10.23.2014

De quadam puella


De quadam puella (Summer 1429?)





In our Taylor book, there was a source called De quadam puella, written sometime in 1429 and the author remains a mystery because modern scholars are not fully convinced that it was written by Jean Gerson. In this treatise, it presents positive and negative views of Joan, certainly whether or not she truly was a virgin pucella sent by God. 

A couple questions are asked by the author in the source,” should one believe that she is truly a young girl, human and natural, or was she changed into a similar, fantastical likeness of a person”? (Taylor 113).
Second, the author asked,” If it is through a superior cause, is this for good, and therefore by a good spirit, or for bad, through an evil spirit”? (113).

Examining these questions, he presents propositions in support of her and later on, near the end of the treatise he ultimately opposes her.
 He starts by presenting proposition of supporting her, he states,” It must be simply affirmed that this is a true Pucelle and a genuine person of human nature”(113). It is convinced that she is a human because of her human actions. And according to Taylor,” The young female is continually found to conform with other men in human actions, speaking, desiring food, eating, drinking, staying awake, sleeping, and other similar things”(113). Based on her “human activities” we know Joan was indeed a person of human nature and not immortal or essentially evil. 

In the author’s IV proposition he states,” It is consonant with the holy scriptures that God may present the joy of salvation to people and to kingdoms by means of the weaker sex and innocent youths”(114). Based on our previous sources, we’ve learn there are other women before her who were also messengers and sent by God other than men. 

The treatise also presents the negative positions about Joan. In proposition number 1, he states,” Many false prophets have come, claiming to have been sent from God by divine inspiration”(115). And according to Taylor,” in the law of the gospel, many will say that they come in my name and many will be deceived by them”(116). This is saying that there have been many before Joan who has claimed false prophets; therefore that questions Joan’s creditability.  In the V proposition that opposes her, states,” This Pucelle commits two actions which are defined as forbidden in the holy scriptures” (117). Taylor defines these actions based on her cross dressing and cutting her hair as a man (117).

I found this source really interesting because although the (mysterious) author presents a fair amount of positive and negative points about Joan, I am not fully convinced that the author was supporting Joan. It ultimately opposes her. This is not surprising because of the time period and the situation that Joan was in. If the author had written the treatise twenty years later, perhaps it would support Joan more.

What do you guys think?

Source:                            
Craig,Taylor. Joan of Arc: la Pucelle. Manchester University Press, 2006. Print.

More Frozen: Anna vs. Joan



Since I've already made one Frozen post, I'd thought I'd stick to a theme. ABC's series Once Upon a Time has co-opted the Frozen storyline in order to cash in on the hype surrounding the Disney movie, which has resulted in some more Joan of Arc references. This new version picks up where the Disney movie leaves off. Elsa is Queen and Anna is about to marry Kristoff, but then Elsa reads her mother's journal and believes that their parents left because of her. Anna doesn't think this is true and journeys to the Enchanted Forest (where the rest of Once Upon a Time's fairytale characters live) in order to prove her wrong. However, Anna doesn't want just anyone to find out that she is a princess from another Kingdom, so she decides to take the name of her favorite painting, Joan.
http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/3d/d9/6e/3dd96ec064095a4a009cac08551c5159.jpg 
In my last Frozen post I compared Elsa to Joan, which I think makes more sense than Anna being Joan. Anna isn't segregated from society in any way, and she isn't shamed for supernatural abilities. Anna's naivete borders on dangerous at times, while the nature and results of Joan's mission, as well as the battles she had to fight along the way, made her more skeptical and less trusting. 

However, one thing that Anna and Joan do have in common is their penchant to never give up. When a young Prince Charming is confronted with an impossible obstacle to overcome, Anna is the one who convinces him to not give up. She teaches him how to fight for his freedom despite the odds against him (also can we acknowledge that Joan of Arc taught Prince Charming how to sword-fight?). Joan was also presented with an impossible situation, but she had faith in her voices and her purpose, and was able to accomplish the impossible. She even refused to give up in small moments such as the during the siege of Orleans. The rest of the army was retreating, but she stayed behind with only a handful of men because she had faith that they would take the town that night. Jean d'Aulon reported that Joan said that "she was not alone, that she still had fifty thousand men in her company, and that she would not leave that spot until she had taken the town" (Pernoud 173). At this moment, Joan did not have any advantages over her enemies, and she only had a handful of men. However, her faith in her own ability to accomplish the impossible led her to overcome the obstacles placed in front of her. 

Sources: Pernoud, Regine. The Retrial of Joan of Arc: the Evidence for Her Vindication. San Fransisco: Ignatius Press, 2007.

10.22.2014

Escape Attempt: A True Leap of Faith?

  Currently we have been discussing Joan's capture and reading about her various attempts to escape from her imprisonment. One of these attempts involved Joan leaping from the tower of Beaurevoir. While she claims it was not a suicide attempt and strictly a leap of faith, I have to wonder whether Joan really did want to take her own life.
  According to Joan, "When I heard that the English were coming to take me, I was very wroth at it, and however my voice forbade me often to leap from that tower. And at last, for fear of the English, I leapt and commended myself to God and the Virgin Mary and I was injured in that leap." (By Herself, 154). To break this quote apart lets start with the fact that Joan's voices did not tell her to leap from the tower. In actuality they forbade her from jumping. Joan went against the will of her voices and jumped. Do we have other accounts where Joan went against the commands of her voices?
 Secondly, Joan tells of being fearful of the English. Was she so fearful that she attempted to take her own life versus falling into their hands?
  Thirdly, within the above mentioned quote we are told that Joan commended herself to God and was injured in that leap. I have to wonder if this would have put any doubt into Joan's mind about God's plan for her? Meaning, was the injury caused by God not wanting Joan to escape or was it simply because she put too much faith in the fact that God would allow her to escape and made a careless decision?
  Was her leap a suicide attempt? According to Joan, "In leaping I commended myself to God, and I thought in making that leap to escape so that I should not be delivered over to the English" (By Herself, 155). Joan believed that her leap of faith would result in God protecting her from injury and allowing her to escape from her imprisonment. However, after the leap resulted in her being injured and being imprisoned by the same people once again, Joan still maintained her faith in God. I have to wonder whether anyone else who sought God's protection in an escape attempt and failed would still have that same level of devoutness to God? Do you think Joan just came to the realization that God meant for her to be captured and sold over to the English? Or do you think Joan ever doubted, even for a second, whether God was still at her side?

Works Cited
Pernoud, Regine. Joan of Arc: By Herself and Her Witnesses. Lanham: Scarborough House, 1994.
Image from http://www.maidofheaven.com/maid_assets/extras/joan_beaurevoir_castle.jpg.

Orange is the New Orleans

On May 23, 1430, one of the most fateful moments in the young girl’s life, Joan was captured by the Burgundians while attempting to defend Compiegne from an Anglo-Burgundian siege. Following her capture, Joan went on to endure imprisonment in numerous castles until she was finally sold to the King of England and housed in the castle of Bouvreuil to await her trial in Rouen. There is much modern speculation about Joan’s experiences while imprisoned, even the theory of a suspected rape. While Joan does not specifically discuss her time spent imprisoned during her trial, several witnesses were able to visit the Maid in her cell, and described the conditions in which she was held. 

Some of the most telling evidence of Joan's imprisonment comes from the Retrial records where witnesses from the Rouen trial re-testified about the conditions of the prison as well as Joan's hardships. Pierre Daron, Lieutenant to the bailiff of Rouen, testified: "We found her in a tower of the castle, with fetters on her legs, which were attached to a great wooden block," (Pernoud 209). As to how Joan was guarded, Jean Massieu testified: "Joan was kept a prisoner and remained in that place under the guard of five Englishmen, of whom three stayed in her room at night and two remained outside the door," (Pernoud 210). This constant guarding by Englishmen allowed for the rumors of a suspected rape upon the Maid. Guillaume Manchon testified: "Once or twice [Joan] complained… Master Nicolas Loiseleur that one of her guards had tried to rape her," (Pernoud 211). Whether this attempted rape was successful is much debated among historians today. Perhaps one of the most interesting theories of Joan's imprisonment is the testimony given by several men that claimed an iron cage was made for Joan, in which she would have been forced to stand in her cell, chained. Jean Massieu described having heard from a local blacksmith who crafted the cage, and Pierre Cusquel corroborated the creation of a cage for Joan, although neither man admits to having seen Joan actually enchained.

Perhaps one of the most essential question for understanding Joan's imprisonment is: how did Joan's experience differ from that of an average medieval prisoner? Prisoners in the Middle Ages were rarely afforded certain privileges modern inmates are allowed, including meals, medical aid, and frequent visitors. Medieval prisoners were less guarded or supervised which left them more free but also more susceptible. Joan, however, was under nearly constant supervision by the recorded five Englishmen.  The lack of hygiene and small quarters or cells prisoners inhabited during the Middle Ages created an unhealthy environment, as inmates often died of disease. Several Rehabilitation records reflect that Joan fell ill while in prison, and had to be bled. This would seem a fairly typical occurrence in a medieval prison. Although more care was surely administered to Joan, who was essential to the English to remain alive until sentenced. Lastly, the circumstances of Joan being imprisoned with male guards was wholly inconsistent with the custom of the Middle Ages. According to medieval custom, women inmates were held in ecclesiastical prison, guarded solely by women. This, however, was not a liberty Joan was afforded, and created a source of anger that Joan exhibited during her trial.

While historians know much about typical medieval prisons, Joan’s experience while imprisoned was wholly unique considering the war and double monarchy of the day. Furthermore, Joan was not a typical prisoner. The rumors of Joan combined with the English dedication to prove her a heretic proves her time spent in prison was unlike that of a common criminal. However, the extraordinary circumstances surrounding her imprisonment align with the extraordinary life she lived before her capture.

Below are several images of the castle of Bouvreuil, where Joan was imprisoned while awaiting her trial in Rouen. She was held specifically in the tower below. 




Works Cited:

Geltner, Guy. "Medieval Prisons: Between Myth and Reality, Hell and Purgatory." History Compass 4 (2006). Web. 22 Oct. 2014.
Pernoud, Regine. The Retrial of Joan of Arc: The Evidence for Her Vindication. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2007. Print.

10.21.2014

Halloween: Joan of Arc

Jamie immediately after giving birth and preparing to run from Uncle Michael
Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers references Joan of Arc in the beginning of the film. It is in a joking manner at first and would be very easy to miss. During Michael Myers mission of finding his last living relatives, Jaime, Michael's niece, makes a phone call to a comedic Halloween radio show as a last stitch effort for survival. While crying "He's coming, He's coming", the radio show host criticizes the victim saying "Let me guess what your name is, Joan of Arc? Did the voices tell you that?" The director using Joan in the start of the film foreshadowed the role of voices in the film.

Paul Rudd, before he became a comedic actor
saving Jamie's baby and the family in
the Myers home.
Although that is the only mention of Joan of Arc by name in the film, the question of hearing voices (in this case evil voices) is present throughout the film. It started with an elderly woman warning that a young boy that lives in the Myers' house hears the same voice the serial killer heard the night he killed his family. She gave a spooky explanation to why the boy hears an evil voice that tries convincing the child to kill his family.


The voice by the end of the film proved to be a doctor manipulating a poor child who had grown up knowing the history of the house he lived in. Since the film did start with a direct reference to Joan, the director may have ended it with his opinion of Joan's voices. The voice in this film was manipulated by a doctor that knew how to make a 6-year old boy believe he heard an evil voice. Joan could have had voices but it could also have been a manipulation for her to fight in battle and make herself the woman prophesied about. Of course Joan accomplished great feats regardless if it was truly voices telling her what to do or her own doing.


Chappelle, Joe. Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers. DVD. , 1995.
Picture Sources:
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjgd4Pyk0vBIVYqcoMbkTzKwm4lgF_IPxZsvpE7xr14R1k6b_xMGzYyC3T-xp2OtOw1njC9mr1Jj_9UccFo3Vp3wD9PRm7Ls1UpwVJ2fmSCGIZabYESz4OK6RndMDZHvDlhuR4IztQ_Z9Y/s320/Halloween+6+Jamie+and+nurse.jpg

http://www.halloweenforevermore.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Paul-Rudd-appears-in-this-entry.-375x239.png

10.19.2014

Monty Python and the Holy Grail--Funny but Accurate



            There aren’t many historically accurate movies out there that can make you laugh. Monty Python and the Holy Grail is one of the few that will. This movie is full of slapstick humor and is a cult-humor classic. The movie is about the king Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table and their quest to find the Holy Grail. The whole movie is accurate in terms of weapons, armor, castles, ceremonies, and legendary heroes. What this movie does is take these historical truths and poke fun at them.
           
            The movie is set in England in the year 932 A.D. From the start of the movie we run into our first issue with reality. King Arthur appears through the fog riding…nothing. He skips along on foot acting like he is riding a horse while his lackey (Patsy) jogs behind hitting coconut shells together to make the sound of horse hoofs (this is why Dr. Wolbrink had the coconuts in class). If anyone was traveling over long distances in those days, they would be on a horse (the no horse trend continues throughout the movie). In the movie, Patsy is holding a large trunk on his back along with a horn and other camping gear. 


           
            One thing that was historically accurate in the movie were the castles. The castles were in fact filmed from a single real castle. The castle used was Doune Castle located in central Scottland and Castle Stalker. These castles have very high, thick walls with plenty of defenses. In one scene, King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table attack a French controlled castle. The attack was repulsed by the French throwing live animals and other objects over the walls at the Knights of the Round Table. Although none of the castles had a human-built moat to hinder troops from taking the castle, the Castle Stalker was small but built on a small island with a natural lake surrounding it. This would be a very good defense against attackers trying to take the castle.
           
            Another thing that was funny but still held some accuracy was the burning of a witch. In the movie the “witch” is actually a woman that the towns people dressed up to look like a witch. She has a carrot nose held on with string and a metal funnel for a hat. The towns people even admit to dressing her up that way but they test her anyway. The way they test her is they compare her weight to a duck on a large scale. The logic is witches burn because they’re made of wood, wood floats in water, ducks float in water, if she weighs the same as a duck she is made of wood, therefore she is a witch. She does not pass the test and she is taken away to be burned. This kind of logic was present back in medieval times when the understanding of how biology worked was not understood yet. If a bug crawled out from under a rock, the logic was that rock made a bug somehow.


           
            Another legend that was sacrificed on the altar of comedy was the legend of The Black Knight. In the movie The Black Knight is seen battling another knight trying to cross a very small wooden bridge over a small creek (the creek could be jumped across). His camp is seen on the other side. As the Black Knight battles the challenger, the fighting style is very slapstick-like. There is no real honor to style to it and The Black Knight kills the challenger by throwing his broadsword through the air and stabbing the challenger through the head, through the opening in his visor. This is not very likely to happen since the opening is very small but it was very funny.
            
When King Arthur attempts to cross the bridge he must defeat the Black Knight, and he does, with ease. The movie makes The Black Knight look like a weakling and has no skill in combat. In the movie an interesting point is made when The Black Knight says “The Black Knight always triumphs!” This I feel was intentional because in the legends The Black Knight is always the victor. Instead of sticking to the legend, the movie has its own spin on it. The Black Knight ends up loosing all his limbs but never bleeds out and says he will bite Arthur’s legs off (yes this is the kind of movie this is).

           
            Towards the middle of the movie, there is a scene involving Sir Lancelot and a medieval wedding ceremony. The ceremony is also accurate. It has a musical group playing instrauments such as the shawm, the racket (guitar like), a hand drum, and the reed pipe. In the court yard was prepared food including fruits, vegetables, and various meats. The marriage ceremony was held in the main hall of the castle. Friends and family of the bride were present at the party socializing and dancing. In the scene Sir Lancelot goes crazy and trashes the party by killing several wedding guests in order to rescue the “princess” in the tower from her father. It turns out that the prince was the one who sent the note asking for help, which nullifies the nobility of the quest.
           
            Another historically accurate object in the movie is the central main character, King Arthur. The real king Arthur is a larger than life character who wields Excalibur and is the defeater of the Saxons. The King Arthur in the film looks accurate for the time period and instead of a lion on his tunic he wears a sun with a mustache. This is also seen on his standard held by his lackey, Patsy. King Arthur in the film even alludes to his father Uther Pendragon. The film has made King Arthur has he should be but they put their own funny twist on his character.


           
            Although this film contains mystical or magical elements to it, the film is largely historically accurate. Nothing in the film that includes dress, weapons, environment, logic, or technology is inaccurate for that time period. The movie is a blend of modern touches, mythical legend, and historical accuracy. This movie is by far one of my favorites and makes me laugh every time I watch it. I can also just about quote the whole thing. This is a great film to watch and I would recommend everyone watch it.
           

Work Cited

Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Performed by Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Eric Idle, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones, Michael Palin,. England: EMI Films, 1975. Film.