Index

Famous Trials Index
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bannerAmistad.jpg
"The Court Scene" from the Amistad. Murals by Hale Woodruff (1939) (Talladega College)
bannersocrates.jpg
"The Death of Socrates" (painting by Jacques Louis David, 1787).
bannerscope.jpg
Clarence Darrow questions William Jennings Bryan during the Scopes Trial (1925).
bannerNurember.jpg
Hermann Goering testifies in the Major War Criminals Trial in Nuremberg (1946).
bannersalem.jpg
Examination of a Witch" by Thompkins Matteson, 1853. (Suspect being examined for "witch's marks"
in Salem in 1692.)
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Trial of Socrates (399 B.C.)

Trial of Socrates (399 B.C.)

Gaius Verres Trial (70 B.C.)

Gaius Verres Trial (70 B.C.)

Trial of Jesus (30 A. D.)

Trial of Jesus
(30 A. D.)

Medieval Trials (897 to 1386)

Medieval Trials
(897 to 1386)

Trial of Joan of Arc (1431)

Trial of Joan of Arc (1431)

Trial of Gilles de Rais (1440)

Trial of Gilles de Rais (1440)

Martin Luther Trial (1521)

Martin Luther Trial (1521)

Thomas More Trial (1535)

Thomas More Trial (1535)

Trials of Giordano Bruno (1592-1600)

Trials of Giordano Bruno (1592-1600)

Gunpowder Plot Trial (1606)

Gunpowder Plot Trial (1606)

Trial of Galileo (1633)

Trial of Galileo (1633)

Trial of Anne Hutchinson (1637)

Trial of Anne Hutchinson (1637)

Mary Dyer Trials (1659-60)

Mary Dyer Trials (1659-60)

Salem Witchcraft Trials (1692)

Salem Witchcraft Trials (1692)

John Peter Zenger Trial (1735)

John Peter Zenger Trial (1735)

"New York Plot" Trials (1741)

"New York Plot" Trials (1741)

Boston Massacre Trials (1770)

Boston Massacre Trials (1770)

Mutiny on the Bounty Court-Martial (1792)

Mutiny on the Bounty Court-Martial (1792)

Burr Conspiracy Trial (1807)

Burr Conspiracy Trial (1807)

Turner (Slave Revolt) Trials (1831)

Turner (Slave Revolt) Trials (1831)

Amistad Trials (1839-1840)

Amistad Trials (1839-1840)

Carthage (Joseph Smith Murder)  Trial (1845)

Carthage (Joseph Smith Murder) Trial (1845)

The Dred Scott Trials  (1847-1856)

The Dred Scott Trials (1847-1856)

Burns Trial (1854)

Burns Trial (1854)

Celia, A Slave Trial (1855)

Celia, A Slave Trial (1855)

John Brown Trial (1859)

John Brown Trial (1859)

Dakota Conflict Trials (1862)

Dakota Conflict Trials (1862)

Lincoln Conspiracy Trial (1865)

Lincoln Conspiracy Trial (1865)

Andersonville Prison Trial (1865)

Andersonville Prison Trial (1865)

Johnson Impeachment (1868)

Johnson Impeachment (1868)

Susan Anthony Trial (1873)

Susan Anthony Trial (1873)

Mountain Meadows Massacre (1875-76)

Mountain Meadows Massacre (1875-76)

Molly Maguire Trials (1876-77)

Molly Maguire Trials (1876-77)

Earp (O.K. Corral) Trial (1881)

Earp (O.K. Corral) Trial (1881)

Charles Guiteau Trial (1881-82)

Charles Guiteau Trial (1881-82)

Louis Riel Trial (1885)

Louis Riel Trial (1885)

Haymarket Trial (1886)

Haymarket Trial (1886)

Lizzie Borden Trial (1893)

Lizzie Borden Trial (1893)

Dreyfus Affair Court-Martial (1894)

Dreyfus Affair Court-Martial (1894)

Three Trials of Oscar Wilde (1895)

Three Trials of Oscar Wilde (1895)

Bill Haywood Trial (1907)

Bill Haywood Trial (1907)

Thaw (White Murder) Trials (1907-08)

Thaw (White Murder) Trials (1907-08)

Sheriff Shipp Trial (1907-09)

Sheriff Shipp Trial (1907-09)

Triangle Fire Trial (1911)

Triangle Fire Trial (1911)

Leo Frank Trial (1913)

Leo Frank Trial (1913)

Sacco-Vanzetti Trial (1921)

Sacco-Vanzetti Trial (1921)

Black Sox Trial (1921)

Black Sox Trial (1921)

Adolf Hitler (Putsch) Trial (1924)

Adolf Hitler (Putsch) Trial (1924)

Leopold and Loeb Trial (1924)

Leopold and Loeb Trial (1924)

D. C. Stephenson Trial (1924)

D. C. Stephenson Trial (1924)

Scopes "Monkey" Trial (1925)

Scopes "Monkey" Trial (1925)

Sweet Trials (1925 & 1926)

Sweet Trials (1925 & 1926)

Osage Murder Trials (1926-29)

Osage Murder Trials (1926-29)

Al Capone Trial (1931)

Al Capone Trial (1931)

Massie Trials (1931 & 1932)

Massie Trials (1931 & 1932)

"Scottsboro Boys" Trials (1931-1937)

"Scottsboro Boys" Trials (1931-1937)

The Ulysses Trials (1933)

The Ulysses Trials (1933)

Hauptmann (Lindbergh) Trial (1935)

Hauptmann (Lindbergh) Trial (1935)

Trial of the Nazi Saboteurs (1942)

Trial of the Nazi Saboteurs (1942)

Korematsu Trial (1942-1944)

Korematsu Trial (1942-1944)

Nuremberg Trials (1945-49)

Nuremberg Trials (1945-49)

Tokyo War Crimes Trial (1946-48)

Tokyo War Crimes Trial (1946-48)

Alger Hiss Trials (1949-50)

Alger Hiss Trials (1949-50)

Brown v Topeka Board of Ed. (1951)

Brown v Topeka Board of Ed. (1951)

Rosenberg  Trial (1951)

Rosenberg Trial (1951)

Oppenheimer Security Hearing (1954)

Oppenheimer Security Hearing (1954)

Sam Sheppard Trials (1954 & 66)

Sam Sheppard Trials (1954 & 66)

Emmett Till Murder Trial (1955)

Emmett Till Murder Trial (1955)

Confidential Magazine Trial (1957)

Confidential Magazine Trial (1957)

Nelson Mandela Trial  (1963-64)

Nelson Mandela Trial (1963-64)

Lenny Bruce Trial (1964)

Lenny Bruce Trial (1964)

Mississippi Burning Trial (1967)

Mississippi Burning Trial (1967)

"The Chicago Eight" Trial (1969 - 1970)

"The Chicago Eight" Trial (1969 - 1970)

My Lai Courts Martial (1970)

My Lai Courts Martial (1970)

Charles Manson Trial (1970-71)

Charles Manson Trial (1970-71)

Pentagon Papers (Ellsberg) Trial (1973)

Pentagon Papers (Ellsberg) Trial (1973)

Patty Hearst Trial (1976)

Patty Hearst Trial (1976)

Leonard Peltier Trial (1977)

Leonard Peltier Trial (1977)

Dan White Trial (1979)

Dan White Trial (1979)

Chamberlain "Dingo" Trial (1982)

Chamberlain "Dingo" Trial (1982)

John Hinckley, Jr. Trial (1982)

John Hinckley, Jr. Trial (1982)

Falwell v Flynt Trial (1984)

Falwell v Flynt Trial (1984)

Bernhard Goetz Trial (1987)

Bernhard Goetz Trial (1987)

McMartin Preschool Trial (1987-90)

McMartin Preschool Trial (1987-90)

LAPD (King Beating) Trial (1992)

LAPD (King Beating) Trial (1992)

Ruby Ridge (Weaver) Trial (1993)

Ruby Ridge (Weaver) Trial (1993)

West Memphis Three Trials (1994)

West Memphis Three Trials (1994)

O. J. Simpson Trial (1995)

O. J. Simpson Trial (1995)

Okla City Bombing Trial (1997)

Okla City Bombing Trial (1997)

Dr. Kevorkian Trial (1999)

Dr. Kevorkian Trial (1999)

Clinton Impeachment  Trial (1999)

Clinton Impeachment Trial (1999)

Laramie (Shepard Murder)  Trials (1999)

Laramie (Shepard Murder) Trials (1999)

Moussaoui (9/11) Trial (2006)

Moussaoui (9/11) Trial (2006)

Enron (Lay & Skilling) Trial (2006)

Enron (Lay & Skilling) Trial (2006)

Trial of Amanda Knox (2009)

Trial of Amanda Knox (2009)

Breivik (Norway Massacre) Trial (2012)

Breivik (Norway Massacre) Trial (2012)

Zimmerman (Trayvon Martin) Trial 2013

Zimmerman (Trayvon Martin) Trial 2013

Animal Rights Trials (2013-19)

Animal Rights Trials (2013-19)

George Floyd Murder (Chauvin) Trial (2021)

George Floyd Murder (Chauvin) Trial (2021)

Trump (Hush Money) Trial (2024)

Trump (Hush Money) Trial (2024)

pcinterrogationbyPaulDelaroche

Bishop Pierre Cauchon interrogates Joan (painting by Paul Delaroche)

April 1337      The “Hundred Years’ War” between the rulers of England and the rulers of France begins.

Jan. 6 1412     Joan is believed to have been born on this date in Domremy, Lorraine, France.

August 1415   The English invade Normandy, taking the port city of Harfleur.

October 1415  Henry V of England wins a key victory over the French in Normandy in the Battle of Agincourt. Many French noblemen die in the fighting and Charles, Duke of Orleans is taken prisoner by the English.

July 1416        King Henry and John the Fearless of Burgundy enter into a treaty in which they promise not to wage war against each other in the duke’s northern territories.

January 1418  Burgundian troops take Rouen, capital of Normandy. Meanwhile, English forces take control of other parts of France.

May 1418        Burgundian forces take control of Paris. The dauphin Charles, the 15-year-old son of King Charles VI, is spirited out of Paris by Armagnac supporters.Bourges becomes the capital of Armagnac France.

January 1419   English forces take Rouen and move toward Paris.

Sept.10 1419   Armagnac supporters with the dauphin Charles murder the duke of Burgundy on a bridge at Montereau, ending hopes for an Armagnac-Burgundian alliance against the English.

May 21 1420   Duke Philip of Burgundy (seeing the English as the lesser evil) and the English enter into a treaty.  Charles recognizes Henry King of England as the rightful heir to his throne.

Jan. 6 1421     The dauphin Charles is summoned to answer charges in Paris.  He does not show up.

Aug. 31 1422   King Henry V dies.

Oct. 21 1422   King Charles VI dies. John the duke of Bedford is named regent of France on behalf of Henry's nine-month-old son.

1424                Joan first hears "voices" from God.

May 1428      Joan goes to Vaucouleurs to request Robert de Baudricourt take her to speak with Charles VII, but he refuses.

Fall 1428        The English begin their long siege of Orleans, the northernmost town on a curve of the river Loire, which formed the natural boundary between Armagnac France to the south and English/Burgundian controlled France to the north.

Jan. 1429      Joan again visits Vaulcoulers and this time Baudricourt agrees to provide Joan with an escort to see Charles.

March 1429   Joan speaks with Charles VII at Chinon.  He has Joan examined by theologians to determine whether her visions should be believed.

Apr. 29 1429  Joan arrives at the sieged city of Orleans.

May 7-8 1429  Joan and her troops force the English to abandon their siege of Orleans.

June 18 1429  Joan's army defeats the English army at the Battle of Patay.

June 17 1429  The day after Joan and her army enter Reims, Charles VII is coronated at Reims Cathedral.

Sep. 8 1429    Joan's army attacks Paris and Joan is shot by an arrow and her troops withdraw.

May 23 1430   Joan is trapped and captured by Burgundian troops at Compiegne.

Nov. 1430       For a price, the Burgundians turn Joan over to the English.

Dec. 23 1430  Joan is brought to Rouen.

Jan. 9 1431    Joan's condemnation trial begins.

Feb. 21 1431  The first of six public examinations of Joan is held.

Mar. 3 1431    The last of the six public examinations of Joan is held.  After a week, Joan is examined in her cell in a series of private examinations.

Mar. 26 1431   Trial in Ordinary begins with the reading of 70 articles of accusation and Joan's responses to each.

April 1431       Twelve articles of accusation against Joan are drafted and then presented.

May 2 1431    In Rouen Castle's great hall, Joan is asked to submit to Church authority, but she refuses.

May 9 1431   Joan is shown instruments of torture and threatened if she does not confess, but she refuses.

May 23 1431   Joan is found guilty on each of the twelve articles of accusation.

May 24 1431   Joan is taken to an open space near an abbey in the center of Rouen where a scaffold had been erected.  Joan announces that she is willing to sign a statement of abjuration, and she does so.  She is taken back to her cell.

May 28 1431   Joan is declared a relapsed heretic after she is found in her cell wearing male dress.

May 30 1431   Joan is burned at the stake in a public square in Rouen.

Nov. 1449       French forces retake Rouen.

Feb. 13 1450  Charles VII issues a declaration authorizing an inquiry into Joan's trial of condemnation.

May 1452        Inquisitor-General Jean Brehal, after an investigation of Joan's case, recommends an appeal of the case.

Nov. 7 1455    In Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, the family of Joan petition for a revision of her sentence.

Dec. 12 1455   The "Nullification Trial" officially opens in Paris.

July 7 1456    The Nullification Trial concludes with a finding that Joan was wrongfully executed.

May 16 1920  Joan is canonized as a saint by Pope Benedict XV.