Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Troubles of the 14th Century - Coggle Diagram
Troubles of the 14th Century
Joan of Arc
In 1429 Joan led the French army into a battle. The battle was hard-fought from both sides. The french finally retreated.
When Joan was 13 she began to have visions and hear what she believed was the voices of the saints. They urged her to drive the English out of France
When Joan was 13 she began to have visions and hear what she believed was the voices of the saints. They urged her to drive the English out of France
In 1429 a peasant girl named Joan of Arc felt moved by God to rescue France from the English.
Suddenly, Joan and a few soldiers charged back toward the fort, having the entire French army storm after her. Joan won that battle and led her army to the path of victory
1420 the french and English signing a treaty that Henry V would inherit France
1430 Joan was captured by the Burgundies. they took her to England where the English then handed her over to the church.
Joan stood trial, the church condemned her as a witch and heretic because of her claim to hear voices. Joan was burned at the stake on May 30, 1431
Nationalism
What motivations might the English have had for burning Joan of Arc?
The impact of the Hundred Years War
The war finally ended in 1453 each side experiencing major changes.
Feeling of nationalism emerged in England and France. People thought of their king as a national leader, fighting for the glory of the country, he was not just a simple feudal lord.
Historians consider the end of the war (1453) as the end of the middle ages
The power and prestige of the French monarch increased.
The English suffered a period of internal turmoil known as the War of the Roses, in which two noble houses fought for the throne.
The twin pillars of the medieval world, religious devotion and the code of chivalry, both crumbled. The Age of Faith died a slow death. This death was caused by the Great Schism, the scandalous display of wealth by the Church, and the discrediting of the Church during the plague.
War and Leadership
What would have happen if the war never started?
The Hundred Years' War
England and France battled with each other on French soil for just over a century. which marched the end of medieval Europe’s society.
When the last Capetian king died without a successor, England’s Edward III, as grandson of Philip IV, claimed the right to the French throne.
The war that Edward III launched for that throne continued on and off from 1337 to 1453.
between 1421 and 1453, the French rallied and drove the English out of France entirely, except for the port city of Calais.
The War changed the style of warfare in Europe some still operating under medieval ideals of chivalry. They looked with contempt on the common foot soldiers and archers who fought alongside them. This contempt would change as the longbow changed warfare.
change
why did the war happen