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  1. Cette évocation de l'évêque Pierre Cauchon est aussi une occasion, pour l'auteur, d'aborder longuement le milieu universitaire parisien, et donc son fonctionnement, sa place, son implication et son rôle dans la capitale et le royaume en général, au prétexte que, son personnage a fréquenté ce milieu, et explique-t-il, pense souhaitable de nous imprégner pleinement de l'ambiance qu'a ...

  2. Pierre Cauchon: Comment on devient le juge de Jeanne d'Arc : Favier, Jean: Amazon.de: Bücher Zum Hauptinhalt wechseln.de. Lieferung an Kassel 34117 ...

  3. Zitierweise Cauchon, Pierre, Indexeintrag: Deutsche Biographie, https://www.deutsche-biographie.de/pnd118934821.html [30.05.2024].

  4. Minutes, that Pierre Cauchon deliberately ordered Courcelles to falsify the Latin record in order to blacken the memory of the victim are unsubstantiated. (9-10) Hobbins prefers to work with the official Latin compilation because it includes many more documents than the French Minutes: numerous letters, consultations, opinions of individual ...

  5. Cauchon works with Warwick, promising him that the Church will turn over Joan to the English if she is captured. Cauchon’s desire to save Joan’s soul is complicated by the fact that her direct communication with God threatens the Church’s institutional power; in other words, Cauchon has ulterior motives for wanting Joan captured and tried: on the one hand, he sincerely wants to save her ...

  6. This trail, which took place before an English-backed church court in Rouen, France in the first half of the year 1431 was, in the minds of many people, one of the most significant and moving trials ever conducted in human history. January 9, 1431, opened in Rouen before a church tribunal chaired by the Bishop of Beauvais, Pierre Cauchon, the ...

  7. Saint Joan of Arc by Bishop Pierre Cauchon on 30 May 1431 (even though he allowed her Holy Communion before her immolation). She was fully reconciled to the Catholic Church at her Trial of Nullification in 1456. Antipope Felix V and his followers by Pope Eugene IV at the Council of Florence on 23 March 1440.