Joan Of Arc Theory: The Trial Of Joan Of Arc

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During the early fifteenth century in France, we see the birth of a young peasant girl known as Joan whom became a celebrity or divine figure. Also known as “The Maid of Orleans,” the martyr of the church of France and the saint of the Roman Catholic Church, Joan of Arc, played a significant role in manifesting popular Christian piety, influencing developments with bureaucratic states, and initiating major changes with European societies during the fifteenth century through her trial with the Catholic Church known as the Trial of Joan of Arc.
To begin, the experiences and the trial of Joan of Arc had a significant reflection on popular piety. Firstly, her reflection of popular piety, actually begins when she was younger. When she was at the age of only thirteen, she claimed to have heard voices from three saints or angels whom were delivering her a message from God as she was in the castle. (The Trials of Joan of …show more content…

101) Believing in or seeing saints and angels is a practice of Christianity. Continuing, Joan of Arc claimed these saints to be significant French saints through the Christian church, in which she voluntarily and punctually attended. The three saints were identified to be Saint Michael, Saint Catherine, and Saint Margaret. As claimed in the text, The Trial of Joan of Arc, by Daniel Hobbins, these saints had told Joan of Arc “that she was to bring about the deliverance of Orleans from an English siege,” (The Trial of Joan of Arc, pg. 2) and that she needed the help of King Charles VII to do so. This is what initiated Joan of Arc’s experience with a “series of further victories” (The Trial of Joan of Arc, pg. 2), such as the Battle of Orleans, that were all in the name of God, in which reflected on popular piety. Foreshadowing to her trial, during Joan

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