She revealed something that was a complete secret to him.
Joan of Arc was an actual person, and most of the events surrounding her story did happen, so the story doesn't actually serve a purpose. It was a real woman existing during a real war. However, people could take different lessons from Joan of Arc. For instance: the strength of women, the strength of faith in God, women can do anything men can do, don't put too much faith in your allies (the Dauphin abandoned Joan of Arc to burn at the stake and didn't send anyone to rescue her). However, the "story" doesn't serve a purpose because its not a made up story that was created in order to teach a lesson or a moral, it was an actual event involving an actual woman.
Joan did not want to take lives and she was not trained in combat. She was a strategist and spent her time directing the battles.
Joan's execution was very politically motivated. Joan had embarrased and humiliated the British army and they wanted revenge. The British also hoped that, by executing Joan, the French would become disheartened and allow the Brits to again take the upper hand in the conflict.
The Burgundians were ethnic French who supported the British and along with the British army they had been defeated in battles by Joan of Arc. They were anxious for revenge and saw their opportunity to take Joan prisoner when she let her guard down during a retreat. Joan had ordered her army to retreat and take cover after they attacked the Burgundian camp at Margny. Being a good leader, Joan held the rear while her soldiers took shelter and was captured at that time.
Yes, as a leader she had to take her soldiers to where they were needed the most.
Joan did not take power. She was given power by the Dauphin Charles VII. Some of the other leaders in the French army did not accept this and often excluded Joan from strategy meetings. When the French army started being victorious because of Joan's strategies, they finally came around to accepting her leadership and judgement.
Yes; she was called by her voices to defeat the English and take the Dauphin to Reims to be crowned. This she did. Unfortunately, she then invented a new quest - to boot the English out of France - which was not ordered by her voices, and which led to her capture and death.
3hrs
It takes about 8.5 hours.
What more can I say to convince you? Convince me with your actions.
Joan was an army leader in France.
Joan Fishman has written: 'Something's Got to Take'
The driving distance is 641 miles. The journey will take 12 hours and 26 minutes.
It didn't take much to convince the jury.How can I convince you to come on a date?
The antonym of convince is "dissuade." It means to persuade someone not to take a particular course of action.
Evidently, God felt that the dauphin, the crown prince of France, was the legitimate heir to the French throne. The French people as a whole wanted to be ruled by a French, not an English king and wanted to have their own country, France, and not be just another part of England, like Ireland and Scotland were for so many years. That is exactly what would have happened if Joan of Arc had not raised the siege of Orleans (which was the key to southern France), and conducted the dauphin to Rheims to be coronated King Charles VII of France. The English already had control of all of northern France, Paris and Normandy and Brittany, and only needed to take Orleans to have control of all of what is the modern state of France.
How did hopeful motivate Christian not to take their life