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  1. Jeanne des Armoises. 19th-century depiction. Jeanne des Armoises (also Claude des Armoises; fl. 1438) was a French adventurer living in the 15th century. She was reportedly a soldier in the Pope's army in Italy. Following Joan of Arc 's execution, several young women came forward claiming to be the Maid, including Claude des Armoises. [1]

  2. Jeanne (ou Claude) du Lis 2 (ou des Lis ), dite Jeanne des Armoises, est une femme qui se fit passer pour Jeanne d'Arc après le supplice de celle-ci. Son cas n'est pas isolé à l'époque, un certain nombre de « fausses Jeanne d'Arc » apparaissant dans les années qui suivent la mort de la Pucelle sur le bûcher de Rouen .

  3. The city even paid her 200 livres for her services while Orléans was being besieged. This means her contemporaries were convinced Jeanne des Armoises was the Maid of Orléans." NARRATOR: And the book of accounts does indeed include a record of a payment to Jeanne Claude des Armoises, alias Joan of Arc.

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  4. Mar 6, 2019 · Jeanne des Armoises. Like Joan, Claude wore her hair short, in a men’s style, and had already posed as a soldier in the army of Pope Eugene IV, where she allegedly did away with two men during a rebellion in Rome in 1435. She spoke almost exclusively in Christian parables, which enabled her to cloud certain facts and contributed to her mystery.

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  5. Captain in the French army. Name variations: Joan of Armoises. Flourished in 1438 in France; married and mother of two. A few years after the death of Joan of Arc , another Joan came to prominence in France's fight against England. Mother of two and married when she began her military career, Jeanne des Armoises was a soldier from the peasantry.

  6. Several impostors claimed to be Joan of Arc after the execution date. The most successful was Jeanne (or Claude) des Armoises. Claude des Armoises married the knight Robert des Armoises and claimed to be Joan of Arc in 1436. She gained the support of Joan of Arc's brothers. She carried on the charade until 1440, gaining gifts and subsidies.

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  8. Oct 12, 2014 · The profile of J. des Armoises from Metz. 2. The wood-carved version of the same profile from a wooden door from the house in Metz. This door was once in the house owned by Jeanne and Robert des Armoises in Metz. It is a relatively small door, only approximately 1.2 m high, most likely leading into a storage facility of the house.

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