1 00:00:11,080 --> 00:00:15,840 Speaker 1: It is February fourteen thirty one. A chill freezes the 2 00:00:15,840 --> 00:00:18,960 Speaker 1: air of the Great Room within the Castle of Ruan. 3 00:00:20,160 --> 00:00:23,639 Speaker 1: Up in the galley of this makeshift court room, sixty 4 00:00:23,680 --> 00:00:28,040 Speaker 1: pairs of eyes stands staring, the eyes of men that 5 00:00:28,080 --> 00:00:32,240 Speaker 1: have poured over the most rigorous philosophical texts of the time, 6 00:00:33,000 --> 00:00:37,840 Speaker 1: absorbing the granular detail of every law and loophole, every 7 00:00:37,880 --> 00:00:42,720 Speaker 1: facet of global policy they can. They've been called to 8 00:00:42,840 --> 00:00:47,080 Speaker 1: ruan the Duchy of Normandy Seed in the Kingdom of France, 9 00:00:47,600 --> 00:00:50,599 Speaker 1: and the military base of the King of England, from 10 00:00:50,640 --> 00:00:54,080 Speaker 1: the comfort of their dioces or the familiar power of 11 00:00:54,120 --> 00:00:58,040 Speaker 1: their university residences, to stand judge at the trial of 12 00:00:58,120 --> 00:01:01,960 Speaker 1: what many regard as the single biggest threat to the 13 00:01:02,040 --> 00:01:07,080 Speaker 1: English crown, the one who's frequently been described as a 14 00:01:07,160 --> 00:01:11,760 Speaker 1: genius military strategist and a kingmaker blessed with the gift 15 00:01:11,800 --> 00:01:16,119 Speaker 1: of prophecy, who many also believe has been sent by 16 00:01:16,240 --> 00:01:22,680 Speaker 1: God themselves to save the Kingdom of France. Heavy footsteps 17 00:01:22,720 --> 00:01:26,959 Speaker 1: and the clanking of chains are heard approaching from outside 18 00:01:27,000 --> 00:01:31,800 Speaker 1: the room, and just then a heavy door swings open, 19 00:01:32,440 --> 00:01:36,000 Speaker 1: letting in a gust of winter wind, and the sixty 20 00:01:36,040 --> 00:01:40,920 Speaker 1: men look up, gasping at the sight of the pale, diminutive, 21 00:01:41,560 --> 00:01:46,640 Speaker 1: nineteen year old woman being led into the courtroom. The 22 00:01:46,720 --> 00:01:53,200 Speaker 1: woman's ankles and wrists are clasped in iron, her body wasted, sickened, 23 00:01:53,240 --> 00:02:01,080 Speaker 1: and malnourished. Is this her? Think the men? Is this it? 24 00:02:02,720 --> 00:02:06,520 Speaker 1: But as the young woman takes the stand, she tilts 25 00:02:06,520 --> 00:02:10,399 Speaker 1: her head to the galley, her back seeming to straighten, 26 00:02:11,280 --> 00:02:15,320 Speaker 1: her body seeming to grow as she stares each of 27 00:02:15,360 --> 00:02:19,680 Speaker 1: the men, one after the other, defiantly in the eye. 28 00:02:20,960 --> 00:02:23,760 Speaker 1: And when she is asked to state her name, she 29 00:02:23,880 --> 00:02:28,600 Speaker 1: replies proudly. In my village, I was known as Jeannette. 30 00:02:29,600 --> 00:02:36,880 Speaker 1: Now I am known as jan or simply Joanne. There 31 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:40,160 Speaker 1: are few whose lives speak to the idea of legacy 32 00:02:40,600 --> 00:02:43,200 Speaker 1: like Joan of Arcs. As she has come to be 33 00:02:43,280 --> 00:02:47,480 Speaker 1: known in the English speaking world. It could be said 34 00:02:47,600 --> 00:02:50,760 Speaker 1: that she existed more in her future than she ever 35 00:02:50,840 --> 00:02:55,160 Speaker 1: did in her present. Her cult following, for example, would 36 00:02:55,200 --> 00:02:57,880 Speaker 1: not really start to take hold until a good four 37 00:02:57,960 --> 00:03:02,760 Speaker 1: hundred years after her death. The name now associated with 38 00:03:02,840 --> 00:03:07,360 Speaker 1: the May French feast day jeand arc is not even 39 00:03:07,480 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 1: one that she used in life. For the woman we'd 40 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:14,639 Speaker 1: come to know as Joan of Arc, Hers was a 41 00:03:14,720 --> 00:03:20,840 Speaker 1: life spent looking unerringly forward, speaking with faith and fearlessness 42 00:03:20,840 --> 00:03:27,360 Speaker 1: of things that were yet to come. You're listening to Unexplained, 43 00:03:28,040 --> 00:03:39,640 Speaker 1: and I'm Richard McClane Smith. As Joan took the stand 44 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:44,160 Speaker 1: on that frigid day in February fourteen thirty one, her 45 00:03:44,200 --> 00:03:48,080 Speaker 1: accusers pushed her repeatedly to swear to tell the truth, 46 00:03:48,480 --> 00:03:54,360 Speaker 1: absolutely and completely on everything she was asked. But Joan, 47 00:03:55,000 --> 00:03:58,520 Speaker 1: perhaps recognizing that in the hands of those men the 48 00:03:58,640 --> 00:04:02,400 Speaker 1: truth could be a slip every thing, refused to comply. 49 00:04:03,720 --> 00:04:07,360 Speaker 1: If it was her story they wanted, she would be 50 00:04:07,400 --> 00:04:11,360 Speaker 1: the one to tell it on her own terms. And 51 00:04:11,440 --> 00:04:16,200 Speaker 1: so as the men's voices became ever more disgruntled and 52 00:04:16,320 --> 00:04:21,280 Speaker 1: their faces grew ever more read, the diminutive nineteen year 53 00:04:21,320 --> 00:04:27,760 Speaker 1: old woman slowly began to talk. Growing up in the 54 00:04:27,880 --> 00:04:31,960 Speaker 1: village of don Remy, the daughter of a relatively wealthy farmer, 55 00:04:32,720 --> 00:04:36,760 Speaker 1: Hers had been a simple life pockmarked by the unending 56 00:04:36,800 --> 00:04:41,240 Speaker 1: battle for regional supremacy between the English and the French crowns. 57 00:04:42,600 --> 00:04:46,440 Speaker 1: Located in what is now the northeast of present day France. 58 00:04:47,040 --> 00:04:50,479 Speaker 1: At the time of her birth in fourteen twelve, dn 59 00:04:50,600 --> 00:04:55,960 Speaker 1: Remy was situated firmly within the province of Chompagne, which, 60 00:04:56,120 --> 00:05:00,520 Speaker 1: despite being within the Kingdom of France, was broadly speaking, 61 00:05:00,920 --> 00:05:04,960 Speaker 1: under the control of then English King Henry the Fifth. 62 00:05:06,279 --> 00:05:09,880 Speaker 1: For the most part, Joan was a simple, pious child, 63 00:05:10,440 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 1: often seen kneeling in prayer at church or helping her 64 00:05:14,320 --> 00:05:19,880 Speaker 1: mother with spinning and sewing. Until that was one day when, 65 00:05:20,080 --> 00:05:23,839 Speaker 1: at the age of thirteen, she found herself sitting in 66 00:05:23,880 --> 00:05:28,280 Speaker 1: the garden enjoying the heat of summer. It had just 67 00:05:28,400 --> 00:05:32,400 Speaker 1: gone noon, with the sun at its zenith when, she 68 00:05:32,520 --> 00:05:36,159 Speaker 1: later claimed, a bright light appeared at the right side 69 00:05:36,200 --> 00:05:39,039 Speaker 1: of her vision, which seemed to be coming from the 70 00:05:39,120 --> 00:05:43,680 Speaker 1: direction of the village church, and then she heard a 71 00:05:43,800 --> 00:05:49,120 Speaker 1: voice inside her head that was not her own. Looking 72 00:05:49,120 --> 00:05:52,359 Speaker 1: about in fear and confusion at where on earth the 73 00:05:52,480 --> 00:05:56,159 Speaker 1: voice could be coming from, she saw only the empty 74 00:05:56,200 --> 00:06:01,400 Speaker 1: fields surrounding her. But the voice continued to talk, and 75 00:06:01,520 --> 00:06:07,000 Speaker 1: it was talking to her. Rather than be disturbed by it, however, 76 00:06:07,520 --> 00:06:12,480 Speaker 1: the more Jane listened to its soft, peaceful words, instructing 77 00:06:12,520 --> 00:06:15,040 Speaker 1: her to be good and to make sure that she 78 00:06:15,120 --> 00:06:18,920 Speaker 1: continued to go to church, she began to find solace 79 00:06:18,960 --> 00:06:25,159 Speaker 1: in it. Day after day, the voice returned. Then, over time, 80 00:06:25,920 --> 00:06:30,600 Speaker 1: more voices began to speak to her. She became convinced 81 00:06:30,720 --> 00:06:34,440 Speaker 1: that these voices were none other than the archangel Michael, 82 00:06:34,960 --> 00:06:41,160 Speaker 1: Saint Catharine of Alexandria, and Saint Margaret of Antioch, all 83 00:06:41,279 --> 00:06:46,720 Speaker 1: supplying her with a direct line from God. The voices 84 00:06:46,800 --> 00:06:49,839 Speaker 1: came most often when she was walking in the woods 85 00:06:50,000 --> 00:06:54,000 Speaker 1: near her home, and at first their relationship was a 86 00:06:54,080 --> 00:06:58,440 Speaker 1: simple one. As she walked, basking in the warmth of 87 00:06:58,480 --> 00:07:02,560 Speaker 1: the sun and the sweet fragrance of summer flowers, the 88 00:07:02,720 --> 00:07:08,480 Speaker 1: voices would comfort and counsel her, guiding her and her piety. 89 00:07:08,800 --> 00:07:12,960 Speaker 1: By the time Joan had turned sixteen, however, the voices 90 00:07:13,040 --> 00:07:16,840 Speaker 1: had become more insistent, telling her that she was not 91 00:07:17,000 --> 00:07:21,120 Speaker 1: just any young girl, but a girl with a divine 92 00:07:21,240 --> 00:07:25,400 Speaker 1: mission to find the heir to the throne of France 93 00:07:25,840 --> 00:07:30,200 Speaker 1: and help him to reclaim her homeland from the English crown. 94 00:07:38,040 --> 00:07:42,160 Speaker 1: The war between France and England, which historians later dumped 95 00:07:42,200 --> 00:07:46,160 Speaker 1: the Hundred Years War, had begun after King Charles the 96 00:07:46,280 --> 00:07:50,680 Speaker 1: Fourth of France died in thirteen twenty eight without leaving 97 00:07:50,720 --> 00:07:55,720 Speaker 1: an heir. His closest male relative was his nephew, King 98 00:07:55,960 --> 00:08:01,280 Speaker 1: Edward the third of England, who was sixteen at the time. However, 99 00:08:01,560 --> 00:08:05,960 Speaker 1: the French nobility rejected Edward's claim on account of his father, 100 00:08:06,520 --> 00:08:11,080 Speaker 1: the recently deposed King Edward the Second, being English, and 101 00:08:11,240 --> 00:08:15,520 Speaker 1: so Charles the Fourth's cousin, Philippe, was crowned the king 102 00:08:15,560 --> 00:08:20,560 Speaker 1: of France instead. This ruling remained in place until thirteen 103 00:08:20,680 --> 00:08:24,600 Speaker 1: thirty seven, when a more mature Edward renewed his claim 104 00:08:24,720 --> 00:08:28,800 Speaker 1: to the French throne and declared war on King Philippe. 105 00:08:29,680 --> 00:08:33,320 Speaker 1: The conflict would outlive them both and continued until the 106 00:08:33,400 --> 00:08:37,480 Speaker 1: military successes of then King Henry the Fifth of England, 107 00:08:37,960 --> 00:08:40,640 Speaker 1: who would go on to capture Paris and much of 108 00:08:40,760 --> 00:08:45,320 Speaker 1: northern France, forced then King Charles the sixth of France 109 00:08:45,760 --> 00:08:50,120 Speaker 1: to sign a treaty in fourteen twenty declaring Henry the 110 00:08:50,200 --> 00:08:55,040 Speaker 1: Fifth as France's true heir apparent. This act, in turn 111 00:08:55,600 --> 00:09:01,040 Speaker 1: disinherited Charles, his own son, also called Charles, but perhaps 112 00:09:01,080 --> 00:09:04,760 Speaker 1: better known as the dauphin, the title given to the 113 00:09:04,840 --> 00:09:10,040 Speaker 1: eldest son of a French king. Things soon deteriorated, however, 114 00:09:10,480 --> 00:09:14,280 Speaker 1: when both Henry the Fifth and Charles the sixth died 115 00:09:14,440 --> 00:09:20,160 Speaker 1: two years later. Once again reigniting the war. On one 116 00:09:20,200 --> 00:09:24,120 Speaker 1: side were the supporters of the new English King, Henry 117 00:09:24,120 --> 00:09:27,120 Speaker 1: the Sixth, who was not even one years old at 118 00:09:27,160 --> 00:09:32,080 Speaker 1: the time, which included a number of French aristocracy, such 119 00:09:32,120 --> 00:09:36,000 Speaker 1: as the Duke of Burgundy, while on the other were 120 00:09:36,040 --> 00:09:40,320 Speaker 1: those who'd remained steadfastly loyal to Charles the sixth, who 121 00:09:40,360 --> 00:09:44,559 Speaker 1: claimed his son, the Dauphin Charles, had the true divine 122 00:09:44,640 --> 00:09:49,200 Speaker 1: right to the French throne. By fourteen twenty nine, however, 123 00:09:49,960 --> 00:09:54,120 Speaker 1: things were not going well for the Dauphins, with the 124 00:09:54,120 --> 00:09:58,200 Speaker 1: then seven year old King Henry the sixth court managing 125 00:09:58,240 --> 00:10:03,760 Speaker 1: to secure managing no previous gained. Fan and his supporters, 126 00:10:04,280 --> 00:10:08,360 Speaker 1: also known as the Armagnacs, had made little headway in 127 00:10:08,520 --> 00:10:13,559 Speaker 1: capturing the rest of the country for himself. Most inconveniently, 128 00:10:13,920 --> 00:10:17,280 Speaker 1: the town of Rance, located a hundred miles to the 129 00:10:17,320 --> 00:10:21,480 Speaker 1: east of Paris, the traditional place for the French coronation 130 00:10:21,960 --> 00:10:26,000 Speaker 1: and where any future monarch seeking legitimacy as the King 131 00:10:26,040 --> 00:10:30,240 Speaker 1: of France had to be crowned, remained under the control 132 00:10:30,360 --> 00:10:33,679 Speaker 1: of the English monarch by way of the Duke of Burgundy. 133 00:10:35,320 --> 00:10:40,120 Speaker 1: God it seemed, had made their choice, but young Joan 134 00:10:40,520 --> 00:10:45,120 Speaker 1: begged to differ, as the voices had continued to keep 135 00:10:45,200 --> 00:10:49,280 Speaker 1: telling her the Dauphin was the true heir of France, 136 00:10:50,120 --> 00:10:53,040 Speaker 1: but God would need her help to put him on 137 00:10:53,080 --> 00:10:58,480 Speaker 1: the throne. She had also by then begun to see things, 138 00:10:59,440 --> 00:11:04,360 Speaker 1: little shots, she believed of things that were yet to come. 139 00:11:11,960 --> 00:11:15,600 Speaker 1: Perhaps the family and friends of anyone else would dismiss 140 00:11:15,640 --> 00:11:19,280 Speaker 1: a sixteen year old girl determined to meet the men 141 00:11:19,400 --> 00:11:21,839 Speaker 1: at the head of the war that had ravished their 142 00:11:21,960 --> 00:11:25,600 Speaker 1: lands for nearly a hundred years on account of some 143 00:11:25,720 --> 00:11:29,440 Speaker 1: voices she'd heard in her head. But things had a 144 00:11:29,440 --> 00:11:34,720 Speaker 1: way of falling into place around Joan long before the voices, 145 00:11:35,120 --> 00:11:40,080 Speaker 1: an air of mystery and mysticism had surrounded her. She 146 00:11:40,200 --> 00:11:43,079 Speaker 1: was born on the sixth of January, the day some 147 00:11:43,200 --> 00:11:47,400 Speaker 1: Christians believe was the precise day that the biblical magi 148 00:11:47,800 --> 00:11:52,040 Speaker 1: otherwise known as the Three Wise Men, visited the baby 149 00:11:52,160 --> 00:11:56,960 Speaker 1: Jesus to bestow their famous gifts on him. And on 150 00:11:57,080 --> 00:11:59,839 Speaker 1: that day of her birth, it was said that the 151 00:12:00,080 --> 00:12:03,959 Speaker 1: roosters of her village had crowed long before the dawn, 152 00:12:04,640 --> 00:12:09,760 Speaker 1: as if already sensing the significance of the day. So 153 00:12:09,800 --> 00:12:13,120 Speaker 1: when she told her family she had an important message 154 00:12:13,360 --> 00:12:17,320 Speaker 1: to deliver, to Robert de Beaudricourt, captain of the French 155 00:12:17,360 --> 00:12:22,080 Speaker 1: garrison nearby Voucler. They didn't hesitate to take her there. 156 00:12:23,520 --> 00:12:27,240 Speaker 1: Joan's first meeting with the captain, however, in May of 157 00:12:27,400 --> 00:12:33,320 Speaker 1: fourteen twenty eight, ended in disaster. On arriving, Joan is 158 00:12:33,360 --> 00:12:36,960 Speaker 1: said to have regarded the captain oddly, saying he was 159 00:12:37,000 --> 00:12:41,400 Speaker 1: exactly how she'd remembered from her vision, catching him a 160 00:12:41,400 --> 00:12:47,120 Speaker 1: little off guard. Then barely pausing to even introduce herself, 161 00:12:47,760 --> 00:12:51,520 Speaker 1: Joan explained that she'd been given a mission by God 162 00:12:51,760 --> 00:12:56,079 Speaker 1: to save France, and that she and only she could 163 00:12:56,080 --> 00:13:00,920 Speaker 1: make it happen. She then demanded that she even unarmed 164 00:13:01,080 --> 00:13:05,400 Speaker 1: escort to inform the Dauphin of her mission, who was 165 00:13:05,440 --> 00:13:08,880 Speaker 1: based in the town of Shinnon, almost three hundred miles 166 00:13:08,880 --> 00:13:14,080 Speaker 1: away to the west. Offended by the outlandish demands of 167 00:13:14,120 --> 00:13:18,319 Speaker 1: the strange peasant girl as he saw her, de Beaudricorps 168 00:13:18,480 --> 00:13:24,320 Speaker 1: promptly dismissed her. The following month, Joan's hometown of don 169 00:13:24,440 --> 00:13:29,760 Speaker 1: Romi was raided by the Duke of Burgundy's forces. Homes 170 00:13:29,800 --> 00:13:33,880 Speaker 1: and crops were brutally burned to the ground, and Joan 171 00:13:34,000 --> 00:13:38,439 Speaker 1: and her family were forced to flee, more convinced than 172 00:13:38,480 --> 00:13:42,880 Speaker 1: ever of her cause. In January fourteen twenty nine, a 173 00:13:43,000 --> 00:13:47,120 Speaker 1: then seventeen year old Joan returned once again to Voucole 174 00:13:47,880 --> 00:13:53,240 Speaker 1: to demand another audience with the Captain de Beaudricorps. Once again, 175 00:13:53,720 --> 00:13:58,880 Speaker 1: the captain refused her outlandish demands, but this time her 176 00:13:58,960 --> 00:14:03,719 Speaker 1: journey was not in vain. It seemed that word of 177 00:14:03,800 --> 00:14:10,120 Speaker 1: jones curious convictions had started to precede her. Simon Voukola 178 00:14:10,600 --> 00:14:15,160 Speaker 1: had begun speaking of a prophecy foretold long ago, of 179 00:14:15,200 --> 00:14:19,520 Speaker 1: an armed female virgin who would one day reveal themselves 180 00:14:19,760 --> 00:14:24,760 Speaker 1: as the savior of France. And though Captain de Beaudricourt 181 00:14:25,320 --> 00:14:29,720 Speaker 1: was yet to be convinced, something of jones quiet fortitude 182 00:14:30,080 --> 00:14:35,040 Speaker 1: and determined piety had touched two of his soldiers, Bertrand 183 00:14:35,120 --> 00:14:39,640 Speaker 1: de Poulangi and Jean de Metz, enough to make them 184 00:14:39,640 --> 00:14:43,680 Speaker 1: wonder if the young girl from don Remi might indeed 185 00:14:43,720 --> 00:14:49,000 Speaker 1: be the savior she claimed to be. Despite being rejected 186 00:14:49,000 --> 00:14:53,080 Speaker 1: by the captain again, de Poulangi and de Metz convinced 187 00:14:53,160 --> 00:14:56,320 Speaker 1: Joan to stay awhile longer to see if they could 188 00:14:56,320 --> 00:15:01,320 Speaker 1: help her cause. The men introduced her as Jean Pascuarrel, 189 00:15:01,840 --> 00:15:05,960 Speaker 1: an Augustinian chaplain who was quickly won over by the 190 00:15:06,040 --> 00:15:11,880 Speaker 1: unusual intensity of her religious convictions. Together, the three men 191 00:15:12,080 --> 00:15:17,560 Speaker 1: convinced de Beaudricourt to give the girl another chance. Then 192 00:15:17,840 --> 00:15:22,440 Speaker 1: a few weeks later, in early February of fourteen twenty nine, 193 00:15:22,560 --> 00:15:34,680 Speaker 1: something strange happened. The town of Orleans, located just south 194 00:15:34,720 --> 00:15:38,240 Speaker 1: of Paris in the north of France, was strategically and 195 00:15:38,320 --> 00:15:43,000 Speaker 1: symbolically significant during the Hundred Years War. It sat on 196 00:15:43,040 --> 00:15:47,440 Speaker 1: a key place along the routes to both Paris and Raths, 197 00:15:47,480 --> 00:15:51,360 Speaker 1: just south of the territories. Recognizing the English Henry the 198 00:15:51,480 --> 00:15:56,520 Speaker 1: sixth as the true king of France, most military strategists 199 00:15:56,520 --> 00:16:00,200 Speaker 1: of the time believed that if Orleans fell to the 200 00:16:00,240 --> 00:16:04,200 Speaker 1: English army, who had been occupying small pockets of territory 201 00:16:04,320 --> 00:16:08,560 Speaker 1: nearby and steadily laying siege to it since October fourteen 202 00:16:08,640 --> 00:16:13,520 Speaker 1: twenty eight, they would conquer all of France. And so 203 00:16:13,560 --> 00:16:17,840 Speaker 1: it was in early February that Joan told her newfound 204 00:16:17,880 --> 00:16:22,320 Speaker 1: supporters that she'd had a vision of French forces being 205 00:16:22,360 --> 00:16:26,440 Speaker 1: decimated by a convoy of English soldiers just to the 206 00:16:26,560 --> 00:16:30,960 Speaker 1: north of Orleans. It was almost a week later when 207 00:16:31,000 --> 00:16:35,920 Speaker 1: news came through to Robert de Beaudricorps that on February twelfth, 208 00:16:36,280 --> 00:16:40,000 Speaker 1: French forces had indeed been defeated in what would later 209 00:16:40,080 --> 00:16:43,760 Speaker 1: become known as the Battle of Rouvre when they attempted 210 00:16:43,840 --> 00:16:48,480 Speaker 1: to intercept an English convoy making their way toward Orleans. 211 00:16:49,800 --> 00:16:53,600 Speaker 1: There was simply no earthly way that Joan could have 212 00:16:53,760 --> 00:16:59,680 Speaker 1: known this. On receiving the news, Captain de Beaudricorps recalled 213 00:16:59,680 --> 00:17:03,560 Speaker 1: once more the strange way in which Joan had first 214 00:17:03,680 --> 00:17:08,199 Speaker 1: greeted him, insisting that she had foreseen their meeting in 215 00:17:08,240 --> 00:17:13,119 Speaker 1: a vision. A little unsettled by it all, he decided 216 00:17:13,200 --> 00:17:16,720 Speaker 1: to take a chance on the strange girl from Doramy. 217 00:17:18,040 --> 00:17:21,480 Speaker 1: At the third time of asking, he finally granted her 218 00:17:21,520 --> 00:17:25,040 Speaker 1: her wish, but she would have to make some changes first. 219 00:17:25,880 --> 00:17:28,679 Speaker 1: If they were to travel to Chinon to speak to 220 00:17:28,760 --> 00:17:32,440 Speaker 1: the Dauphin, she would first have to disguise herself as 221 00:17:32,440 --> 00:17:38,320 Speaker 1: a boy so as not to arouse any unwonted attention. Accordingly, 222 00:17:38,440 --> 00:17:41,960 Speaker 1: her hair was then cut short into the iconic bob 223 00:17:42,280 --> 00:17:45,639 Speaker 1: that she would later become synonymous with, and she was 224 00:17:45,680 --> 00:17:49,560 Speaker 1: given a change of traditional men's clothes to complete the look. 225 00:17:50,760 --> 00:17:55,320 Speaker 1: The following day, Joan, accompanied by six men at arms, 226 00:17:55,640 --> 00:18:01,800 Speaker 1: began her journey towards Chinnon eleven days at Having successfully 227 00:18:01,840 --> 00:18:05,679 Speaker 1: trecked halfway across the country, they arrived at the court 228 00:18:05,760 --> 00:18:10,879 Speaker 1: of the Darphan. Sadly, however, her growing reputation had not 229 00:18:11,040 --> 00:18:15,120 Speaker 1: yet made it as far as she. With her regional 230 00:18:15,160 --> 00:18:19,240 Speaker 1: accent and boyish appearance, Joan could not have looked more 231 00:18:19,359 --> 00:18:22,920 Speaker 1: out of place. Unsure what to make of a door, 232 00:18:23,640 --> 00:18:29,680 Speaker 1: the Darphan's advisers counseled him against receiving her. With Joan 233 00:18:30,000 --> 00:18:33,679 Speaker 1: on the verge of returning home, two days later, she 234 00:18:33,840 --> 00:18:37,600 Speaker 1: received word that the young dwarphin only twenty six years 235 00:18:37,600 --> 00:18:40,960 Speaker 1: old himself at the time, would see her after all. 236 00:18:41,920 --> 00:18:46,960 Speaker 1: Unbeknownst to Joan, however, according to legend, the Dwarphan decided 237 00:18:47,040 --> 00:18:51,480 Speaker 1: to play a game. Having heard of her apparent mystical powers. 238 00:18:52,119 --> 00:18:55,760 Speaker 1: Charles decided to disguise himself to test her, and hid 239 00:18:55,800 --> 00:18:59,040 Speaker 1: among his courtiers when Joan was due to come and 240 00:18:59,080 --> 00:19:02,200 Speaker 1: speak to him. It is said that as soon as 241 00:19:02,280 --> 00:19:06,840 Speaker 1: Joan entered the room, she spotted him immediately, despite never 242 00:19:07,040 --> 00:19:11,720 Speaker 1: having seen his likeness before. When asked how she'd known 243 00:19:11,760 --> 00:19:16,000 Speaker 1: it was him, she replied simply it was the Voices 244 00:19:16,080 --> 00:19:26,919 Speaker 1: who told her. Having been suitably amazed by Joan's seeming 245 00:19:26,960 --> 00:19:30,800 Speaker 1: act of clairvoyance, it is said the Dauphin then granted 246 00:19:30,840 --> 00:19:34,200 Speaker 1: her a private audience to hear everything she had to say. 247 00:19:35,280 --> 00:19:38,920 Speaker 1: Some say it was her insistence to him that, according 248 00:19:38,960 --> 00:19:42,439 Speaker 1: to the Voices, he was the legitimate son of Charles 249 00:19:42,480 --> 00:19:45,840 Speaker 1: the sixth, a fact that had been frequently questioned by 250 00:19:45,880 --> 00:19:50,800 Speaker 1: his enemies, that finally won him over. Others that it 251 00:19:50,960 --> 00:19:55,000 Speaker 1: was the prayer that she so precisely and calmly recited 252 00:19:55,040 --> 00:19:59,240 Speaker 1: to him, the exact same prayer that he himself had 253 00:19:59,280 --> 00:20:03,880 Speaker 1: made back the previous November, which nobody except him and 254 00:20:04,080 --> 00:20:08,919 Speaker 1: God could possibly have known. If Joan was to have 255 00:20:09,040 --> 00:20:12,560 Speaker 1: her way, However, it wasn't only the Dauphin whom she 256 00:20:12,600 --> 00:20:16,480 Speaker 1: had to convince. For the next few days, she was 257 00:20:16,520 --> 00:20:22,040 Speaker 1: interrogated by the Dauphin's ecclesiastical advisers, who were mostly interested 258 00:20:22,200 --> 00:20:24,879 Speaker 1: in making sure that she wasn't, in fact, a witch 259 00:20:25,440 --> 00:20:30,440 Speaker 1: operating under the guidance of the devil. In a foreshadowing 260 00:20:30,480 --> 00:20:33,600 Speaker 1: of what was to come, the seventeen year old Joan 261 00:20:34,320 --> 00:20:37,119 Speaker 1: was forced to stand in a room full of questioning 262 00:20:37,160 --> 00:20:41,600 Speaker 1: men and plainly state her divine mission, to which she 263 00:20:41,680 --> 00:20:45,359 Speaker 1: replied that it was nothing less than to see Charles 264 00:20:45,359 --> 00:20:49,320 Speaker 1: crowned as the king of France. A series of stern 265 00:20:49,400 --> 00:20:53,439 Speaker 1: and rigorous questions followed, testing her knowledge of the scriptures, 266 00:20:53,960 --> 00:20:58,600 Speaker 1: all of which she passed with flying colors. None the less, 267 00:20:58,720 --> 00:21:03,520 Speaker 1: the men remained convinced, so Joan told them that she 268 00:21:03,560 --> 00:21:08,040 Speaker 1: would prove her mission by ending the English assault on Orleans. 269 00:21:09,280 --> 00:21:13,159 Speaker 1: But first there was something she would need from them. 270 00:21:14,280 --> 00:21:18,280 Speaker 1: According to legend, Joan then revealed to them that the 271 00:21:18,359 --> 00:21:22,720 Speaker 1: voices had told her about a secret sword buried long 272 00:21:22,760 --> 00:21:26,720 Speaker 1: ago behind the altar of the Church of Saint Catharine 273 00:21:26,760 --> 00:21:29,879 Speaker 1: of fur Bois in the commune of the same name 274 00:21:30,000 --> 00:21:34,359 Speaker 1: in central France. The sword of Saint Catharine, as she 275 00:21:34,480 --> 00:21:38,760 Speaker 1: called it, bore five crosses and at once belonged to 276 00:21:38,880 --> 00:21:43,199 Speaker 1: Charles Martel, a seventh and eighth century leader of the 277 00:21:43,320 --> 00:21:47,840 Speaker 1: pre France territory known then as Francia, who had also 278 00:21:48,080 --> 00:21:53,040 Speaker 1: originally founded the church. As a forefather of the Kingdom 279 00:21:53,040 --> 00:21:57,199 Speaker 1: of France, Martell was credited with helping to stop the 280 00:21:57,240 --> 00:22:01,400 Speaker 1: expansion of the Islamic whom I add caliph that controlled 281 00:22:01,480 --> 00:22:05,520 Speaker 1: most of the Iberian Peninsula, the area comprised today of 282 00:22:05,640 --> 00:22:11,359 Speaker 1: Portugal and Spain. According to Joan, as the story goes, 283 00:22:12,080 --> 00:22:15,840 Speaker 1: Martell had secretly buried his sword for the next person 284 00:22:16,240 --> 00:22:20,119 Speaker 1: when the time came, whom God would choose to find 285 00:22:20,160 --> 00:22:26,400 Speaker 1: it and save France once again. The doorphans priests knew 286 00:22:26,400 --> 00:22:30,359 Speaker 1: well of Charles Martel and its conquests, but then knew 287 00:22:30,400 --> 00:22:34,080 Speaker 1: nothing of any such sword, and so it was with 288 00:22:34,160 --> 00:22:45,479 Speaker 1: great skepticism that a soldier was sent to locate it. 289 00:22:45,480 --> 00:22:48,480 Speaker 1: It was a few days later when the soldier entered 290 00:22:48,480 --> 00:22:51,360 Speaker 1: the church and made his way to the altar at 291 00:22:51,400 --> 00:22:56,359 Speaker 1: the back. After removing some stones, he began to dig 292 00:22:56,400 --> 00:23:01,400 Speaker 1: in the dirt, where apparently soon after, he tuck something hard. 293 00:23:02,400 --> 00:23:05,679 Speaker 1: As he brushed off the soil, he uncovered what was 294 00:23:05,760 --> 00:23:10,560 Speaker 1: quite clearly the reddish, rusted blade of the sword. And 295 00:23:10,680 --> 00:23:14,320 Speaker 1: when a polish was later applied to the blade, one 296 00:23:14,480 --> 00:23:19,119 Speaker 1: after another, the five stars engraved in the metal slowly 297 00:23:19,240 --> 00:23:25,720 Speaker 1: revealed themselves, just as Joan had described them. With the 298 00:23:25,760 --> 00:23:30,120 Speaker 1: sword recovered, Joan claimed it as her own, and from 299 00:23:30,200 --> 00:23:34,560 Speaker 1: that day forward it seemed that Joan's reputation was sealed. 300 00:23:35,680 --> 00:23:39,840 Speaker 1: Before long, word began to spread that the sword was 301 00:23:39,880 --> 00:23:43,000 Speaker 1: a holy relic destined to play a part in the 302 00:23:43,040 --> 00:23:48,880 Speaker 1: salvation of France. But more importantly, word was also beginning 303 00:23:48,880 --> 00:23:52,560 Speaker 1: to spread of the young Joan, who had so mysteriously 304 00:23:52,760 --> 00:23:57,399 Speaker 1: helped to find it. As one priest after another tried 305 00:23:57,440 --> 00:24:01,000 Speaker 1: and failed to confirm her as a tick or a witch, 306 00:24:01,440 --> 00:24:06,920 Speaker 1: a different thought began to emerge among the theologians. Joan 307 00:24:07,080 --> 00:24:14,720 Speaker 1: wasn't only being guided by saints, she was a saint herself. Then, 308 00:24:14,920 --> 00:24:18,600 Speaker 1: as word of Joan's apparent divine mission began to spread 309 00:24:18,680 --> 00:24:23,840 Speaker 1: throughout the French army, spirits began to raise. With one 310 00:24:23,960 --> 00:24:28,080 Speaker 1: so clearly beloved by God on our side, surely their 311 00:24:28,119 --> 00:24:33,920 Speaker 1: cause could not fail. Back in Chinot, on March twenty second, 312 00:24:34,119 --> 00:24:39,280 Speaker 1: fourteen twenty nine, Joan, dictating to the Dauphin, sent a 313 00:24:39,359 --> 00:24:42,679 Speaker 1: series of letters to the English King Henry the sixth 314 00:24:42,920 --> 00:24:47,800 Speaker 1: and his acolytes, demanding that they retreat from Orleans in 315 00:24:47,880 --> 00:24:53,040 Speaker 1: the names of Jesus and Mary. With the letters dispatched, 316 00:24:53,400 --> 00:24:55,960 Speaker 1: she is then said to have turned to the Dauphin 317 00:24:56,320 --> 00:25:00,080 Speaker 1: and declared, I shall last a year from now, but 318 00:25:00,240 --> 00:25:03,919 Speaker 1: only a little longer. She is then also said to 319 00:25:03,960 --> 00:25:07,520 Speaker 1: have stated that the voices had told her she would 320 00:25:07,520 --> 00:25:12,480 Speaker 1: be captured by Midsummer's Day of that year, June twenty fourth. 321 00:25:13,680 --> 00:25:17,600 Speaker 1: All this was said without fear or any hint of distress, 322 00:25:18,080 --> 00:25:21,120 Speaker 1: but rather with the clear sense that it was simply 323 00:25:21,160 --> 00:25:27,560 Speaker 1: the way things must be. A few weeks later, with 324 00:25:27,600 --> 00:25:32,440 Speaker 1: her place at the Dauphin's court firmly cemented, Charles decided 325 00:25:32,440 --> 00:25:37,439 Speaker 1: it was time to unleash their sacred weapon. Joan was 326 00:25:37,480 --> 00:25:41,840 Speaker 1: provided with a military household of several men that included 327 00:25:41,880 --> 00:25:46,600 Speaker 1: her brother's Shan and Pierre. Then carrying a standard and 328 00:25:46,720 --> 00:25:50,919 Speaker 1: banner which she designed herself, and the now sacred sword 329 00:25:50,960 --> 00:25:54,639 Speaker 1: of Saint Catherine, she was instructed to make her way 330 00:25:54,920 --> 00:25:58,840 Speaker 1: to the French army camp and Blois, about twenty miles 331 00:25:58,880 --> 00:26:04,840 Speaker 1: southwest of Lyon, riding in pristine white armor a stride 332 00:26:04,840 --> 00:26:08,760 Speaker 1: of fine white steed. Many would rush out to see 333 00:26:08,880 --> 00:26:13,879 Speaker 1: the one they called Jean Lapousselle Joan the Maid, just 334 00:26:14,160 --> 00:26:17,359 Speaker 1: for a glimpse of the rumored living saint who'd come 335 00:26:17,440 --> 00:26:27,919 Speaker 1: to deliver France from England. After her arrival at the 336 00:26:28,000 --> 00:26:32,800 Speaker 1: camp in Blois on April seventh, Joan was horrified by 337 00:26:32,840 --> 00:26:38,400 Speaker 1: what she found there, soldiers drinking and swearing and frequently 338 00:26:38,400 --> 00:26:43,440 Speaker 1: fraternizing with sex workers. The soldiers had clearly lost their way, 339 00:26:43,560 --> 00:26:46,960 Speaker 1: she thought, and would be destined to fail if they 340 00:26:47,000 --> 00:26:51,879 Speaker 1: didn't rediscover their faith in God. As a seemingly confirmed 341 00:26:52,000 --> 00:26:55,120 Speaker 1: messenger of God. With the backing of none other than 342 00:26:55,160 --> 00:26:59,479 Speaker 1: the Dauphin himself, Joan took it on herself to ensure 343 00:26:59,520 --> 00:27:04,040 Speaker 1: the army were not neglecting their Christian faith, since it 344 00:27:04,200 --> 00:27:09,159 Speaker 1: was this, after all, that was going to secure their victory. 345 00:27:09,320 --> 00:27:12,040 Speaker 1: She ordered all the soldiers to go to church to 346 00:27:12,119 --> 00:27:16,520 Speaker 1: make confession, give up swearing, and end their looting of 347 00:27:16,640 --> 00:27:20,880 Speaker 1: towns and villages. When a sex worker was later found 348 00:27:20,920 --> 00:27:23,720 Speaker 1: in the camp, Joan is said to have beaten her 349 00:27:23,840 --> 00:27:28,720 Speaker 1: so hard with her sword that it broke. Joan was 350 00:27:28,760 --> 00:27:32,639 Speaker 1: also said to have slapped and allied Scottish soldier for 351 00:27:32,680 --> 00:27:37,480 Speaker 1: the crime of stealing meat. Far from making her unpopular, 352 00:27:37,880 --> 00:27:43,280 Speaker 1: Joan's hardline approach called men to Charles's cause in their droves, 353 00:27:43,600 --> 00:27:47,960 Speaker 1: encouraged by her unshakable conviction that she had indeed been 354 00:27:48,040 --> 00:27:52,800 Speaker 1: sent by God to save them. But more was to come. 355 00:27:54,240 --> 00:27:58,080 Speaker 1: It was a warm, humid evening on May fourth when 356 00:27:58,200 --> 00:28:03,760 Speaker 1: Joan suddenly sprang to her feet and armed herself. Striding 357 00:28:03,760 --> 00:28:07,840 Speaker 1: out of her tent, she informed her guard that according 358 00:28:07,920 --> 00:28:11,520 Speaker 1: to the voices, a skirmish was taking place at an 359 00:28:11,520 --> 00:28:14,560 Speaker 1: English held fort just to the east of the city, 360 00:28:15,080 --> 00:28:19,919 Speaker 1: and their help was needed. Joan and her escort leaped 361 00:28:19,920 --> 00:28:23,280 Speaker 1: on to their horses and bolted off in search of battle. 362 00:28:24,359 --> 00:28:29,000 Speaker 1: Half an hour later, Joan and her men found it. 363 00:28:29,000 --> 00:28:31,800 Speaker 1: It is said that when the French soldiers saw Joan 364 00:28:31,920 --> 00:28:35,760 Speaker 1: approaching on top of her white horse and dressed in 365 00:28:35,800 --> 00:28:40,480 Speaker 1: her saintly white armor, a wave of optimism swept through 366 00:28:40,520 --> 00:28:44,800 Speaker 1: their ranks as a huge cry went up between them. 367 00:28:45,320 --> 00:28:49,600 Speaker 1: The men immediately redoubled their efforts, and by the end 368 00:28:49,680 --> 00:28:53,240 Speaker 1: of the day they'd captured the fort from the English army. 369 00:28:54,840 --> 00:28:59,600 Speaker 1: A little later that day, once again, Joan dictated another 370 00:29:00,080 --> 00:29:04,160 Speaker 1: of her letters of defiance to the English crown, demanding 371 00:29:04,200 --> 00:29:09,040 Speaker 1: that they concede before any more blood was shed. God 372 00:29:09,520 --> 00:29:13,360 Speaker 1: was with her and France, she said, and their victory 373 00:29:13,920 --> 00:29:17,680 Speaker 1: was only a matter of time. But the court of 374 00:29:17,800 --> 00:29:22,800 Speaker 1: Henry the sixth refused her offer. They weren't about to 375 00:29:22,880 --> 00:29:29,680 Speaker 1: let an unhinged, possibly deranged little girl dictate anything to them. 376 00:29:29,720 --> 00:29:34,520 Speaker 1: After all, what on earth could she possibly be capable 377 00:29:34,600 --> 00:29:43,280 Speaker 1: of Doing you'd been listening to Unexplained Season six, episode thirty, 378 00:29:43,880 --> 00:29:49,080 Speaker 1: The Inextinguishable Fire, Part one of two. Part two will 379 00:29:49,120 --> 00:29:55,120 Speaker 1: be out next Friday, March twenty fourth. This episode was 380 00:29:55,120 --> 00:30:00,200 Speaker 1: written by Ella McCloud and Richard McClane Smith. Unexplained as 381 00:30:00,200 --> 00:30:04,680 Speaker 1: an AV Club Productions podcast created by Richard McClain Smith. 382 00:30:05,440 --> 00:30:08,840 Speaker 1: All other elements of the podcast, including the music, are 383 00:30:08,880 --> 00:30:14,040 Speaker 1: also produced by Richard McClain smith. Unexplained. The book and audiobook, 384 00:30:14,560 --> 00:30:17,880 Speaker 1: featuring stories that have never before been featured on the show, 385 00:30:18,360 --> 00:30:23,600 Speaker 1: is now available to buy worldwide. You can purchase from Amazon, Barnes, 386 00:30:23,600 --> 00:30:29,120 Speaker 1: and Noble Waterstones, among other bookstores. Please subscribe and rate 387 00:30:29,160 --> 00:30:32,080 Speaker 1: the show wherever you listen to podcasts, and feel free 388 00:30:32,120 --> 00:30:34,680 Speaker 1: to get in touch with any thoughts or ideas regarding 389 00:30:34,680 --> 00:30:37,360 Speaker 1: the stories you've heard on the show. Perhaps you have 390 00:30:37,400 --> 00:30:39,880 Speaker 1: an explanation of your own you'd like to share. You 391 00:30:39,920 --> 00:30:43,560 Speaker 1: can reach us online at Unexplained podcast dot com or 392 00:30:43,640 --> 00:30:48,360 Speaker 1: Twitter at Unexplained Pod and Facebook at Facebook dot com, 393 00:30:48,640 --> 00:30:51,080 Speaker 1: forward Slash Unexplained Podcast