The d'Arcs were relatively wealthy, with a house—modest by modern standards, but the only stone house in the town at the time—that is now a museum (shown here). Their children did not have opportunities to learn to read and write, but the family had strong Catholic values that would form their children's upbringing. It is their second daughter that we want to focus on.
Her name was Jeanne, and she would refer to herself later as Jeanne la Pucelle ("Jean/Joan the Maiden"). As a child she performed the usual household chores: spinning, looking after livestock. Her father claimed to have dreams that his younger daughter was going to go to war. This disturbed him so much that he told his sons to guard against this by drowning her if it looked like his dreams proved prophetic. Attempts to marry Joan off failed due to her obstinacy.
In 1425, Jeanne says, a figure she identified as St. Michael appeared to her in the garden. She started having visions regularly, especially when she heard the church bells rung (in the illustration above, the church is the building in the distance to the right). Its. Margaret and Catherine also appeared (although which Margaret and which Catherine were never made clear). Saints Margaret of Antioch and Catherine of Alexandria were known as virgins who had powerful enemies and were martyred for their beliefs.
In the French countryside at the time, a prophecy circulated based on the statements of Marie Robine of Avignon (died 1399), a French mystic who said an "armed virgin" would save France. In 1428, she went to the nearby town of Vaucouleurs where soldiers were garrisoned and asked the commander to escort her to the Dauphin, Charles. The commander, Robert de Baudricourt, sent her back home. The following year, Burgundian forces hostile to the Dauphin raided Domrémy, burned the crops, stole the cattle, and destroyed houses (the d'arc's stone house survived). Jeanne went back to Vaucoleurs and was again rebuffed by the commander, but two of the garrison's soldiers were intrigued by her claims and offered their support.
News of her claims of visions and desire to help the Dauphin had spread, and the Duke of Lorraine, Charles II, summoned her. He was ill, and wondered if she had some supernatural ability that could help cure him. Her only comment to him as that he had sinned by living with a mistress.
Meanwhile, English forces were encroaching more and more. Baudricourt agreed to meet with Jeanne for a third time, urged by the two soldiers, Jean de Metz and Bertrand de Poulengy. She was given an escort of six soldiers to see the Dauphin. For the journey, she borrowed men's clothing to wear. For the rest of her life she dressed as a man.
She reached the Dauphin in late February or early March 1429, and the story will continue tomorrow.