Preparation In March 1430 the French court learned that
Philip the Good, duke of
Burgundy, planned to lay siege to the city. The
count of Clermont delivered a message to the city that Compiègne was his according to legal treaty and demanded a surrender. Residents of the city expressed strong opposition to the demand and the French garrison commander readied the city for action. Count
John of Luxembourg departed for the expedition in command of the vanguard on 4 April. Philip the Good departed from
Péronne on 22 April. Meanwhile, the Duke of Bedford was waiting at
Calais for the arrival of King
Henry VI of England, a nine-year-old boy who had recently been crowned king of England. According to Régine Pernoud and Marie-Veronique Clin, Philip the Good planned to retake command of the cities that controlled the
Oise river. Bedford supported the strategy in order to protect
Île-de-France and Paris, which was then under Anglo-Burgundian control. King
Charles VII of France had been hoping for a peace treaty with Burgundy but realized on 6 May that he had been duped by false promises. Joan of Arc had realized the danger before the king did, and began meeting with a few Royal commanders in the area in an attempt to convince them to come to the city's aid. By April she had convinced several commanders, including and an Italian mercenary commander named Bartolomeo Baretta, resulting in a company of about 300–400 volunteers. She departed for Compiègne, possibly without the king's knowledge, and arrived at the city on 14 May.
Combat Several minor actions took place in the days that followed. Two days later Captain
Louis de Flavy fled artillery bombardment at
Choisy-au-Bac and took refuge at Compiègne. On 18 May Joan of Arc's group, which by that point included
Regnault of Chartres and the
Count of Vendôme, attempted to surprise the Burgundians at
Soissons. Residents of Soissons refused them entry and declared allegiance to Burgundy the following day. On the morning of May 23, the defenders of Compiegne launched an assault against the Burgundians at
Margny, attacking an outpost while it was separated from the main force. Count John of Luxembourg noticed the action by chance while taking a survey of the territory and called in reinforcements. These reinforcements outnumbered the attackers and the Armagnac commanders ordered a retreat over the objections of Joan of Arc, who urged them to stand and fight. They refused, and ordered a rearguard to screen the rest of the force as it retreated toward the town. Joan of Arc chose to remain with the rearguard, carrying her banner on her horse.
Capture of Joan of Arc The next moments remain a source of scholarly debate. The city gate closed before the rearguard could return to the town. This was either a reasonable action to prevent the Burgundians from entering the city after they had seized the end of the bridge; or an act of betrayal by Guillaume de Flavy. In the words of
Kelly DeVries, "both the accusers and defenders must in turn either indict or vindicate the character of Compiègne's governor, Guillaume de Flavy, and the role he played in shutting off any escape possibility for Joan of Arc on that day." The French rearguard that remained outside had no means of avoiding capture. According to the Burgundian chronicler
Georges Chastellain and other sources, Burgundian troops soon surrounded the rearguard and shouted at Joan of Arc to surrender, eager to capture such a famous figure. She refused. Finally, a Burgundian crossbowman, "a rough and very sour man", maneuvered his horse behind her and "grabbed the edge of her cloth-of-gold doublet, and threw her from her horse flat to the ground". She then surrendered to Lionel, Bastard of Vendôme, who was in the service of the
Count of Ligny. Guillaume de Flavy was blamed by some sources for allegedly ordering the drawbridge raised behind the rearguard. Although the defense of Compiègne was eventually successful several months later when the Burgundian army was forced to withdraw, nonetheless accusations of misconduct regarding Joan of Arc's capture caused the decline of de Flavy's career. ==Footnotes==