Thursday, 29 March 2012

Reflection

I have been told that every few days, I am to reflect on the period's work. Here goes, I guess.
My strengths is the ability to quickly read information, learn it, and put into my own words on the blog.
My weakness was connection problems with WHS-wifi.
This will be remedied over the weekend as my connection is fine at home.

Question two

Now it is time to talk about Joan herself. Around 70 years after the war had started, both sides were still fighting, even after Europe had been ravaged by the black death. Joan of Arc was said to be born around 1412, to a peasant family in north-eastern France. At this point, France was divided, as a region called Burgundy had broken off and allied with England. When she was twelve, Joan claimed to have had visions of St. John, St. Catherine, and St. Margaret.

At the time, the French that fought England were led by the Duke of Orleans, who was linked to the uncrowned heir to the throne. Joan said the vision told her to lift the siege on the city of Orleans.

More to come soon.

Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Last post about the war's beginning.

Okay, this is my last post on how the war began. After Phillip VI took the French throne, England still had control of a portion of Gascony, which was a point of dispute between the two sides. The events that sparked off the war happened in 1333, when Edward III of England went to war with David II of Scotland, hoping to rule over the entirety of Great Britain. David II was an ally of the French, causing further stress. The war initially was a huge success for the English, forcing David II to flee to France. In 1336, France threatened to seize Gascony if England did not stop the war with Scotland. England refused, and in 1337, the Hundred Years War began.

Question one continued,

After a series of conflicts in the 1200s, almost all of the English holdings on the French mainland were gone, leaving only a small region near Spain, known as Gascony. In the decades before the war began, many of the English nobility remembered their grandparents owning many fruitful regions of France. This, combined with a good amount of the English aristocracy being of French ancestry, was a large motivation for retaking of portions of mainland France, especially Normandy.

The constant intertwining of England and France, made lines of succession quite confusing. In 1314, Phillip IV of France died. Phillip had four children: Louis X, Phillip V, Charles IV, and Isabella, who was married to Edward II of England. Isabella's and Edward's child, Edward of Windsor, was a possible heir to both the English and French throne. Louis X, first son of Phillip IV, died two years later, letting Phillip V attempt to claim the throne, something opposed by many of the French nobility. Phillip V became king anyway, and also stated that the French throne was a title that could be only held by a man. Phillip V died in 1322, leaving the throne to Charles IV, third son of the late Phillip IV.

In 1324, King Charles IV of France, fought a brief war with his brother-in-law, King Edward II of England. England was devastated in the war, losing even more of their remaining land in the French region of Gascony.

Recovery of land lost in this conflict became a focus in French-English relations, and also drove the support of Edward II into the ground. In 1327, Edward II was deposed, and replaced by Edward of Windsor (now King Edward III). A year after Edward III ascended to the English throne, Charles IV of France died, leaving only one female child. Edward III was nephew to the late French King, and by feudal law, rightful heir to the French throne.

The French nobility were obviously against the idea of being ruled by an English king. Edward's mother, Isabella, was already held in low regard for her behaviour, so the French searched for another solution. The fourth son of Phillip III of France was Charles of Valois, who had died in 1325. His son, Phillip of Valois, was sworn in as King Phillip VI of France.

The next post will involve the declaration of war in 1337.

Monday, 26 March 2012

Question one

The first question for my Joan of Arc project is "What was France like during this period of time?"

Joan of Arc was famous for her role in the Hundred Year's War, so I'm going to begin by researching the war. http://www.middle-ages.org.uk and Wikipedia say that the Hundred Years War was actually a series of conflicts fought almost entirely in France, between England and France (with Burgundy later becoming an entity of its own). It lasted from 1337 to 1453 (117 years), but was not continuous fighting, instead a series of wars, punctuated by a number of unsuccessful peace treaties. To understand why the war began, it is important to note the relationship England and France had in the centuries before. After the invasion of England in 1066, William I of England (also known as William the Conqueror, William, Duke of Normandy, and William the Bastard." meant that the king of England was a French duke who had to pledge allegience to the king of France. A king doing such to another king was considered quite embarrassing and humiliating. For a while, since the kings of England were also tied to the Duke of Normandy, there was a period where the king(s) of England owned more land in France than the king of France did, despite the English king still pledging allegiance to a French king with less power in France.

The next post will show what sparked off the Hundred Year's war in the early 14th century.

First Post

Since my project is on Joan of Arc, who I know as a French peasant during the Hundred Year's War, who claimed to have seen god, was then burned at the stake for being a witch, and I think became a saint. This is all I know so far, so to begin with, I am going to research the Hundred Year's War, and see what France was like at the time.

The beginning of this blog.

Hello readers, or probably just reader, this is the blog where I will be doing my findings on Joan of Arc, one of history's most influential teenagers. Stick around and I'll post my findings soon.