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Some Related Sentences

1429 and Joan
* 1429Joan of Arc arrives to relieve the Siege of Orleans.
Written in 1429, The Tale of Joan of Arc celebrates the appearance of a woman military leader who, according to de Pizan, vindicated and rewarded all women ’ s efforts to defend their own sex.
* 1429Hundred Years ' War: Joan of Arc leads the French army in their capture of the city and the English commander, William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk in the second day of the Battle of Jargeau.
* 1429 – French forces under the leadership of Joan of Arc defeat the main English army under Sir John Fastolf at the Battle of Patay.
* 1429Hundred Years ' war-Charles VII of France is crowned the King of France in the Reims Cathedral after a successful campaign by Joan of Arc
* 1429Joan of Arc ends the Siege of Orléans, pulling an arrow from her own shoulder and returning, wounded, to lead the final charge.
* 1429Joan of Arc unsuccessfully besieges La Charité.
* 1429Joan of Arc liberates Saint-Pierre-le-Moûtier.
The Treaty of Troyes ( 1420 ) ceded it to the English, who had made a futile attempt to take it by siege in 1360 ; but French patriots expelled them on the approach of Joan of Arc, who in 1429 had Charles VII consecrated in the cathedral.
* Joan of Arc's first letter to Reims — translation by Allen Williamson of the letter dictated by Joan of Arc to the city of Reims on August 5, 1429.
During this interval ( 1429 ) Joan of Arc was subjected to a formal inquest in the town.
Escorted by Baudricourt, Joan arrived in Chinon on March 6, 1429, and met with the skeptical La Trémoille.
They reached Rheims the next day and the Dauphin Charles, with Joan at his side, was finally consecrated as King Charles VII of France on July 17, 1429.
In 1429, Joan of Arc came here to acknowledge him.
This was the site of the battle on 8 May 1429 which allowed Joan of Arc to enter and liberate the city from the Plantagenets during the Hundred Years ' War, with the help of the royal generals Dunois and Florent d ' Illiers.
He was, however, famously crowned in Reims in 1429 through Joan of Arc's effort to free France from the English.
In 1429, Saint Joan of Arc had a historic meeting with the future King of France Charles VII at Chinon.
The residence of several French kings, it is also the place where Joan of Arc went in 1429 to be blessed by the Archbishop of Reims before departing with her army to drive the English from Orléans.
* Joan of Arc's Letter to Clermont-Ferrand – Translation by Allen Williamson of an entry concerning Joan of Arc's letter to this city on 7 November 1429.
The intervention of Joan of Arc, culminating in Charles ' royal consecration at Reims in 1429, reinvigorated the Valois ' will to assert their rule to the whole of France.
In 1429, Joan of Arc made Blois her base of operations for the relief of Orléans.
The high watermark of Plantagenet hegemony in France was reversed when the Dauphin, afterwards Charles VII, and Joan of Arc recovered the town of Troyes in 1429.

1429 and Arc
* Ditié de Jehanne d ' Arc ( 1429 )
East along the rue de Rivoli, at the Place des Pyramides, is the gilded statue of Joan of Arc situated close to where she was wounded at the Saint-Honoré Gate in her unsuccessful attack on English-held Paris on September 8, 1429.
* Joan of Arc's letter to Tournai — English translation ( by Allen Williamson ) of this letter dictated by Joan of Arc on June 25, 1429.
When that city was relieved by Joan of Arc in 1429, he managed a retreat to Jargeau where he was forced to surrender on 12 June.
" The nighte before that he was yolden himself up in surrender to the Franco-Scottish forces of Joan of Arc on 12 June 1429 he laye in bed with a Nonne whom he toke oute of holy profession and defouled, whose name was Malyne de Cay, by whom he gate a daughter, now married to Stonard of Oxonfordshire ".
Cauchon returned to his diocese with the deaths of Charles VI and Henry V. He departed from a visit to Rheims in 1429 when Joan of Arc and the French army approached for the coronation of Charles VII.

1429 and Siege
The Siege of Orléans ( 1428 – 1429 ) marked a turning point in the Hundred Years ' War between France and England.
Siege of Orleans, 1429.
In April 1429, not long after his release, the duke heard about Joan of Arc, who had come to Charles VII at Chinon, promising to liberate France from the English, asking that he send her with an army to lift the Siege of Orléans.

1429 and Orléans
He became co-commander of the English forces at the siege of Orléans ( 1429 ), after the death of Thomas Montacute, 4th Earl of Salisbury.
After a visit to England in 1428, he returned to the war, and on 12 February 1429 when in charge of the convoy for the English army before Orléans defeated the French and Scots at the Battle of the Herrings.
The Battle of the Herrings was a military action near the town of Rouvray in France, just north of Orléans, which took place on 12 February 1429 during the siege of Orléans.
In Scene 3 ( 29 April 1429 ), Dunois and his page are waiting for the wind to turn so that he and his forces can lay siege to Orléans.
De Brosse was among the French leaders who attempted to repel the English advance, however they failed, and in 1429 the English arrived at Orléans.
John Carmichael was elected bishop of Orléans in 1426, and was one of the 6 bishops to attend the coronation of the Dauphin as Charles VII in 1429 at Rheims.

1429 and Hundred
* 1429Hundred Years ' War: start of the Battle of Jargeau.
* Battle of Patay ( June 18, 1429 ): French heavy cavalry charges an English army, for the first time defeating the English longbowmen in a direct confrontation, marking a turning point in the Hundred Years ' War.
The rejection of this proposal began the third part of the Hundred Years ' War, the Lancastrian War ( 1415 – 1429 ).
The Battle of Patay ( 18 June 1429 ) was the culminating engagement of the Loire Campaign of the Hundred Years ' War between the French and English in north-central France.

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