The long wait

Supposedly, Margaret would never agree to such a ridiculous request to move to the Netherlands with her wife. Pen, fun, and www.biquge.info

In fact, when Philip first made this request, Margaret was adamantly opposed.

But when Philip's hand took Margaret's hand, Margaret repeated Philip's words like a puppet.

In the evening, Michelle, who was also resistant to the sudden emigration report, was also concocted in the same way, not only no longer questioning her husband, but also providing him with a service that he had never done before.

The soldiers in charge of the guard, who had not looked down on the cowardly duke's son, became as well-behaved as farmers after Philip slaughtered dozens of mobs and bandits with his own hands.

Whenever Philip and his wife were having fun in a hotel or farmhouse, the guards couldn't help but get together to discuss the terrifying scenes when Philip slaughtered his enemies: Philip was enjoying his killing, and he smiled brightly whenever blood splattered his face.

Philip, who was a devil along the way, was able to sensitively sense the devotion of people everywhere to the faith of the Lord.

Luckily, near Reims, Philip caught a gypsy girl, a Domme descendant with a magical talent far beyond ordinary people.

Philip, who lacks a good hand, keeps her by his side as a maid, and by the time the group arrives at their destination, Bruges, the gypsy girl has become a barely qualified witch.

Although the belief in the Lord was looser in the Low Countries, Philip, not satisfied with just not being uncomfortable, turned his attention to Zeeland a little further north.

By the time John the Intrepid lost his position as regent in 1413, Philip had effectively taken control of Zeeland and the cities of Brussels, fulfilling his promise to Margaery. But he was very irritated that he could never find a holy soul, and in order to avoid being detected by the church when he was angry, he abandoned the more prosperous Brussels, and hid in the monastery of Middelburg, and began to cast several devilish spells in Zeeland under the cover of the local depraved priest who was bewitched by him, but unfortunately he could not find the Holy Spirit despite several attempts to improve the quality of the sacrifices.

The intrepid John, although he lost his regent, took over Brussels from his son, and lived there contentedly and recuperated.

In 1414, at the behest of his father, Duke John, Philip secretly went to England to provoke a war between England and France.

Henry V, who wanted to avenge his father, personally led an English army with archers as the main force to land in France in 1415 and restarted the battle for the English and French thrones.

With Philip's help, Henry V defeated the 36,000 elite of France at Agincourt, with only 5,000 archers and 900 knights on foot.

More than half of the French army suffered casualties in this battle, and with Burgundy sitting on the mountain watching the tiger fight, they no longer used their courage and strength to stop the British army.

The war brought Philip a degree of freedom, and the panic and rebellion allowed him to secretly search the French countryside under the cover of gypsy assistants.

Time flies, and in 1417, Duke John still couldn't hold back, and directly allied with King Henry V of England and began to officially fight against the French army.

In 1418, John, who had returned to Paris, slaughtered his former political enemy, a member of the Armagnacs.

After purging his political opponents, John intended to get close to the French crown again and return to his role as regent of the country.

In 1419, outside Paris, John was assassinated by members of the Armagnacs when he was on his way to meet with the new Armagnac leader, Charles VII, the Dauphin.

Philip, who had already explored the Toulouse region but had not succeeded in finding the Holy Spirit, was forced to return to Dijon.

After inheriting the duke's throne, Philip used the funeral to meet with all the nobles in the duchy and personally instilled in them the memory of unconditional loyalty to him.

After dealing with the succession, Philip openly claimed that the crown prince had plotted to assassinate the old duke, and the power of the Duchy of Burgundy was operating with unprecedented efficiency.

In 1420, under the banner of revenge, Philippe, who actually used the army as a minion to search for traces of the Holy Spirit in northern France, accidentally captured the madman Charles VI.

Philip, who was not on the throne, sent the king to Troyes.

There, Britain and France signed the Treaty of Troyes, which stripped the crown prince of his right to inheritance.

After the stage victory, Henry V returned to England with his wife Charles VI's daughter, Caitlin of Valva.

After Catherine gave birth to a prince with devilish blood, Philip, who noticed that a blood relative had been born, secretly went to England.

After determining the prisoners of war he had handed over to Henry and giving birth to his own child in just one attempt, Philip decisively killed Henry V.

England, which had parliament in control of actual power, happily accepted a baby less than a year old as the new king, and Henry VI succeeded to the throne under the watchful eye of Philip.

When the madman Charles VI died in 1422, France was unwilling to recognize a baby as king, and went into complete anarchic chaos.

In 1423 Philip arranged for his sister to marry John of Lancaster, Duke of Bedford, the English commander-in-chief in France, to cover up the fact that John had become Philip's slave.

In the same year, Michelle discovered the secret of her husband's demagoguery and non-belief in the Lord, and told it to the Archbishop of Burgundy.

The archbishop, who was not a good man and doubted the authenticity of the Lord's existence, told Philip about it.

Since then, Burgundy has lost a Duchess Michel of France and a cardinal who is getting younger and younger.

In 1424, Philip became the new Duchess of Burgundy, the purest maiden of Artois he had found for many years.

As a degenerate who believes in the great devil Lou Ranun, Bonnet plays the role of a duchess both in the bedroom and in social situations.

In the years that followed, Philip, who felt the troubled times, acquiesced to the fact that Crown Prince Charles was cowering south of the Loire, and he himself occasionally went deep into the Holy Roman Empire and the Iberian Peninsula in disguise, searching for people who might be the Holy Spirit.

Under the cover of Bonnet and Duke Bedford, coupled with the presence of a stand-in, no one noticed that Lord Duke was no longer in the country.

It wasn't until 1429 that a rural girl named Donrémi, who came from the border of the Lorraine region, miraculously replaced the Duke of Danoy and led the French army to rescue Orleans from the English army.

By the time Philippe had returned from his long journey, the maiden named Joan of Arc had already performed a series of miraculous victories, and had become a saint recognized by most French and Burgundian people, and even English soldiers.

It's a pity that Charles VII, who the girl relied on, was still a layman with a lot of private letters, and after Philip extended an olive branch, Charles VII decisively betrayed Joan of Arc.

On 23 May 1430, less than a year before the Battle of Orleans became famous, Joan of Arc was captured by the well-prepared Burgundian in the Compiègne region.

The British were excited to take her away and execute her, and Lady Margaret, who felt that her life was near, hurried to protect the saint, just hoping that she would suffer less sin in purgatory after death.

As Philip watched his mother take Joan of Arc away, he felt that the reason for his possession of such a family was fully understood, for he was the last person who could shelter the Holy Spirit, and the decision to ascend to heaven or to hell was in his own hands, in the hands of the Duke of Burgundy.

Excitedly expelled from the British, she forcibly took over Joan of Arc's care from Lady Margaret, and a group of dead men reformed by Philip himself guarded the tower where she was imprisoned. She has no freedom in the tower, and enjoys a rich life of brocade clothes and delicacies.

The near-puppet Dead faithfully kills all males who try to approach the Tower except Philip.

Aside from the maid and the cook who served her, only Lady Margaret could see this particular prisoner without an entourage.

Without Philip's fanning of the flames, the tripartite forces, which had long been disgusted with the war, stopped the war.

Philippe also hid quietly in Rouen, trying to lure the Holy Spirit into depour. Neither the Church nor the British pressure could affect his patience, and the eventful Margaret died of an old illness due to her overexcitement.

In the process of seducing the Holy Maiden, Philip himself became her captive. Philip, who was infatuated with the Holy Virgin, became insane, and he first arranged for Bonnet to fake his death, and set about establishing a fully loyal order of Catholic believers (Knights of the Golden Fleece).

At the end of 1430, Philippe began with the proclamation to all Burgundians, Frenchmen, Englishmen, Bretanians, and the Church, proclaiming Joan of Arc of Donrémi, as the third duchess.

The stunned Charles VII, the embarrassed Asmodeus, the oracle of Pope Martin V, and the Ottoman Sultan Murad II of Venice, who had just been defeated, for the sake of his own selfish desires, for the first time, faced three beings stronger than himself, and three at a time.

The real story also kicked off this year.