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Guillaume Erard: Difference between revisions

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imported>Darman36
Figure we could have a trial page, since it's historical, has WP page, and is covered in book. Not quite sure if execution is truly an auto-da-fé
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{{Era|Individuals}}
{{Era|Individuals}}
'''Guillaume Erard''' was a priest that took part in the trial of [[Jeanne d'Arc]], being the one responsible for her forced abjuration.
'''Guillaume Erard''' was a [[priest]] who took part in the [[trial of Jeanne d'Arc]] and was responsible for Jeanne's forced {{Wiki|abjuration}}.


==Biography==
==Biography==
On 24 May 1431, Erard prefaced Jeanne's sentencing with a sermon where he railed against both Jeanne and [[Charles VII of France]] calling them heretics, among other insults. Erard had a fellow clergy member hand Jeanne a letter of abjuration—a statement forcing her to swear never to cut her hair short, or don men’s clothing, or take up arms again— in return, she would be taken into custody of the church. When Jeanne asked that the clerks read the document out loud for her, Erard yelled at her, threatening her with immediate execution by fire, though the young clergyman that had handed her the letter ignored the priest and read it for Jeanne.<ref name = "Chapter 32">''[[Assassin's Creed: Heresy]]'' – Chapter 32</ref>
On 24 May 1431, Erard prefaced Jeanne's sentencing with a sermon where he railed against both Jeanne and [[Charles VII of France]] calling them heretics, among other insults. Erard had a fellow clergy member hand Jeanne a letter of abjuration—a statement forcing her to swear never to cut her hair short, don men’s clothing, or take up arms again—in return for her surrendering into the church's custody. When Jeanne asked that the clerks read the document out loud for her, Erard yelled at her, threatening her with immediate {{Wiki|Death by burning|execution by fire}}, though the young clergyman that had handed her the letter ignored the priest and read it for Jeanne.<ref name = "Chapter 32">''[[Assassin's Creed: Heresy]]'' – Chapter 32</ref>


==Appearances==
==Appearances==

Revision as of 02:35, 6 August 2023

Guillaume Erard was a priest who took part in the trial of Jeanne d'Arc and was responsible for Jeanne's forced abjuration.

Biography

On 24 May 1431, Erard prefaced Jeanne's sentencing with a sermon where he railed against both Jeanne and Charles VII of France calling them heretics, among other insults. Erard had a fellow clergy member hand Jeanne a letter of abjuration—a statement forcing her to swear never to cut her hair short, don men’s clothing, or take up arms again—in return for her surrendering into the church's custody. When Jeanne asked that the clerks read the document out loud for her, Erard yelled at her, threatening her with immediate execution by fire, though the young clergyman that had handed her the letter ignored the priest and read it for Jeanne.[1]

Appearances

References

  1. Assassin's Creed: Heresy – Chapter 32