Henry V heir to the French throne
1422
- August 31: Henry V of England dies and is succeeded by his infant son. John, Duke of Bedford becmes Regent
- October 21: Charles VI of France dies. The infant son of Henry V is delcared King of France with John, Duke of Bedford, Regent
1424 (?)
- Summer: Joan first hears her voices
1428
- May 13: Joan meets for the first time with Robert de Baudricourt in Vaucouleurs
- July: Burgundian raid on Domrémy
1429
- February 12: Orléans. Battle of the Herrings
- February 12: Joan's last meeting with de Baudricourt before being granted an escort for the journey to Chinon
- February 22: Joan leaves for Chinon
- March 4: Joan arrives in Chinon
- March 6: Joan meets with the Dauphin
- April 29: Joan enters the city of Orléans
- May 4: Orléans. Saint-Loup bastide is taken
- May 6: Orléans. Bastide of the Augustinians taken
- May 7: Orléans. Les Tourelles taken
- May 8: Orléans. Siege of Orléans is lifted
- June 11-12: Battle of Jargeau
- June 15: Battle of Meung-sur-Loire
- June 16-17: Battle of Beaugency
- June 18: Battle of Patay
- July 17 Rheims. Charles VII crowned
- September 8: Paris. Joan wounded in failed attack on Paris
- December: Joan and her family receive letters of nobility from Charles VII
1430
- January: Joan in Orleans
- March 16: Joan sends a letter to the inhabitants of Reims promising aid against any Burgundian offensive
- March 23: In a letter addressed to the followers of John Hus, Joan condemns the Hussites
- March 28: Joan sends a second letter to the inhabitants of Reims
- late March: an attempted Armagnac coup in Paris is foiled
- May 23: Compiegne. Joan of Arc is captured by the Burgundians
- May 26: University of Paris, in the name of the Inquisitor of France, writes to Duke of Burgundy requesting that Joan be surrendered to the Inquisition and University for trial
- July 14: Bishop Pierre Cauchon presents a letter to the Burgundians demanding that Joan be transferred to the King of England for a Church trial and offers several thousand pound in exchange for her
- approx July to early November: Joan is held in the castle of Beaurevoir
- by November 21: Joan is under control of Henry VI and the University of Paris wtites asking that she be turned over to Cauchon and the Inquisition for trial
- December 23: Joan arrives in Rouen
1431
- January 9: Rouen. Joan's trial on various charges begins
- February 21: Rouen. First public session of the trial. Joan is presented to the court.
- March 10: Rouen. Trial sessions moved to prison
- May 9: Rouen. Joan is threatened with torture
- May 24. Rouen. Joan's abjuration
- May 28: Rouen. Joan "relapses" by dressing in men's clothes. This opens the charge that she is a relapsed heretic
- May 30: Rouen. Joan is burned at the stake
1431-1455
- December 16, 1431: Duke of Bedford stages a coronation in Paris of King Henry VI, styled of England and France
- Spring 1432: English suffer military reverses around Paris
- November 1432: Anne of Burgandy (the Duchess of Bedford) dies. Anne's marriage to the English regent had fortified and formalized the Anglo-Burgundian alliance
- September 29, 1435: Treaty of Arras between Burgundy and France whereby Duke Philip of Burgunday, formerly an ally of the English, recognizes Charles VII as King of France
- February 1436: Paris blockaded
- April 1436: Paris opens its gates to Dunois and Richemont. Paris is once again in French hands.
- April 15, 1450. The English field army is destroyed at the Battle of Formigny and the English are expelled from Normandy, the ancient seat of the Normans who conquered England.
- July 17, 1453. English are expelled from Aquitaine following the Battle of Castillon, ending the Hundred Years' War.
1456
- July 7: Rouen. Rehabilitation trial adjourns, declaring the 1431 conviction null on the basis of procedural flaws