Civil War
The rise in the number of French Protestants
excited the alarm and hatred of the French Roman Catholics. The religious
hatred was intensified by political rivalry between the house of Valois,
then in possession of the French throne, and the house of Guise. Catherine
de Medicis, widow of Henry II, who governed in the name of her son, King
Charles IX, at times allied herself with the Huguenots for political reasons,
but generally sided against them. The Huguenots were persecuted severely
in Charles's reign, and they in turn made reprisals upon the Roman Catholics.
Finally, open civil war broke out. Between 1562 and 1598 eight bitter wars
were fought between French Roman Catholics and Protestants.
The Huguenot leaders in the first
of the nearly four decades of conflict were Louis I de Bourbon, prince
de Cond‚, and the French admiral Gaspard de Coligny; subsequently they
were led by Henry of Navarre, later Henry IV, king of France.
The principal Roman Catholic leaders
were Henri I de Lorraine, 3rd duc de Guise; Catherine de M‚dicis; and King
Henry III. Each side from time to time called on foreign help. The Huguenots
obtained troops from England, Germany, and Switzerland; the Roman Catholics,
from Spain. The treaties that concluded the wars usually granted the Huguenots
some measure of tolerance, but the government's subsequent ignoring or
outright repudiation of the terms of the treaties led to a renewal of hostilities.
The greatest act of treachery of the period took place in 1572. Two years
previously, Catherine and Charles IX had signed a treaty with the Huguenots
granting them freedom of worship; they had remained on friendly terms with
the Huguenots, calling Coligny to court, where he enjoyed great influence.
Having lulled the Huguenots into a feeling of security, on August 25, 1572,
St. Bartholomew's Day, the queen mother and the king caused thousands of
them to be massacred in Paris and elsewhere in France. Coligny was found
and killed by the duc de Guise himself.
The eighth civil war took place during
the reign of Henry III, successor to Charles IX. The Huguenots, now led
by Henry of Navarre, inflicted (1587) a crushing defeat upon the Roman
Catholics at Coutras. Strife among the Catholics themselves, which resulted
in the assassinations of the duc de Guise in 1588 and Henry III in 1589,
helped the Huguenot cause. With the death of Henry III the house of Valois
became extinct, and Henry of Navarre, the first of the Bourbon line, became
king of France as Henry IV. To avoid further civil strife, he conciliated
the Roman Catholics by converting to Catholicism in 1593. In 1598 Henry
IV issued the Edict of Nantes, by which the Huguenots received almost complete
religious freedom.
An End to Persecution
Under Henry IV the Huguenots became
a strong power in France. To break this power, which stood in the way of
the absolutist type of government that the next two kings of France, Louis
XIII and, particularly, Louis XIV, wished to impose on the country, both
monarchs instigated new persecutions of the Huguenots, and new civil wars
took place. The French statesman and cardinal Richelieu caused the political
downfall of the Huguenots with the capture (1628), after a long siege,
of their principal stronghold, La Rochelle. Thereafter he sought to conciliate
the Protestants. Louis XIV, however, persecuted them mercilessly, and on
October 18, 1685, he revoked the Edict of Nantes. Finding life in France
intolerable under the ensuing persecutions and evaporation of religious
liberty, hundreds of thousands of Huguenots fled to England, Germany, the
Netherlands, Switzerland, and the English colonies in North America, including
Massachusetts, New York, and South Carolina. The total emigration is believed
to have been from 400,000 to 1 million, with about 1 million Protestants
remaining in France. Thousands of Protestants settled in the C‚vennes mountain
region of France and became known as Camisards; the attempt of the government
to extirpate them resulted in the Camisard War (1702-05).
The enlightened and religiously skeptical
spirit of the 18th century, however, was opposed to religious persecution,
and during this time the French Protestants gradually regained many of
their rights. Although Louis XV issued an edict in 1752 declaring marriages
and baptisms by Protestant clergymen null and void, under Louis XVI the
edict was recalled. After 1787, Protestant marriages were declared legal,
and Protestants were granted other rights as well. Several laws passed
later in the 19th century gave full religious freedom to all French sects,
including the Protestants. In the 19th and 20th centuries French Protestants,
although comparatively few in number, have been influential in French life,
playing an important part in education, law, and finance, and in general
taking a liberal stand on social reform.