Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Pedro Cauchon (em francês: Pierre Cauchon; Reims, 1371 — Ruão, Dezembro de 1442) foi um bispo francês, defensor dos interesses ingleses no final da Guerra dos Cem Anos. Passou à posteridade como organizador do julgamento de Joana d'Arc, a quem condenou à morte na fogueira em Ruão em 30 de maio de 1431.

  2. Pierre Cauchon (1371 – 18 December 1442) was a French Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Beauvais from 1420 to 1432. He was a strong partisan of English interests in France during the latter years of the Hundred Years' War .

  3. Pierre Cauchon (born 1371, near Reims, Fr.—died Dec. 18, 1442, Rouen) was a French bishop of Beauvais, an ecclesiastic memorable chiefly because he presided over the trial of Joan of Arc. Cauchon was educated at the University of Paris, of which he became rector in 1403.

  4. Pierre Cauchon, né en 1371 à Reims, et mort le 18 décembre 1442 à Rouen, fut évêque de Beauvais puis de Lisieux, défenseur des intérêts anglais à la fin de la guerre de Cent Ans, passé à la postérité pour avoir été l'ordonnateur du procès de Jeanne d'Arc, qu'il a fait condamner à mourir sur le bûcher à Rouen le 30 ...

  5. Overview. Pierre Cauchon. (c. 1371—1442) Quick Reference. (1371–1442) Born to a rich family of Reims, Pierre Cauchon studied at the university of Paris from which he graduated in law and later became Rector. His positions in favour ... From: Cauchon, Pierre in Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages » Subjects: History — Early history (500 CE to 1500)

  6. Pierre Cauchon. 1371 - 1442. Issu de la prestigieuse université de Paris, c’est un grand érudit et un homme politique : il est maître des arts, licencié en droits canoniques, docteur en théologie, chanoine de Beauvais en 1409, recteur d’université, défenseur de Jean sans Peur au Concile de Constance, maître des requêtes au Parlement en 1418.

  7. In December of that same year, she was transferred to Rouen, the military headquarters and administrative capital in France of King Henry VI of England, and placed on trial for heresy before a Church court headed by Bishop Pierre Cauchon, a supporter of the English, in efforts to illegitimize King Charles's crowning.