1429, August 1 – At Montmirail-en-Brie
1429, August 2-5 – At Provins
1429, August 7 – At Coulommiers and Ch?teau-Thierry
1429, August 10 – At La Fert? Milon
1429, August 11 – At Cr?py-en-Valois
1429, August 12 – At Lagny-le-Sec
1429, August 13 – At Dammartin and Thieux
1429, August 14 – At Baron and Montepilloy
1429, August 14-15 – Battle of Montepilloy
1429, August 16-17 – At Cr?py-en-Valois
1429, August 18-23 – At Compi?gne
1429, August 26 – September 8 – At St. Denis and La Chapelle
1429, September 8 – Attack on Paris; Jehanne is wounded in the thigh while trying to locate a spot for her troops to cross Paris’ inner ditch.
1429, September 9 – At La Chapelle and St. Denis
1429, September 10 and 13 – At St. Denis
1429, September 14-21 – At Lagny, Provins, Bray, Sens, Courtenay, Ch?teaurenard, Montargis, Gien
1429, October – At Meung-sur-Y?vre and Bourges
1429, October and early November – At St. Pierre-le-Moutier
1429, November 9 – At Moulins
1429, November 24 – Attack on La Charit?-sur-Loire
1429, early December – At Meung-sur-Y?vre
1429, December 19 – At Orleans
1429, December 25 (?) – At Jargeau ?
1429, December 29 – Ennobled along with her family, given a coat of arms and surname “du Lys”
1430, March 3-28 – At Sully
1430, early April – At Lagny; battle of Lagny
1430, April 17-23 – At Melun
1430, late April – At Senlis, Compi?gne, Berenglise, Ste Marguerite, Soissons, Cr?py-en-Valois
1430, May 14-15 – At Compi?gne and Pont l’Ev?que
1430, May 18 (?) – At Soissons
1430, May 19(?) – 22 – At Cr?py-en-Valois
1430, May 23 – At Compi?gne; assault on Margny; Jehanne captured.
1430, May 23-25 – At Clairoix
1430, late May – July – Held prisoner at Beaulieu
1430, mid-July – mid-November – At Beaurevoir
1430, late November – At Arras, St Riquier, Drugy, and Le Crotoy
1430, December – At St Val?ry, Eu, Dieppe, and Rouen.
1430, December 25 (?) – Held in a tower at Rouen, where she would stay until May 30
1431, January 3 – Transferred to the custody of Bishop Cauchon
1431, January 9 – Beginning of the 1st trial (Trial of Condemnation)
1431, February 21 – First public session of the trial
1431, March 10-17 – Closed sessions of testimony
1431, March 27 – Libellus read
1431, April 18 – Admonished to recant
1431, May 19 – Reading of the University of Paris’ condemnation
1431, May 23 – Conclusion of the trial
1431, May 24 – Taken to a platform and threatened with execution; recants and is given the sentence of life in prison
1431, May 28 – Rejects her previous abjuration and accepts a death sentence.
1431, May 29 – The assessors vote to turn her over to secular justice
1431, May 30 – Execution.
———————— Related events after her death ————————
1435, Sept 21 – Treaty of Arras between Charles VII and Philippe-le-Bon de Burgundy, effectively dooming the English cause
1436 – Paris surrenders to the French
1448 – Rouen taken by the French
1450 – English driven out of Normandy; the process of retrying Joan of Arc’s case begins under the direction of Guillaume Bouill?
1450, March 4 & 5 – Preliminary witness depositions are taken, beginning with the testimony of Guillaume Manchon, one of the notaries at the original trial.
1452 – Joan of Arc’s retrial process continues under Cardinal d’Estouteville and Inquisitor Jean Br?hal
1452, May 2 & 3 – Five witnesses questioned.
1452, May 8 – More testimony, with depositions from seventeen witnesses
1453 – English driven out of Guyenne; most historians consider this to be the end of the “Hundred Years War”
1455, June 11 – Pope Calixtus III authorizes Jehanne’s mother, Isabelle, to open the suit
1455, November 7 – The opening session of the retrial (”Trial of Rehabilitation”), held at Notre Dame in Paris
1455, November through 1456, May – Witness testimony
1456, May 14 – The witness testimony is concluded
1456, May 30 – Hearings resumed
1456, June 2 – As no further evidence was submitted, the existing body of testimony was accepted into the record.
1456, June 5 – The counsel for the plaintiffs, Guillaume Pr?vosteau, submitted his documents to the tribunal
1456, June 10 – Final session during which all the various documents were collected.
1456, June 18 – The plaintiffs, in the form of Jehanne’s brother Jean Darc, the family’s lawyer, and the Promoter for the case, pay a visit to the commissioners, expressing the wish that the latter would speed up their final deliberations
1456, June 24 – Final call for any objections, with presentation of final evidence against Jehanne set for July 1
1456, July 1 – No one showed up.
1456, July 2 – The plaintiffs formally ask the judges to annul the original verdict and declare Jehanne innocent.
1456, July 7, beginning at the hour of 8 am – Public announcement of the judgement of the court, in which the original verdict is thrown out and Joan of Arc is declared innocent.
————– Related events in our own era ————–
1903, February – Formal proposal for canonisation
1904, January – Pope Pius X awards her the title of “Venerable”
1909, April 11 – Beatification
1920, May 16 – Canonised as a saint by Pope Benedict XV