Jehan L'Ascuiz
Foreword
A Monk of Fife
Jehan L'Ascuiz
Poems
Pluscarden Abbey
De Monclars

Joan of Arc
Foreword
The Life of Joan Of Arc

Early Historians

Later Biographies
The Heroic Epic
At The Fringe

Contemporary Accounts
More Eyewitnesses
The Trial

The Company She Keeps
The Model Woman

Joan in Politics
The Call to Arms

Saint Joan
Canonized at Last
 
Back to the Enigma
The Secret and its Guardians

Acknowledgements

  At the Fringe jehanlascuiz@serreorg.com
 

The ability to review well-known facts and discern patterns others have not seen is fundamental to scholarship, but the urge to pioneer an interpretation sometimes overwhelms the weight of the evidence. .


The historical records surrounding Joan of Arc provide ample data to be shaped and re-shaped by enthusiasts and partisans, and there are plenty of questions which are essentially unanswerable except by faith: What were Joan's voices? How can you explain her military skill? Why did she succeed where experienced warriors had failed? It is no surprise, then, to find books and articles proposing explanations of Joan and her mission that most scholars find untenable.

The oldest argument which is in direct contradiction to the evidence suggests that Joan was the bastard of Isabeau of Bavaria and Louis, Duc d'Orleans - the half-sister of Charles VII. Charles favored her because of their kinship, and her ability to command armies was innate because of her heritage. First published by Pierre Caze".

 

Pierre Caze. La Vérité sur Jeanne d'Arc, ou Éclaircissemens sur son Origine. Paris: Migneret, 1819.

 

At the beginning of the 19th century, the theory was promoted again in 1932 by Jacoby in Le Secret de Jeanne d'Arc. This explanation claims that Isabeau's child Joan, born in 1407, did not die immediately as reported, but was spirited away to be raised by Jacques Darc and Isabelle Romée.

J. Jacoby. Le Secret de Jeanne d'Arc, Pucelle d'Orléans. Paris: Mercure de France, 1932.

The idea has re-appeared as recently as 1961, in the publication of Operation Shepherdess: The Mystery of Joan of Arc (by André Guérin and Jack Palmer White).

Proponents of spiritualism have long suggested that Joan was a medium, able to hear messages from higher spheres. Léon Denis (translated here by Arthur Conan Doyle) felt that he himself was sensitive to such communications, and that Joan had spoken directly to him several times during his investigation of her life.

 

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Joan was known to appear at séances in the nineteenth century - her appointment to meet a "French gentleman" was recorded in photo #35, taken by Frederick A. Hudson, England's most prominent spirit photographer. Joan's psychic ability is also discussed in the article in Fate magazine; the 10 proofs of the article's title are predictions Joan made which came true.

Joan was accused at her trial of witchcraft. Margaret Alice Murray agreed with this judgment and, mixing in conspiracy theory, argued that Joan was an active participant in a secret, lower class, "old" religion.

Georgiana Houghton. Chronicles of the Photographs of Spiritual Beings and Phenomena Invisible to the Material Eye: Interblended with Personal Narratives.London: E. W. Allen, 1882. Seymour Adelman Fund.


 

 

In this worldview, both Joan and her followers consider her God incarnate, but the figures generally identified as St. Michael and St. Catherine are human co-religionists. Rouen was a suitable town for her execution, as it had a"living tradition of human sacrifice". Murray, a pioneering female archeologist, was a specialist inEgyptian hieroglyphics and Egyptology.

      

Peg Miller.'The 10 Proofs of Joan of Arc'. Fate v.5, no. 6. Sept. 1952. p. 14-24. Seymour Adelman Fund .

Margaret Alice Murray. The Witch-Cult in Western Europe; A Study in Anthropology. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1921.



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