Joan of Arc
EIE-Q "Visionary Leader" Warrior / Martyr · French · 15th c.French peasant girl and soldier (1412–1431). Believing she received divine revelation, she broke the siege of Orléans — the turning point of the Hundred Years' War — and realised Charles VII's coronation. Captured and burned at the stake as a heretic, she was canonised as a saint 500 years later. The eternal symbol of French national identity and selfless sacrifice.
Leading Function+Fe-p (Mission & Prestige)
"Au nom de Dieu! (In God's name!)" — following God's voice from age 13, burned at 19. White armour and white banner as the visual embodiment of "Mission & Prestige." Galvanising a hundred-year-war exhausted French army with a single declaration.
Creative Function-Ni-c (Warning & Divergence)
"I have only a year — use me now" — self-predicting her own death. Pre-announcing her arrow wound at Orléans before the battle. "If the English are not driven out, France will be destroyed" — the prophetic warning as the mission's core.
Vulnerable Function 1+Si-p weak (Comfort & Wellbeing)
Weak +Si-p: from peasant girl to white armour — consistently choosing mission over comfort. After capture, she briefly renounced male dress but resumed it and chose death. Personal safety and comfort subordinated to mission until the last.
Vulnerable Function 2-Te-c weak (Application & Experiment)
Weak -Te-c: zero military training, no tactical flexibility — "frontal assault only" as the linear method. Sidelined by the court after the failed Paris attack — the absence of practical application and experimental approach as the military limitation.
Quadra / Temperament / Club
Quadra: Beta Quadra (Empire) — "saving France" as the imperial mission; hierarchical authority from God (absolute submission to royal power, aristocratic declaration "here is the king"); direct battlefield -Se-p power all align.
Temperament: Linear-Assertive temperament: hammering emotion directly into speech and action. The impulse to advance never wavered at any point in her life.
Club: Humanitarian-Artistic Club: placing the white banner, religious symbols, and "saving France's soul" as a spiritual mission at the centre of political and military action. Military victory less important than emotional solidarity of purpose.
Worldview & Attitude
"By God's will France will be saved" — absolute mission conviction. A worldview that sees structural dangers acutely and trusts divine mission as the response.
Attitude toward Change: Executed as the symbol of hope for French liberation — canonised as a saint after the failure of death. Pointing the direction; the liberation was completed by others.
