Have Archeologists Found Joan of Arc's Lost Remains? | Myth Hunters

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 30 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @linkster5564
    @linkster5564 5 месяцев назад +533

    Smelling bones to identify the undertones to see if they were burnt because it could be a saint from almost 600 years ago is the most French thing they could have done.

    • @tonymoto1188
      @tonymoto1188 3 месяца назад +13

      No, making a stock from them is.

    • @davidnelson7786
      @davidnelson7786 2 месяца назад

      🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤦‍♂️

    • @englishatheart
      @englishatheart 2 месяца назад +1

      @@tonymoto1188 Mmm, human bone broth.

    • @laurelgirard8475
      @laurelgirard8475 Месяц назад +3

      Wouldn’t a mass spectrometer detect residual chemicals from a fire? Seems more accurate than sniffing the bones.

    • @corporateturtle6005
      @corporateturtle6005 Месяц назад +6

      Yeah that part of the vid made me completely disregard the rest of it. Get a real scientist in there instead of that french court jester pretending to be one.

  • @BigSteve_Gaming187
    @BigSteve_Gaming187 7 месяцев назад +604

    Yes, it was a bit disappointing. However, I have always preached to my daughter that I'd rather be disappointed with the truth than to live under a false assumption of a lie.

    • @Kev_Cos
      @Kev_Cos 7 месяцев назад +24

      That's a good saying. Tbh I knew it wasn't going to be a good outcome, we would already know if her remains were true and found. It still reveals an interesting outcome hiding its own little detective story, why did they say it was Joan's remains etc

    • @jamesanonymous2343
      @jamesanonymous2343 7 месяцев назад

      > HOW DO YOU KNOW THE DIFFERENCE,,,,CHECK WITH RUclips ???????

    • @BigSteve_Gaming187
      @BigSteve_Gaming187 7 месяцев назад +12

      @@jamesanonymous2343 truth tends to reveal itself over a period of time to those who pay attention.

    • @rhuephus
      @rhuephus 7 месяцев назад

      try telling that to all of tRUMP's scarecrow followers

    • @helenetrstrup4817
      @helenetrstrup4817 4 месяца назад +4

      I live the same way. No matter how much a truth may hurt, it never hurts more than the betrayal you feel after something has been revealed to be a lie.
      The truth in a situation like this can be equally fascinating. Because who was the mummy these remains belonged to? What happened to it and where is it now?

  • @elainebrooksbank5281
    @elainebrooksbank5281 7 месяцев назад +762

    Whether she was delusional or not she believed she heard voices and could inspire others by her determination to follow the instructions of those voices. There must have been something which convinced the dauphin to let a 16 year old girl, with no military experience, to lead his army to break the siege at Orleans -which none of his previous commanders had managed to do.
    Without her its highly unlikely that he would ever have succeeded as Charles VII - and he shows his gratitude for her efforts in gaining him the throne by abandoning her to a truly horrific fate.

    • @susanohnhaus611
      @susanohnhaus611 7 месяцев назад +39

      Her hearing voices and music are typical of auditory epilepsy. With the possible addition of schizophrenia. Also a brain tumour could trigger these kinds of hallucinations. Most brain tumours occur in children fifteen and younger or the elderly. Therefore she was at the right age since reports are that she had experienced these auditory symptoms from a young age. In the seventies a physician reviewing the notes of her pre-immolation exam (because if she were pregnant she couldn't be executed) felt that she was actually a male. That went over about as well as any scientific review of her eymptoms. And why anybody could be confused as to who would fake her relics-it was big business back then.

    • @senyongaeric1948
      @senyongaeric1948 7 месяцев назад +41

      Typical of all leaders u do the dirty work but u shouldn't grow bigger than I ur master lest u bring me down as well.. look up the King of France vs Teh Knights Templar

    • @phillipdavies6548
      @phillipdavies6548 7 месяцев назад

      Not that unusual for world leaders to be dumb enough to believe a 16 year old girl. After all Greta Thunberg managed to fool a lot of adults didn't she?

    • @elainebrooksbank5281
      @elainebrooksbank5281 7 месяцев назад +35

      @@senyongaeric1948 Philip IV was in debt to the Knights Templar - he owed them a fortune. Pope Clement was pro-French and had moved the papacy to Avignon and, with the demise of the crusades, there was no need for a special military arm to both fight and protect pilgrims. Then there was the vast wealth of the Templars which Philip IV couldn’t resist.
      So Philip sent orders that all Templar groups should be arrested simultaneously around the world - some complied, some didn’t. Edward II of England obeyed his father in law as far as getting his hands on the loot - but didn’t believe the bizarre charges against them so didn’t impose the same horrendous treatment as was meted out to Templars in France.
      So 1312 saw the Templars destroyed - without Philip getting his hands on the loot which had been spirited away - Grand Master Jacque de Molay issued a curse as he was about to be burnt which saw both Philip IV and Pope Clement dead within the year and we were left with the superstition about unlucky Friday 13th.

    • @emmitstewart1921
      @emmitstewart1921 7 месяцев назад +39

      @@susanohnhaus611If she was delusional, which I am prepared to believe, it is remarkable what she actually achieved. There has to be more to the story. How was a schizophrenic young girl able to assemble and effectively lead a medieval army on a victorious campaign?

  • @sarahleonard7309
    @sarahleonard7309 7 месяцев назад +357

    I like the reaction of the perfume tester. "I smell vanilla. I swear I smell vanilla. Why do I smell vanilla? Is it OK that I smell vanilla?" Yes. The fact that it doesn't support our initial hypothesis is fine. Data is data. We prefer honesty. Thank you.

    • @ferea_896
      @ferea_896 7 месяцев назад

      19:32 the best part is a couple seconds before that point. Where he smells/ detects a “particular” smell. Evidence that the 600 year old bones are “old” in his words. That part was incredible. 😂, they are actually getting out of topics and it does banalise scientific work in a world where more and more people each day see it as something that anybody without any particular knowledge can do. To put that guy to determine something like that with his nose would only strengthen the Tiktok university argument, that science is a lie and all that. Very poor taste for a scientist to do such a thing

    • @laurielovett8849
      @laurielovett8849 7 месяцев назад

      @@ferea_896 I think perhaps he was trying to con us,because some preserved saints bodies have the odour of sanctity or so we are told,they smell of some drug or poison. I just can't recall its name I'm 90 years old,same poison as in a peach stone,can anyone Help! Oh just thought of it Cyanide. Some saints incorruptible bodies smell of cyanide, or so we are told

    • @dawnlovedobermans
      @dawnlovedobermans 7 месяцев назад +27

      I read “if you torture the results enough, they will confess”, meaning you can make the results agree with your hypothesis if you manipulate it enough. I’m so happy this man was true to the actual results!

    • @megb7715
      @megb7715 5 месяцев назад +9

      Trying to come to terms that the human remains smell tasty 😂

    • @StephanieArkHogarth
      @StephanieArkHogarth 4 месяца назад

      ..and HIS name is "Jean-Michael". It would be wise to check the ENERGETIC SIGNATURE, because this is where you will find the everlasting evidence. JoA is an ET , and I have the rest of the story. ❤

  • @stevengreenland8492
    @stevengreenland8492 7 месяцев назад +294

    From what I have read Joan's remains were burnt three times. After the first time, her remains were collected and then burnt a second time. The ashes were then collected, sieved and any fragments of bone or teeth were smashed and ground up before being dumped into the river Seine so there could be no remains left that could be used as relics in the future.

    • @disideratum
      @disideratum 7 месяцев назад +66

      After the first immolation of Saint Joan by the Burgundian Church, her heart remained unburned, incorruptible. A miracle. And yet they continued to destroy what was left. They knew already it was a holy relic and still destroyed it. Pure evil. Disgraceful.

    • @kathleenmurray3065
      @kathleenmurray3065 7 месяцев назад

      @@disideratum The French Revolution was also evil. sending children, families including their dogs to the guillotine. Insanity.

    • @shane99ca
      @shane99ca 7 месяцев назад +72

      Joan's trial was one of the dirtiest and most corrupt in European history. It was so egregious that once the war was over, in 1453, the Church nullified it within two years. The same Church that took nearly 400 years to apologize for what it had done to Galileo.
      Full disclosure: I'm a member of that Church, and am quite prepared to acknowledge its mistakes. Over the course of 2,000 years, they are inevitable and many. But I do ask that people also remember the 2,000 years of charity hospitals, schools, and caring for the poor. Indeed, the Dickensian poor did not really exist in England until after the monasteries were dissolved and no one else stepped up to care for them.

    • @disideratum
      @disideratum 7 месяцев назад +18

      @@shane99ca Corrupt individuals can't ruin the goodness of the Church. Those few went against the principles of those they were supposed to be in service of and ultimately Christ Himself.

    • @shane99ca
      @shane99ca 7 месяцев назад +7

      @@disideratum Isn't that essentially what I said in my second paragraph?

  • @allangibson8494
    @allangibson8494 7 месяцев назад +187

    Being burned at the stake doesn’t leave much in the way of remains if done properly. The charred bones are very fragile and crumble.

    • @pippah447
      @pippah447 7 месяцев назад +20

      Ah, but these are 'holy' bones! 😉

    • @judithgockel1001
      @judithgockel1001 7 месяцев назад +10

      Like anything else, how well anything gets done depends on who, how, where, and what is invested for 100% completion. Perhaps they ran out of wood.

    • @Allannah_Of_Rome
      @Allannah_Of_Rome 7 месяцев назад +6

      Everything back then was scooped up, locked up in a box with a cross engraved on it and considered holy!... 😂

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 7 месяцев назад +13

      @@Allannah_Of_Rome Except she was burned as a heretic…

    • @judithgockel1001
      @judithgockel1001 7 месяцев назад +16

      @@allangibson8494 - and later declared a saint by the same organization.

  • @alanle1471
    @alanle1471 7 месяцев назад +342

    Clearly Not the physical remains of Joan of Arc , but 600 years later her memory burns bright in the minds of millions of French people.

    • @ocumstweezers
      @ocumstweezers 7 месяцев назад +10

      Everyone loves Joan of Arc, but that french soldiers were willing to serve under her command speaks volumes about the french people.

    • @seankennedy1377
      @seankennedy1377 7 месяцев назад +12

      And all Christians!

    • @mattx9260
      @mattx9260 7 месяцев назад +21

      @@seankennedy1377 much like Jesus, religious people killed Joan.

    • @izzure
      @izzure 7 месяцев назад

      @@ocumstweezers u have really 0 understanding of history. that was very common back in the 1400s life expectancy wasnt much longer than 30 back then. by 16 most peasants were family leaders military leaders king councils owners of vast lands lords and everything else. this wasnt exclusive to french.

    • @nowirehangers2815
      @nowirehangers2815 6 месяцев назад

      @@mattx9260religious people kill everyone

  • @randomvintagefilm273
    @randomvintagefilm273 7 месяцев назад +1347

    The fact she knew she would be burned at the stake and still admitted to the voices makes me believe she was certain who they were from. Poor girl, what a horrible thing to do to a young woman. Monsters!

    • @VynylFantasy
      @VynylFantasy 7 месяцев назад +4

      Makes me certain she was mentally ill. Today she would have been sectioned. put into a facility where they use plastic forks and you visit once a month. Absolute nutter. She knew nothing about war or strategy. She almost got herself killed on several occasions due to just being unaware of her surroundings and carelessness.

    • @frompapertopeoplepodcast4889
      @frompapertopeoplepodcast4889 7 месяцев назад +219

      Or that she truly believed in what she experienced. But she was likely schizophrenic according to forensic psychology.

    • @willgibbons1733
      @willgibbons1733 7 месяцев назад

      She was a witch, Jesus. What are you gunna do? Let her roam at will?

    • @dark_fire_ice
      @dark_fire_ice 7 месяцев назад +151

      ​@@frompapertopeoplepodcast4889I was about to say that. And as a schizophrenic myself, I understand that level of conviction. I'm just very fortunate I've managed to keep it, well managed

    • @TJ-cn9wq
      @TJ-cn9wq 7 месяцев назад

      largest genocide EVER - was not Jews, Native Americans, - BUT females - look into it Donna Reed's Documentary - The Burning Times - this genocide lasted for centuries - sometimes every female in a village was killed - including baby girls- i guess it isn't any different today - think about all the baby Chinese girls

  • @dianadelahaye7660
    @dianadelahaye7660 7 месяцев назад +156

    Very informative, thank you. I did not know she had been betrayed by her country and the Church. Very sad considering her devotion and courage for France.

    • @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970
      @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970 7 месяцев назад +3

      how did you not know that? you seem to be from an english speaking country, so you must have gone to school?

    • @PeachysMom
      @PeachysMom 7 месяцев назад +16

      @@esmeraldaweatherwaxe970I went to catholic high school and we didn’t learn much about her, or the stories of many other saints. It’s fine with me because I’m not religious, so I’m glad I learned about her later on my own, in a historical context.

    • @pippah447
      @pippah447 7 месяцев назад +12

      @@PeachysMom Joan is important as an example of how the Church treats women who are folk heroes... the Patriarchy eh? ☹

    • @Allannah_Of_Rome
      @Allannah_Of_Rome 7 месяцев назад +1

      You gotta learn somewhere! 😊

    • @RobertStewart-i3m
      @RobertStewart-i3m 7 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@pippah447 Just stop with the modern feminist injections. St Joan was better than all of us.

  • @tombearclaw
    @tombearclaw 7 месяцев назад +131

    The fact that the bones were in a museum not a church reliquary suggests that the church did not really accept them as Joan of Arc’s when they were first found

    • @rogwarrior1018
      @rogwarrior1018 6 месяцев назад

      Yes but the Church was part of putting her to the stake to be burned so they wouldn't want them if they were actually hers.

    • @julicooke4266
      @julicooke4266 6 месяцев назад +8

      there was a you tube article on joan's bones; turned out to be parts of an egyptian mummy and what bones there were were so burned no dna could be extraced

    • @headerahelix
      @headerahelix 4 месяца назад

      I doubt a large majority of the Catholic church's relics are authentic so I wouldn't trust them or their judgement on anything at all.

    • @dolinaj1
      @dolinaj1 4 месяца назад

      She was betrayed by France, Britain, and the omnipresent Church.

    • @joestitz239
      @joestitz239 3 месяца назад

      I think the church passing down its own info over centuries, shows they endured in their own. That no one then saved anything from Joan, the people even if believed in her and there would have been at least one there to witness it, to report back to his/her discreet needtoknow boss that she was gone. Were perhaps finding it too risky to salvage A piece left, or were led to believe firmly by the three fires that nothing of substance was left to bring back. But damn it I bet there is a fragment somewhere. Perhaps in the ground close by, if her torso did explode, they wouldn't have swept up all of it. But we don't have a bone detector do we ? (Like we do for metal.)
      But if hinted remains thrown in river? Then today dredge down in sentiment ? But why not too ?? :)
      such a far cry to pursue.?
      The church back then were so cowardly closed minded-more fearful of their own fellow man, than they were fearful/respectful to God n truth. Makes you wonder how they themselves (priests-carninal-bishops back then didn't hear-- anything or no one themselves, when they wanted to believe in a higher authority..
      Hmm I would have chosen a woman too to speak to in spirit :) those above know who will listen and who is ____ < spiritually dead to begin with.
      Joan was alive- even before she knew it herself!
      Amen

  • @ArtbyKatina
    @ArtbyKatina 7 месяцев назад +66

    An exceptional presentation, demonstrating the importance in the search for truth.

    • @Fungfetti
      @Fungfetti 4 месяца назад +3

      Even if it's not what they were hoping it was, it was still really impressive and amazing, massive props to the dedication he had to find the truth

  • @bobbyhendley3084
    @bobbyhendley3084 7 месяцев назад +25

    Fascinating! And thank you for including all the details behind the scientific processes.

  • @FairbrookWingates
    @FairbrookWingates 5 месяцев назад +19

    Something calling itself "myth hunters" that 1) gives a clear final answer and 2) it's backed up by science and doesn't match the initial hypothesis. Amazing! Kudos!

  • @AK5of8
    @AK5of8 7 месяцев назад +208

    The youngest person to lead a continental army to victory!
    “I am not afraid. God is with me. I was made for this!”

    • @SpaceCattttt
      @SpaceCattttt 7 месяцев назад

      Or.....yet another example of an idiot who claimed to know the will of a made-up fairytale character, and used this certainty to justify
      the slaughter of thousands...

    • @MH-tn3pp
      @MH-tn3pp 5 месяцев назад

      Born royal from a love bed. The daughter of the Queen and her lover and brother of the King. D’Orleans was his name. Hers too. Ops your eyes, in France 🇫🇷 we know the truth.

    • @AK5of8
      @AK5of8 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@MH-tn3pp Well in America we don’t care about “royal blood” and we certainly don’t hold anything for or against the child of a “love bed.” She is still the youngest person to lead a European army to victory. She’s a credit to France.

    • @mywifesboyfriend5558
      @mywifesboyfriend5558 5 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@AK5of8Here in America, we definitely care about royal blood. Our politicans always come from rich families and dynasties.
      We are a monarchy under a different name.
      No replies will be seen

    • @dolinaj1
      @dolinaj1 4 месяца назад

      Hmm.

  • @amandapittar9398
    @amandapittar9398 7 месяцев назад +385

    A truely extraordinary young woman who was destroyed by men for being inconvenient. What’s really extraordinary is that she is remembered and they are all forgotten. The shame and disappointment are theirs, her name and story live centuries after her death.

    • @phillipdavies6548
      @phillipdavies6548 7 месяцев назад

      Not for the first time a military commander was abandoned after successfully winning a war. Being that she was a female has nothing to do with it. Kings have done this since forever when they think someone may be a future contender and a threat to them whether that person was male or female is irrelevant. So stop trying to turn this into a man hating woman victim scenario

    • @drfill9210
      @drfill9210 7 месяцев назад +4

      I'm trying to figure out if this is a good or bad thing

    • @codename495
      @codename495 7 месяцев назад +37

      This isn’t a patriarchy thing. Stop trying to make everything a feminist manifesto. She was likely a mentallybill young woman who did remarkable things and then died for them.

    • @Michelle-hh5de
      @Michelle-hh5de 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@codename495You must be a man to think that. History shows that her being female - dressing as a male and doing male things is what made it possible and easier for them to say it was Satan she was hearing.

    • @codasm
      @codasm 7 месяцев назад +3

      Nah, she was either crazy or a liar

  • @PerfectlyDeranged
    @PerfectlyDeranged 5 месяцев назад +47

    Regardless of the voices or her conviction of god, she was just a 16 year old girl who lead battle valiantly and successfully. Shes a true hero and a female warrior ❤

    • @CherylMcAnally-b2w
      @CherylMcAnally-b2w 4 месяца назад +1

      Most definitely

    • @MrJerryleyva
      @MrJerryleyva 4 месяца назад

      That's the real reason she was murdered. The Catholic Church has always been intensely misogynistic and still is. A good example is the lie they perpetrated about Mary Magdalene being a "repentant" prostitute when in actuality she was one of the persons who funded the Jesus movement. That didn't sit well with the Catholic powers that be so they made up a disgusting lie which proved their misogyny.

    • @RayB1656
      @RayB1656 4 месяца назад +2

      @PerfectlyDeranged / how a ''16 year old girl'' could have on a 40 lbs full armor, with steel chest place and full helmet, not including sword, shield, lance and a small war axe and to control a huge Medieval war horse on a battlefield, where it took a young aristocratic man, in good shape, from 5 to 7 years of training ! She started her training at 11 ?
      Furthermore, Jehanne was in Tull, Holy Germanic Empire, in 1428, before she left for France, to cancel a marriage proposal which was accepted by her father,
      a few years before . She was a 20 year old woman. (Bishop of Metz, said the fiancé was not happy ).
      The latin document Rebus gesti Francorum mentioned that Jehanne arrived in Chinon with Yolande d'Anjou to meet the Dauphin in February 1429, she was then between 21 and 22 !

  • @twelvewingproductions7508
    @twelvewingproductions7508 7 месяцев назад +30

    A wonderful presentation. Showing the importance of honesty and integrity above all. This turned from the remains of St. Joan to something more important. A human story. A story of why belief is sometimes more important than truth.. but those moments are always fleeting.
    In the end all that is really important is that we find how intertwined we are with our real history. And how important the truth is.

  • @bethdumont9020
    @bethdumont9020 6 месяцев назад +8

    I've been to Rouen and saw the site of Jeanne d'Arc's burning.
    My still unanswered question is just how those bones get from Rouen to Paris to begin with.

    • @maryearll3359
      @maryearll3359 6 месяцев назад +4

      Horses ? Nothing too complicated here.

    • @bethdumont9020
      @bethdumont9020 6 месяцев назад

      @maryearll3359 duh! Chain of custody is what I'm talking about - the people/ownership pathway between Rouen and the apothecary (chemist) in Paris in whose attic they were "found". That just wasn't even eluded/alluded to in any way.
      Yes - duh, absence of such paperwork would be a sure sign of a fake. BUT in huge social conflicts - like, oh, I dunno - a Revolution - well, such paperwork has a habit of becoming lost. So the absence of such paperwork isn't necessarily a sign that something's not the real McCoy.

  • @andreiivantsov5366
    @andreiivantsov5366 7 месяцев назад +41

    There is a mistake at 8:46 min. of this video where a picture of Charles VII is mistakenly called Charles VI and Charles VIII portrait is given as the Charles VII (the Dophine).

  • @diabolicaldebbie
    @diabolicaldebbie 7 месяцев назад +49

    It's obvious the king just used Joan of Arc and then set her up. He wanted to keep all the power, glory and credit for himself.

    • @ianmayes8072
      @ianmayes8072 6 месяцев назад +6

      That is what leaders do, be they kings or presidents!

    • @annastinehammersdottir1290
      @annastinehammersdottir1290 5 месяцев назад +2

      Kings are in it for themselves, always.

    • @elizabethhannah4704
      @elizabethhannah4704 4 месяца назад +5

      Nothing, absolutely Nothing has changed from that time to this???? The lust for Power, Control and the Rule of the Ego is ever-fleeting. THIS we are here to transcend. IMO.

    • @audreyrose_1979
      @audreyrose_1979 21 день назад

      why im not surprised… men tsk tsk

  • @HelenTudor-Douglas
    @HelenTudor-Douglas 7 месяцев назад +151

    The biggest Joan of Arc irony is the Lovely Statue of her that was in Notre Dame in Paris. The Statue was to the far right side of the Altar, while a Saint Denis Statue was on the opposite side. During the horrific burning of Notre Dame on April 15, 2019, the wooden spire in flames crashed through the church ceiling & destroyed the Joan of Arc Statue with fire. Joan of Arc died by fire and her statue, in what should be the safest place possible inside of Notre Dame in Paris, was also completely burned. Ironic, and completely Creepy.

    • @Edam-Channel
      @Edam-Channel 7 месяцев назад +29

      If the statue survived untouched people would have found it equally creepy.

    • @SabbaticusRex
      @SabbaticusRex 7 месяцев назад +1

      So once again Joan of Arc was burned by a Catholic Church ..? That _is_ creepy .

    • @Riposte821
      @Riposte821 7 месяцев назад +13

      @@Edam-Channel ONLY if it would have been the only one untouched. If it had been amongst all the other untouched statues, then no. In this case, if hers was the only one burnt then yes, it is indeed rightfully creepy.

    • @SabbaticusRex
      @SabbaticusRex 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@Edam-ChannelY'mean because of the statues tooth gap and unibrow ? Ya true it was rather oooky

    • @juliancate7089
      @juliancate7089 7 месяцев назад +5

      Paintings of her are bound to burst into flames at some point.

  • @melenatorr
    @melenatorr 7 месяцев назад +21

    Charles and Joan reached a breach of communication and agreement shortly after his coronation: he wanted to pursue a diplomatic course and Joan a military one. She felt her influence was waning, and had known at the start of her mission that she was only good for two years, and she told this to Charles.
    It was not the Church which made the fatal judgment about Joan's voices: it was an alliance between the University of Paris and the pro-Burgundian/pro English faction in Rouen, headed by Cauchon. They went so far as to try to falsify the record, but fortunately, the chief court reporter, Guillaume Manchon, kept his certified copy, which he gave to Charles when the king entered Rouen, and this record, along with the persistent attempts by Joan's mother, prompted the re-trial, proved that the first trial was a kangaroo court, and rehabilitated Joan.

    • @TheSeedpearl
      @TheSeedpearl 7 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you for that little bit of extra information. My information on Joan of Arc is mostly learned from the play Saint Joan of Arc by George Bernard Shaw. A wonderful play which we studied in High School.

    • @RexKochanski
      @RexKochanski 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@TheSeedpearl Good play, bad history. Better than the film "the Messenger" which denied she had a message and invented her sister's rape by English marauders to motivate her, contrary to legal testimonies on her upbringing that agreed that her townsfolk were not harmed during her early life.
      Shaw's friend and critic G.K. Chesterton commented that it makes no sense for a "skeptic" to:
      "take up a supernatural story that may have some foundation, and replace it with a natural story with no foundation."🧐

    • @TheSeedpearl
      @TheSeedpearl 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@RexKochanski very interesting input from you. I don't think I saw the movie. But i do pick up information on Joan of Arc whenever I see something published.. or if someone has something to comment about. I know movies and TV shows are usually sensationalized.

    • @carolynbagge1320
      @carolynbagge1320 3 месяца назад

      21:27 ​@@TheSeedpearl

  • @ronaldnelson6692
    @ronaldnelson6692 7 месяцев назад +126

    So, the "found" the remains of someone who was burned at the stake and dumped in a river almost 600 years ago? I find that very hard to believe.

    • @ryanawilson8549
      @ryanawilson8549 7 месяцев назад +8

      Came to say the same thing

    • @pauljones1350
      @pauljones1350 7 месяцев назад +7

      No they said on jar lid that the remains was found below the fire with ashes on the 3rd burning attempt think they were taken by ordinary folk for luck.

    • @laurielovett8849
      @laurielovett8849 7 месяцев назад

      So its all a lie she was a liar never heàrd voices,was supposed to be burned at the stake but evidently didn't or she couldn't be identify. I think less of her if she let sone other girl take her punidhmentu

    • @laurielovett8849
      @laurielovett8849 7 месяцев назад +9

      No they were given the remains of an Egyptian mummy and its mummified cat,that had been founding the 18 the century or so,and passed them off as relics the soot on the bones was the remains of the embalming fluid. Out of decency the remains should be returned to Egypt where the person lived and died

    • @emmitstewart1921
      @emmitstewart1921 7 месяцев назад

      @@laurielovett8849 no such thing was said or implied. All that was proven that the remains in those jars were not hers. Her true remains, if they haven't decomposed or washed out to sea, still lay at the bottom of the river.
      There is no possibility that some other girl was burned in her place. The judges and prosecutors, who wanted her dead and knew her face, witnessed the execution. They would all be familiar with the legend of St. Stephen. They would have wanted to be sure that there was no possibility of such a thing appearing to recur.

  • @tstuart7333
    @tstuart7333 7 месяцев назад +8

    Super video. Well investigated, ending with the right outcome, although it be disappointing to many. Having said that as the narrator spoke, the bones and artifact did not make the woman, it was her quest, strength, determination and legacy which keeps her alive today. I was so intrigued and touched by this. Thank you so much for sharing.

  • @mishaDorjan
    @mishaDorjan 3 месяца назад +7

    Every time someone shows up and says, “I’m from the Catholic Church and I’m here to help,” things always get worse.

    • @StevenG222
      @StevenG222 Месяц назад +1

      Lol..right! I guess that can be said about any group that think they know what's better for you, and "just want to help"!!

  • @qre268Zrtb
    @qre268Zrtb 7 месяцев назад +41

    Interesting, they state at 23.26 that it takes "half a ton of wood and 5 hours to cremate a body". I had no idea it took soo much time and wood.

    • @chloeuntrau4588
      @chloeuntrau4588 7 месяцев назад +8

      A body is full of water...does not burn fast!

    • @JeSTeR-X1o
      @JeSTeR-X1o 7 месяцев назад +4

      Don't they use has now n it's hot like oxycetalene so don't take long either

    • @easterworshipper5579
      @easterworshipper5579 7 месяцев назад

      supposedly, the germans were somehow able to cremate millions of bodies in less than 30 minutes each.

    • @RealBelisariusCawl
      @RealBelisariusCawl 7 месяцев назад

      Humans aren’t very flammable - the average human female today will probably have about 50 kilos (about 14 Imperial Gallons) of WATER dispersed throughout her tissues.
      In order for a body to burn to ashes, all of that water must evaporate.
      Edit: Grammar

    • @damonmelendez856
      @damonmelendez856 5 месяцев назад

      If true that it takes that long, then how did they burn all those bodies at Auschwitz? 🤔 I hope you’re wrong because, if not.. we need to take another look at the ‘established’ narrative.

  • @tazmokhan7614
    @tazmokhan7614 7 месяцев назад +8

    What blows my mind is that the bone relics were still in the process of decay, sheerly amazing.

    • @dinarusso3320
      @dinarusso3320 5 месяцев назад +1

      😊. Exactly, same here I didn't realize they could still be decomposing after thousands of years!

  • @fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602
    @fabiodeoliveiraribeiro1602 7 месяцев назад +59

    Joan of Arc is very much alive in Brazil. Echoes of her protests upon being interrogated can be heard in the words of Admiral Othon Pinheiro, a soldier unjustly denounced and convicted during a grotesque case of Lawfare.
    One thing really caught my attention in the interview with Admiral Othon Pinheiro, his striking phrase that sums up the Brazilian national tragedy well:
    “the guy writes that [the fact] is that and [what was written] becomes true… it is very difficult to live in a system in which the comrade says one thing and it becomes true”
    The Admiral's words reminded me of something I read about Joan of Arc's trial. At one point she protested that everything that was against her was noted by the clerk but that which was in favor of her was not written down. Thus, what was written obviously did not represent the truth but would be seen as the only truth when read by someone (exactly as in the case of the Brazilian Admiral).

    • @SabbaticusRex
      @SabbaticusRex 7 месяцев назад +1

      Lesser Magik and all of that , huh ?
      Interesting thoughts

    • @PattyMarshall-l8v
      @PattyMarshall-l8v 6 месяцев назад

      And I hear she's married to Adolph Hitler.

    • @mywifesboyfriend5558
      @mywifesboyfriend5558 5 месяцев назад

      Wat

    • @buzzzzzz69
      @buzzzzzz69 2 месяца назад

      Yes, history is always recorded by the victor

    • @messier8379
      @messier8379 День назад

      what brainrot is this

  • @christineingram55
    @christineingram55 7 месяцев назад +25

    Absolutely brilliant ,he never gave up.I did not think they were because to burn a body 3 times must have really done the job it was meant to do..However it was strange how ordinary burnings only took one burn.But it’s a great testament to not only his determination,but to science that he got to find out all these amazing things.A really well put together documentary .thank you 🥰

    • @mdeeaonetwothree5162
      @mdeeaonetwothree5162 7 месяцев назад +1

      I think Joan of Arc may have been very big. That’s why she could be a warrior and men were willing to follow her. The fact that they had to burn her three times lends credence to this idea.

    • @SR-iy4gg
      @SR-iy4gg 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@mdeeaonetwothree5162 No. It's because they were trying to destroy her body completely with nothing left for anyone to save. It's not about the size of the body. Even if she was large for a woman, like a man's size, that still wouldn't require three burnings. Men weren't burned three times.

    • @CruzSanchezRipa
      @CruzSanchezRipa 5 месяцев назад +2

      For the same reason Sadam Hussein's body has been hidden and its gravesite has not been revealed.
      The more you let for people go to or keep, the tomb or rests of someone who holding religious power, was killed because it was inconvenient for the political and religious status quo, the more increased the faith of their followers grows and multiplies (ahem, ahem, ahem Jesussss ahem for ahem instance atheeeeem).

  • @MelEveritt
    @MelEveritt 7 месяцев назад +20

    Great documentary. Worth watching, thanks 😊

  • @dougseely1174
    @dougseely1174 7 месяцев назад +97

    Nice guy refusing to pay her ransom

    • @R0GUER0CK
      @R0GUER0CK 7 месяцев назад +2

      who refused to pay Gille DeRais

    • @takohamoolsen2486
      @takohamoolsen2486 7 месяцев назад +3

      Reason being that Joan was a substitute sacrificial victim. Read Margaret Murray's book 'The Divine King in England'.

    • @zoetropo1
      @zoetropo1 7 месяцев назад +5

      Georges de Tremoilles and his coterie were a very bad influence on Charles. That's why Yolande conspired with Arthur to get rid of them.

    • @MH-tn3pp
      @MH-tn3pp 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@takohamoolsen2486Thank you, read l’Affaire Jeanne d’Arc.

    • @lotstodo
      @lotstodo 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@MH-tn3pp Wasn't one of her crimes 'Cross Dressing'?

  • @ardocon1268
    @ardocon1268 7 месяцев назад +45

    What I really wanted to know is how they know who Jeanne D'Arc's relatives are. It was my understanding, while researching my own family tree into France, that a lot of records were destroyed during the French Revolution. So how do they know who her living relatives are?

    • @FreezeDriedIceCreamPrepper
      @FreezeDriedIceCreamPrepper 7 месяцев назад +7

      I thought about this, too. Researching living relatives is normally a great option in modern times. But not so much with Joan. How do we find her aunts and uncles?

    • @ardocon1268
      @ardocon1268 7 месяцев назад +14

      @@FreezeDriedIceCreamPrepper Well, her Aunts and Uncles would be dead now. She would have many distant cousins, though, and she may have many-greats nieces and nephews, descended from her sisters and brothers if she had any.

    • @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970
      @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970 7 месяцев назад +3

      exactly that, well spotted.

    • @RuthZeeck
      @RuthZeeck 7 месяцев назад +24

      Not all records were destroyed during the revolution, not by a long shot. We’ve been able to trace our French ancestry back to the beginnings of the Huguenot religious movement in the 16th century - and find living relatives in France and the USA via DNA databases.

    • @sl1763
      @sl1763 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@RuthZeeckyes so true. You posted great info

  • @MissBlueEyeliner
    @MissBlueEyeliner 7 месяцев назад +16

    The music on this one is _wild!_

  • @niccoarcadia4179
    @niccoarcadia4179 7 месяцев назад +9

    It was at a time when all relics/religious phenomenon was under scrutiny. Almost all churches and other religious sites had some sort of holy relic in their possession. There was also clergy who went from church to church disproving the validity of the relics and trashing tons of them as the devil's toys. This was the world Jean D'Ark was born into.

  • @judithgockel1001
    @judithgockel1001 7 месяцев назад +18

    I’d almost take bets that cats became ‘evil’ after one shat in a bishop’s shoe.
    The English condemnation of Joan was that she wore pants in order to ride astride with the army.

    • @DeidreL9
      @DeidreL9 7 месяцев назад +8

      Agreed, and cats became ‘evil’ because they wouldn’t blindly obey.

    • @judithgockel1001
      @judithgockel1001 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@DeidreL9 - just like women.😂

    • @PattyMarshall-l8v
      @PattyMarshall-l8v 6 месяцев назад +2

      Ggggggoooo cats!

    • @privatechannel8462
      @privatechannel8462 5 месяцев назад

      Trousers, not pants

    • @judithgockel1001
      @judithgockel1001 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@privatechannel8462 - are you British? Your statement seems to use terminology not all that common in the U.S. Trousers are a more formal style of nether garment, at least in modern times. Pants are any style of lower body garment bifurcated to fit the legs and allow (among other things) protection and closure, so to speak, in the crotch area for active endeavors. And that dreadful sin was the reason the English insisted that Joan be slow-roasted with 3,000 pounds of wood. In public. With a large audience watching. Fun, I suppose, but of a very limited sort.

  • @karaamundson3964
    @karaamundson3964 7 месяцев назад +7

    Fascinating video! Unexpected plot twist made it more interesting

  • @makeupboss3568
    @makeupboss3568 7 месяцев назад +32

    Jeanne was a girl full of the Spirit of the Lord, and her strong religious convictions gave her the strength she needed to lead the French Army. She was “ The Maid of Orleans “ and she was to be sure the Dauphin became King . Whether she was hearing the voices of angels and saints , I guess we’ll never know. But she made history. Her death was indeed cruel and tragic, most people that were “ burned “ at the stake usually had nothing but ash left anyway. I’d be lead to believe that there’s nothing out there to find , although it would be quite a revelation and a great way to make history yet again. She was canonized and made a Saint , so she did make Church history.

    • @Invictus13666
      @Invictus13666 7 месяцев назад +1

      Burning at the stake usually didn’t totally consume a body. Even cremations today require breaking up of the larger bone chunks.

    • @rhuephus
      @rhuephus 7 месяцев назад

      oh the irony ... MURDERED by the cult of catholics, then hundreds of years later made a saint in the cult that killed her

    • @garnerjoyce606
      @garnerjoyce606 6 месяцев назад

      Continues to mystify , mystery

    • @jackiemack8653
      @jackiemack8653 6 месяцев назад

      Is it possible she was really a young boy dressed as a woman and she confessed that to the D auphin and that's how she persuaded him to ride into battle? A stretch I know.

    • @Invictus13666
      @Invictus13666 6 месяцев назад

      @@jackiemack8653 More than a stretch, considering, you know, history.

  • @magellagoldstein
    @magellagoldstein 7 месяцев назад +10

    she came from a family that knew about battles and military tactics as they were involved with defending their village from the Burgundians

  • @josephderrico6254
    @josephderrico6254 7 месяцев назад +52

    Once I saw a scrap of linen and resin coated bones, I knew it was a mummy.

  • @UrbanHomesteadMomma
    @UrbanHomesteadMomma 6 месяцев назад +9

    I fail to see how people don’t realize that burning a body still leaves bones. Even when the dead are cremated with modern technology there are bones left behind that must be ground.

    • @PattyMarshall-l8v
      @PattyMarshall-l8v 6 месяцев назад +1

      My father was cremated and when his remains were delivered to us there were numerous small bones remaining.

    • @dinarusso3320
      @dinarusso3320 5 месяцев назад +1

      I agree, it could still be her remains, but after being exposed to such high heat, I believe that's why it's impossible to get DNA

    • @Fungfetti
      @Fungfetti 4 месяца назад +1

      Yea, cremation is meant to burn off everything but bones, they use the cremulator to powderize the remains

  • @FreezeDriedIceCreamPrepper
    @FreezeDriedIceCreamPrepper 7 месяцев назад +64

    From a scientific standpoint, Joan may have been slightly, mentally unhinged. But heroic and so fascinating!

    • @VynylFantasy
      @VynylFantasy 7 месяцев назад +11

      You should read up a bit more on Joan of Arc. You say heroic, I say reckless. Completely disconnected from reality, unaware of happenings going on in her direct vicinity. If it hadn’t been for Giles de Rais, she would have met her end very early on into her campaign from sheer carelessness.

    • @VynylFantasy
      @VynylFantasy 7 месяцев назад +11

      However…she was done dirty by her pretender sovereign.

    • @laramaui4114
      @laramaui4114 7 месяцев назад +17

      She was not. I'm not going to convince you, but please do some research there is a lot of documentation about her. She was not mentally unhinged. She was a true Mystic with the ability to predict so many catastrophic and triumphant events. She recognized key figures without having never met them before Above all she was pure, obedient, faithful, having not benefited from all of her accomplishments. Did you know the tower where she was held -that awful place -is still standing today? At one point She threw herself from the top trying to free herself from the worms, who fabricated a case against her. Less than 30 years after her death, the authorities admittedi she had never done any wrong, no blasphemy, no lies, no sorcery.
      Her own mother asked that her name be cleared from the slander. Even during her interrogations/trial she warned those who were fabricating all of those lies against her that thry were damming their own souls... unfortunately, as it's the case today, some of those corrupt accusers were clerics.

    • @Riposte821
      @Riposte821 7 месяцев назад

      @@VynylFantasyI have read the major works about her from French historians in the original language, read ridiculous amounts of her trial, AND been to Rouen, Orleans, Tours, and the chapel she prayed at in Paris before her attack, and your third sentence is absolutely a judgment and opinion you have and pretty fallacious. The fact is that no one to this day can explain many of the knowledge she had at such a young age, as well as her inexplicable conviction and courage, not to mention like she, a woman (and therefore regarded as inferior to men back then), was able to convince the most arrogant of knights and lead them into battle, and the King himself (discarding all this as mere superstitions from their part is nonsense as there were PLENTY of men and women claiming to be sent from God back then, a fact that actually made it even harder for her to be taken seriously - read Beaune’s book on her for this). Portraying her like some goof out of Bellevue pretending to be a messiah is, to be frank, quite biased of you and the easy way out to explain the supernatural. The world simply has not seen anyone like her since and there have been plenty of unhinged people with even more opportunities for glory or whatnot to match her exploits and here we are, still talking about her uniqueness 800 years later. I invite you read Pernaud’s and also Gallo’s works on her in addition to Beaume’s.

    • @Riposte821
      @Riposte821 7 месяцев назад +11

      There is more evidence to suggest she wasn’t unhinged (witnesses etc. reporting on her uncanny knowledge of things otherwise unknown to her etc.) than to suggest she was. Please read my reply to another person on this post. “She was crazy” is an absolute oversimplification, and a “way out” of the discussion, to discard the large amount of unexplainable occurrences, especially given the historical context. It reminds me of psychologists and other doctors who, when confronted with cases of children who appear possessed and speak latin fluently, are quick to point out they must have been exposed to it by TV or radio, just to later find out the family leaves in some field with no electricity and born of uneducated parents.

  • @kimbari9972
    @kimbari9972 7 месяцев назад +11

    The narration speaks about S-twist fiber woven at 24 threads per cm, but shows the technician handling rough loosely-woven burlap with Z- twist fibers. I mean, come on!

    • @sl1763
      @sl1763 7 месяцев назад +2

      Kembar there are a number of contradictions in this video. Very sloppy presentation.

    • @angellahanson8343
      @angellahanson8343 3 месяца назад +2

      So you thought they making the documentary while the research was being conducted? Come on, this was just a reconstruction! I guess they could have used a slip of modern fabric closer to the original, but they were teaching about the process, not the film crews ability to find a good prop.

  • @lilianapapp6731
    @lilianapapp6731 7 месяцев назад +15

    Okay, but may I ask where did they plan to find "living relatives" of Joan d'Arc to make the dna comparison?

    • @RuthZeeck
      @RuthZeeck 7 месяцев назад +14

      They would not have to be direct descendants to find matching DNA. There are living descendants today of at least one of her brothers.

    • @PeachysMom
      @PeachysMom 7 месяцев назад +7

      They would use genetic genealogy to attempt to find distant ancestors

    • @LilyGrace95
      @LilyGrace95 7 месяцев назад +5

      Very easily - Joan wasn't an only child, and you don't need an _absolute_ direct descendant to get a match. I think even a cousin's direct descendant might be enough in some cases....

    • @bonhamcymbal
      @bonhamcymbal 7 месяцев назад

      John d'arc lol

    • @antistaticandi
      @antistaticandi 7 месяцев назад +1

      What an uneducated question.

  • @melenatorr
    @melenatorr 7 месяцев назад +14

    She actually did renounce her voices after the long and stressful ordeals of imprisonment and unending courtroom harassment. She was threatened with immediate execution unless she renounced both the voices and her male clothing. She was promised a transfer to a religious place for imprisonment instead of the politically situated one, where the guards were dangerous. She signed the paper, but was taken back to where she had been, minus the protection of male clothing. A few days later, she had recanted, and had resumed male clothing, stating that the guards had been vicious, and that Cauchon had lied, and that she had done wrong to betray herself and her voices. Manchon noted that she gave a "fatal response" to Cauchon's questioning, aware she was figuratively signing her death warrant. This documentary is full of inaccuracies.

    • @jimmymags6516
      @jimmymags6516 2 дня назад +1

      Great info. You must be a big fan.

    • @melenatorr
      @melenatorr 2 дня назад

      @@jimmymags6516 Thank you! Yes, she was one of my earliest historical interests.

  • @johnellis7445
    @johnellis7445 2 месяца назад +4

    London calling. Sir . The English made sure that not one bone was left of her remains. The street was cleaned with water to make sure that there was nothing of her. Please remember it was her own people who handed her over to the English.

  • @carenkurdjinian5413
    @carenkurdjinian5413 7 месяцев назад +4

    She Was Always Icon for me …. Strength and Beauty and Wisdom…..🌞

  • @blanchybaby
    @blanchybaby 7 месяцев назад +8

    So she put Charles on the throne and he wouldn’t save her.

    • @kakaka1k
      @kakaka1k 6 месяцев назад

      Nope.. they couldn't accept the fact a woman can do all that work on her own, and must be in league with the devil

    • @johnearly7087
      @johnearly7087 6 месяцев назад +2

      Yes, that's right.

  • @freckles0829
    @freckles0829 7 месяцев назад +16

    This is just so fascinating...the perfect intersection of religion and science!
    ⛪️🧬🔥🔬✌️

    • @axemangang1584
      @axemangang1584 7 месяцев назад

      It's history of a woman who used religion to make others follower her and I turn religious leader used her mental health issues to their advantage.😮

  • @AMAbsherful
    @AMAbsherful 7 месяцев назад +4

    Pretty awesome documentary, honestly. Thanks.

  • @bertassellodavide1297
    @bertassellodavide1297 7 месяцев назад +50

    Jeanne d'Arc héroïne dé France ❤

    • @ronaldmessina4229
      @ronaldmessina4229 7 месяцев назад +3

      Y porqué hay que traducir al anglosajón?el anglosajón NO 👎 tiene nada de la gracia necesaria para hacer traducciones, en cambio el FRANCÉS es completamente válido para hacerse entender mundialmente 😅

  • @FutureMythology
    @FutureMythology 7 месяцев назад +11

    Presented in this video is an exciting exploration into the mysterious tomb of Saint Joan of Arc, narrated by the extraordinary Philippe Charlier, sometimes called the "Indiana Jones of graveyards." Treating the bones as more than simply artifacts-like patients with stories to tell-Charlier's forensic technique brings an intriguing new dimension to the historical enigma. The use of scientific technologies, such as DNA analysis and CT scanning, provides an intriguing window into the possibility of discovering the truth about these ancient relics. This research is riveting from start to finish thanks to its fascinating mix of history, science, and mystery.

  • @clareomarfran
    @clareomarfran 7 месяцев назад +43

    A 16-year-old peasant girl announcing she hears voices of the dead gets a hearing with the king. I haven't gotten past that yet. But the past is a foreign country whose language we cannot speak..

    • @Riposte821
      @Riposte821 7 месяцев назад +3

      There are plenty of explanations how that exactly happened! Fascinating indeed.

    • @gagatube
      @gagatube 7 месяцев назад +9

      As Dr Helen Castor pointed out in her BBC documentary about Jehanne, in those days it was an accepted fact that Churchmen, mystics or visionaries heard 'real' spiritual voices, the problem was how to determine whether they were the voices of Angels or of Demons. As to the audience with the Dauphin, it's pretty clear there were political forces at work either supporting or simply using Jehanne - she was accompanied to Chinon by a group of men who included a Royal Herald, she was escorted into the Dauphin's court by at least one prominent members of that court and there had been rumours circulating for months about a prophesied arrival of a 'maid from Lorraine' who would save France. Additionally, by the time Jehanne turned up, Charles was _desperate,_ the French army was broken and demoralized having lost every major encounter with the English for _years_ and Dr Castor's suggestion is he was willing to try *anything* to claw back some victory.

    • @TheGreatestGoon
      @TheGreatestGoon 7 месяцев назад +1

      She was super cute so it makes sense

    • @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970
      @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970 7 месяцев назад +3

      kings get desperate too, and syffillis does weird things to the brain..

    • @robinrainmaker7232
      @robinrainmaker7232 7 месяцев назад

      Nice!

  • @rhuephus
    @rhuephus 7 месяцев назад +3

    the best book on *_Joan of Arc_* is by Mark Twain -- he spent 12 years doing research and time in France ... Even though it is classified as a "novel", it IS base on facts.

  • @Oneformula_9
    @Oneformula_9 2 месяца назад +1

    This is my first exposure to Charlier, what a clever man! I love hearing about his intricate mindset and his bizarre solutions. Truly a scientific genius.

  • @bobbailey7024
    @bobbailey7024 7 месяцев назад +5

    Why didn't Dr Charlier carry out the radio carbon 14 test first? That seems to be the obvious thing to do. I would have also tested the fabric in the same way at the same time. It would have saved much time and expense.

  • @loretta_3843
    @loretta_3843 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm in Melbourne, Australia, and one of my best friends in high school was a girl named Jeanne d'Arc. It was an unusual name to hear down here, and I've never met another. Unfortunately, we lost touch, but hopefully, she's living a happy life😊

  • @thomassiembor3507
    @thomassiembor3507 5 месяцев назад +20

    If you read her trial's transcriptions, Joan's answers to her captors demonstrated a keen intellect. Whether she was a saint, or an exceptional woman, or both.... Jeanne D'Arc was a remarkable woman demonized by weak men.

  • @andrearock2208
    @andrearock2208 2 месяца назад

    Wow. So much detail! Video was made easy for ordinary people to understand too!

  • @yvonnesmith6152
    @yvonnesmith6152 7 месяцев назад +13

    The French didn’t deserve her then, they don’t deserve her now.
    What happened to this poor girl is unspeakable and I hope her remains are left in peace

  • @alanjameson8664
    @alanjameson8664 7 месяцев назад +2

    There is another test that they don't mention--- the trace mineral isotope composition of the bones, which can indicate the geographical origin of the decedent. One of the most famous examples is the Amesbury Archer.

  • @ChrisRowe
    @ChrisRowe 7 месяцев назад +5

    Just want to point out his "documentary" is so bad they couldn't even get the portraits of the Kings right at 8:48 it shows what it claims as a portrait of Charles VI, but it's actually a very well known portrait of Charles VII (the dauphin), and then they use a portrait of Charles VIII and say it's Charls VII. Charles VII has a very recognisable face and that portrait is often used in French history books, but even if you don't know what he looks like, you'd expect a documentary crew to check... These guys clearly know nothing of French history and apparently also don't know how to count Roman numerals, nor recognise the fashion approporiate to the time they're talking about since Charles VIII is clearly dressed in much later 15th century garb.

  • @hectorbrown656
    @hectorbrown656 3 дня назад

    This was a very interesting documentary , thank you very much.

  • @katebowers8107
    @katebowers8107 7 месяцев назад +11

    First thought: bones+apothecary = mummia. Because the most likely explanation is usually the correct one, I'd have thought the first direction of the tests would be to prove or disprove it was bits of an Egyptian mummy.

  • @dilly1863
    @dilly1863 3 месяца назад

    I am deeply impressed by so many professional scientists of different disciplines working together to obtain a more cohesive and deeply penetrating history of these unknown relics. If only mankind worked together without preconceived prejudices & beliefs, mankind as a whole would benefit from what nature and science has to offer us.

  • @therealanyaku
    @therealanyaku 7 месяцев назад +16

    Grossly dumbed down summary of her trial, and the role of the Church, apparently trying to exculpate the English. Even by the standards of that brutal age, her handling as a POW was criminal.

    • @hodgeelmwood8677
      @hodgeelmwood8677 7 месяцев назад +9

      The point of the video was trying to determine if those remains were hers, not to explore the details of the trial. I'm sure there are other videos detailing that.

  • @BurritoBandito140
    @BurritoBandito140 Месяц назад +2

    The short answer is no. She was burned to ash, including her bones and her ashes thrown in the river. They did this so that there was no part of her that could be used as a relic. So no. They did not find her remains because there are no remains.

  • @Moonlight__vibes
    @Moonlight__vibes 7 месяцев назад +5

    So sad to get to the end and not being what you thought it was gonna be :’)

    • @johnjohnon8767
      @johnjohnon8767 7 месяцев назад

      Most documentaries end up that way, or inconclusive.

  • @AustriaGermany
    @AustriaGermany 7 месяцев назад +2

    great video again

  • @raedale6472
    @raedale6472 7 месяцев назад +3

    I hope they tried retesting the mummy again and check it against other mummy DNA. Might be connected to someone that's been tested before 💜💜

  • @Ridcully9
    @Ridcully9 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is fascinating! So glad I stumbled across it

  • @larsivarhordnes182
    @larsivarhordnes182 7 месяцев назад +3

    interesting documentary Of course. But it is very exhausting to watch a film with so many bright flashes of light all the time. Why? What is the purpose? I ended up just listening, folding down the screen on my computer.

  •  26 дней назад +1

    Basically, the never ending ignorance of the church killed her.

  • @megret1808
    @megret1808 7 месяцев назад +7

    There are cases in Asia, of Buddhist monks resisting cremation. They gave up when the furnace began to melt down

    • @junepearl7993
      @junepearl7993 7 месяцев назад +5

      Myth and legend. Not possible by the laws of physics.

    • @tecumsehcristero
      @tecumsehcristero 7 месяцев назад

      @@junepearl7993because weird things never happened?
      Do you believe the laws of physics are immutable laws laid down by a Devine creator
      Or that they are a description of how things act most of the time?
      Because science says they are the latter.
      Strange unexplained phenomena happen it’s just reality

  • @judynewman7805
    @judynewman7805 3 месяца назад

    Suspense throughout story, was glad he found who the remains belonged to. Very interesting this was.

  • @jessicawicker3582
    @jessicawicker3582 7 месяцев назад +5

    And the ones who murdered her go down in history just as that, murderers😢

  • @cdfdesantis699
    @cdfdesantis699 5 месяцев назад +2

    Well, as soon as the test results showed bitumen (pitch), coupled with a cat bone, it seemed highly likely that the remains WERE from Egypt. I commend the pathologist's thoroughness, though. Always best to be certain.

  • @keltyk
    @keltyk 7 месяцев назад +3

    Mummies were exported commercially, and used in artist's colours and brown paper, among other things

  • @ceegesange9904
    @ceegesange9904 7 месяцев назад +1

    This investigation by Charlier was years ago, not recently; and all it did was confirm what historians had long said (that the alleged relics were not hers), and likewise the Archbishop of Tours had rejected these in 1914 (they had been held in a secular museum, not by the Church). The only group which had previously supported them as valid remains of Joan of Arc was a previous group of scientists who examined them in 1913 or 1914, so Charlier merely debunked that group's previous examination.

  • @Miss_Mellie_Girl
    @Miss_Mellie_Girl 7 месяцев назад +4

    Who else knew the answer within the first 15 minutes?

  • @debramoore6318
    @debramoore6318 4 месяца назад +1

    I lived in Orléans as a child (1950s). Every May there was a beautiful parade dedicated to Jeanne d'Arc. It would end with a young woman, in full armor, on horseback circling the statue of Jeanne d'Arc in the town square.

  • @DeonMakene
    @DeonMakene 7 месяцев назад +11

    I'll save anyone coming here who reads this some time... The bones aren't even burnt so they're 100% not hers.

    • @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970
      @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970 7 месяцев назад

      after so many years you can't find a reiabel descendant dna match anyway.. try doing geneology research and see how it all turns to mush since the wars destroy records and people lie about who fathered their babies.

    • @TheTwil1
      @TheTwil1 7 месяцев назад +2

      TY

    • @CelticBearWoman
      @CelticBearWoman 7 месяцев назад

      Actually, there were at least three scientifically plausible explanations of why the bones would not show the burn results they expected even if they had been cremated; therefore, more tests were needed before these could be truly excluded as Not Joan's.

    • @annaluisapolanska156
      @annaluisapolanska156 7 месяцев назад

      @@CelticBearWoman i think that the fact there was no carbon found on the bones sealed the deal already.

    • @DENVEROUTDOORMAN
      @DENVEROUTDOORMAN 4 месяца назад

      No it's her magic was used

  • @harveywallbanger6258
    @harveywallbanger6258 5 месяцев назад

    In 2010 I visited her hometown. I got to see her childhood home and the two churches that she attended. There is a museam in the "backyard" of her home. If you visit the museam you can sit in a small auditorium and watch a one hour historical video about her and it is very interesting. It is very interesting.
    In 2011 I wrote an online Bible Study sight for Q&A regarding her supposed visions and her mission. They came back with some very good, solid Biblical Scripture as to why the three persons that spoke to her could not be "Heavenly Beings", but they also closed their message with the fact that she could have very well been Saved through Christ, and she spoke of her faith while in the fire. I think a guard broke down and realized what they had done to her and that it was wrong.
    So why was she inspiried to take such a journey? I don't think we will every know. The entire event is bizarre as to why a teenaged girl would be asked to do something so profound. What was the point?

  • @Artemiskibasgirlfri
    @Artemiskibasgirlfri 7 месяцев назад +19

    I am curious on where a 10 year old find a human skull. Was it in the woods? Was it a murder victim? A WW1 soldier? A skull from some old cemetery? Did he find it at like a specialty anatomy store? I don't think so could it would have been a he bought a not a he found... Where the police aware of this find and allow him to keep it?

    • @jamesjohno1180
      @jamesjohno1180 7 месяцев назад +4

      He could have been obsessed with death and went on a nice little bike ride to the cemetery and dug up someone’s nan, he tells everyone it’s just archeology😂
      No one would suspect a ten year old lad of grace robbing
      What was you doing at ten?😂I was obsessed with history but I wasn’t finding skulls, I was playing with my wwe figures and picking my nose 😂

    • @SabbaticusRex
      @SabbaticusRex 7 месяцев назад

      You want a skull ? I can get you a skull , believe me ... there are ways, dude- you don't wanna know about it believe me ...
      Hell I can get you a skull by 3 o'clock this afternoon - _with_ lipstick dude..!

    • @MelissaCrew-uz3om
      @MelissaCrew-uz3om 7 месяцев назад +2

      It's sayys the skull was 1300 years old. So a cemetery I guess? 🤷🏻‍♀️

    • @gagatube
      @gagatube 7 месяцев назад

      It said in the video he found it on a visit to Pompeii when he was a 7year-old. Given his apparent age that would put the visit around the year 2000. I'm confident the curators of the Pompeii site at that time were not handing out 'free skulls' to every visitor who wanted one, but I suppose he _could_ have found something, stuffed it in a backpack and walked out without being detected... If the story is true, then it is blatant theft and destruction of historical artifacts since as the whole area has been a National Park since 1995 and is an UNESCO World Heritage Site.

    • @maeve4686
      @maeve4686 7 месяцев назад +2

      Who really cares...

  • @WelshRabbit
    @WelshRabbit 7 месяцев назад +2

    The the editors of Chronicle: The picture at 8:28 is not the Dauphin, Charles (later Charles VII). You're showing the MUCH later Charles VIII (i.e., the one who had a thing for door frames, and known for getting France into the Italian Wars).
    The picture at 8:48 said to be "Charles VI" (i.e., the old mad king who thought he was made of glass) is likewise an error; it's in fact, Charles, the Dauphin (the one who should have been shown at 8:28), and the one whom Joan was trying to get crowned as Charles VII. Charles VII was José Ferrer's character perfectly cast (and whom he physically resembled) in the movie "Joan of Arc" (1948).
    And at 10:17, when depicting Charles VII, you once again incorrectly showed Charles VIII. It's almost like your video editor thought that one French King Charles was as good as any other Charles and that no one would notice the difference. Yes, all these Charles characters have similar names, but if you wanted to show a picture of England's Chas. II, you surely would not mistakenly show Chas. III (and Camilla), would you? By the way, I'm not French, I'm not even British. I'm just one of those "dumb Americans" who would not know the difference.

  • @thelostlegendsoflewesandhamsey
    @thelostlegendsoflewesandhamsey 7 месяцев назад +7

    I’ve got the genuine locations of some lost kings for you…. One of them is stored in Brighton museum and just needs analysing. Never been able to get anything looked at properly. Let me know and I’ll give you the registration number and the possible identity for the (burned bones).

    • @captainhoratiobungleiii7147
      @captainhoratiobungleiii7147 7 месяцев назад +1

      Oh yes? What king is that? A Saxon?

    • @SabbaticusRex
      @SabbaticusRex 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@captainhoratiobungleiii7147 Chuck Mangioni -- Sausage King of Chicago .

    • @thelostlegendsoflewesandhamsey
      @thelostlegendsoflewesandhamsey 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@captainhoratiobungleiii7147 an Anglo Saxon King. A man who became a mythical legend…

    • @thelostlegendsoflewesandhamsey
      @thelostlegendsoflewesandhamsey 7 месяцев назад +1

      Possibly*, a part of Henry II, lies forgotten in a church near Lewes. I have no doubt that other, very old Anglo-Saxon kings are also in the same place.

    • @captainhoratiobungleiii7147
      @captainhoratiobungleiii7147 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@thelostlegendsoflewesandhamsey that would be interesting to research, indeed! Offa was buried near where I am from. They had great burial customs. Until they went Christian and got rid of the grave goods.

  • @LilyGrace95
    @LilyGrace95 7 месяцев назад +1

    "Have they....?" documentaries always seem not worth watching to me - Richard III's discovery proved that if the answer is "yes", we'd know about it, so obviously it's either going to be a no or, more likely, incredibly vague at the end.
    Having said that, this is a very well made documentary, and incredibly interesting 😊

  • @elisabethhopson5639
    @elisabethhopson5639 7 месяцев назад +5

    There are reports that Joan of Arc did not get burnt at the stake but was "swapped" by the French during the night before she was due to be burnt. Some other poor creature was burnt instead. Joan is said to have been spirited away into the countryside and eventually had a family. I don't know if this is true or not but it would not surprise me.

    • @ronaldmessina4229
      @ronaldmessina4229 7 месяцев назад

      What reports are these? Are they all very accurate? So be very careful and sure about which u write, because death 💀 is a very horrible situation for anyone who is burnt at the stake, be it woman 👩 or man 👨, the onlyconsulta is that, for a Catholic, the person who suffers gains everlasting merit to ascend into heaven

    • @cheriearchaeoedwards2732
      @cheriearchaeoedwards2732 5 месяцев назад

      Really? I am unfamiliar with this. What are your sources? Joan of Arc is one of my favorite Saints. I would like to read this/these as well please.

    • @elisabethhopson5639
      @elisabethhopson5639 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@cheriearchaeoedwards2732 a book was written by 2 French men, one a journalist and one an ex secret service personnel. The book was called 'The Joan of Arc Affair', by Gay and Senzig. It was reported in the Guardian newspaper, which is where I picked it up. French historians have since refuted their evidence. They have to really, if Joan did not die in the way we have always been told, then she can't be a saint, so I prefer to believe the traditional version.

  • @Rose-s5s2j
    @Rose-s5s2j 7 месяцев назад +2

    We don't have Bones ;; but she will always be in our hearts

  • @ankhpom9296
    @ankhpom9296 7 месяцев назад +4

    Ignorance and politics can be dangerous.

  • @robertschumann7737
    @robertschumann7737 2 месяца назад

    I nailed this one as soon as the guy said it smelled really old. Back in the mid 1800's mummies were huge in Europe and everywhere. They said the "relics" came from a pharmacy and a well known "cure" for headaches in the middle of the 19th century was ground up mummy bones. So a pharmacist ordered some mummy to sell to patients. He received some black bones that looked burned and the cash register ding went off in his head. This one was easy to figure out and all of those fancy tests and machines were not necessary. Just needed a bit of knowledge about the time when they were "discovered" and some common sense. It also helps to know the extent of man's greed is endless. I do agree that when they identified the cat bone all signs definitely pointed to Egypt.

  • @Nana-Opa
    @Nana-Opa 7 месяцев назад +8

    Not Joan’s bones

    • @hodgeelmwood8677
      @hodgeelmwood8677 7 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, we knew that going in, but thanks for your effort to be "the guy that blows it all wide open."

    • @sl1763
      @sl1763 7 месяцев назад

      @@hodgeelmwood8677hee hee

    • @Okapi.LuckyFeather
      @Okapi.LuckyFeather 7 месяцев назад

      Thanks, I hate wasting my time.

  • @christineharris2302
    @christineharris2302 4 месяца назад

    I think part of the point of the documentary is number 1 to learn about the person's life and number 2 to observe the procedures they go through to confirm if it is the person or not and if not, who it might be.

  • @AfterImageArt
    @AfterImageArt 7 месяцев назад +3

    Irritating white flashes and drums pounding. What reason for this? Would have been interesting except for the cartoon additions.

  • @coleengoodell7523
    @coleengoodell7523 3 месяца назад

    I like Sci ence and I can not lie! Loved all the cool stuff presented here. Absolutely fascinating!

  • @speakupriseup4549
    @speakupriseup4549 7 месяцев назад +11

    After expensive and extensive laboratory and documentary investigation it has been conclusively proven that the remains of Joan of Arc are actually just an over full ashtray 😂

    • @SabbaticusRex
      @SabbaticusRex 7 месяцев назад +3

      1960s KFC leftovers and 1/16th of a really pissed off kitty cat . What a world

    • @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970
      @esmeraldaweatherwaxe970 7 месяцев назад +2

      catholics were famous for that, they did a count of how many fingers/hands/skulls some saints must have had for all te relics on display.. 🤣🤣

  • @susanmcdonald-timms3202
    @susanmcdonald-timms3202 21 день назад

    This was fascinating

  • @sfgrubs_zc5337
    @sfgrubs_zc5337 6 месяцев назад +3

    a dangerous time to be hearing voices and be a powerful person at the same time. but i wonder in modern day, what could the medical doctors say about joan's mental health? was she bipoler? or something? what could explain the voices she say she heard?

  • @TacDyne
    @TacDyne 5 месяцев назад +1

    The only reason the church decided she was hearing the devil was because it would have cost them money to get her back. They have done this to various groups, kings, etc. throughout history.

  • @TheRemoteTTL
    @TheRemoteTTL 7 месяцев назад +7

    they should start with carbon14 tests, then many manhours would be saved. work done uselessly before that test. in my opinion, kinda.

    • @thaliazelmer2327
      @thaliazelmer2327 7 месяцев назад +1

      I am certain most of these tests were being done simultaneously, but the documentary is in a story telling mode, one at a time.

    • @DavidSmith-xz4zz
      @DavidSmith-xz4zz 7 месяцев назад

      Why? Carbon 14 tests, or any tests depending on molecular decay, are guesses anyway. Can anyone be 100% certain the decay rate has remained constant for the entire history of the planet? Not unless they were there in the beginning.

    • @chromicapop4595
      @chromicapop4595 7 месяцев назад +2

      Are you aware that forensic pathology as a field of intense study isn’t always easy to get money for studies? Like out of pocket doesn’t look cheap for equipment lol

  • @callanightshade8079
    @callanightshade8079 2 месяца назад

    I can appreciate that this documentary admitted "no this is not Saint Joan of Arc" rather than leaving everyone in suspense in the hopes that it's her