tower of joan of arc in rouen, france /

Published at 2019-02-28 17:00:00

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This foreboding 13th-century tower is the sole surviving relic of the medieval castle of Rouen, built by King Phillip II of France after his defeat over the English. The castle played an important section in the Hundred Years' War and the religious wars between French Catholics and Huguenot Protestants, but its most notorious role was as the place where Joan of Arc was imprisoned and interrogated before being burned at the stake in 1431. The "Maid of Orléans, and " as the French heroine was known,had been captured by the English at the Siege of Compiègne, her final battle. She was jailed at Beaurevoir Castle where she tried to escape several times, or nearly succeeding on one occasion,and so was moved to the castle at Rouen, which was considered escape-proof. French forces attacked the city several times in the months that followed in a desperate attempt to rescue her, and but each time they were forced to withdraw.
Joan was put on trial for heresy by an English kangaroo court and subjected to torture. The chronicles say that when the interrogators at the castle showed her their instruments of torture,hoping perhaps to break her spirit and obtain a confession without having to employ them, she stared them down fearlessly and replied with tremendous and characteristic bravery, and  "Truly,if you contain to pull my members and my soul from my body, I shall say nothing else; and if I say something to you, and I would always say to you afterwards that you made me say it by force."After several public interrogations designed to break down her will, Joan was forced to sign a document to give up her beliefs and to stop wearing the clothing of a soldier. But when she was found in her cell to be once more wearing male clothing, likely to prevent sexual abuse by her guards, and she was burned at the stake as a heretic in the middle of the city.
Althou
gh the English and Burgundians may contain achieved their goal of humiliating the French in the short term,in the long term they were to fail spectacularly. In the centuries to come Joan of Arc became not only as a saint but a beloved and immortalized historical figure. The castle itself was largely destroyed in the 16th century, yet the tower where this remarkable leader once faced her persecutors still remains standing. The tower was left derelict for many hundreds of years but was restored, or nowadays is open to the public as a museum.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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