Camisards

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War of the Camisards
Part of the French wars of religion
France Massif central.jpg
Massif Central in France, showing the Cévennes
Date1702 – 1710[1]
Location
Result Royal victory
Belligerents
 Kingdom of France Croix huguenote.svg Huguenot Camisards
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of France Louis XIV
Kingdom of France Victor-Maurice, comte de Broglie
Kingdom of France Nicolas Auguste, maréchal de Montrevel
Kingdom of France Claude Louis Hector de Villars
Croix huguenote.svg Jean Cavalier
Croix huguenote.svg Abraham Mazel 
Croix huguenote.svg Roland Laporte 

Camisards were Huguenots (French Protestants) of the rugged and isolated Cévennes region and the neighbouring Vaunage in southern France. In the early 1700s, they raised a resistance against the persecutions which followed Louis XIV's Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, making Protestantism illegal. The Camisards operated throughout the mainly Protestant Cévennes and Vaunage regions including parts of the Camargue around Aigues Mortes. The revolt broke out in 1702, with the worst of the fighting continuing until 1704, then skirmishes until 1710 and a final peace by 1715. The Edict of Tolerance was not finally signed until 1787.

Etymology[]

The name camisard in the Occitan language may derive from a type of linen smock or shirt known as a camisa (chemise) that peasants wear in lieu of any sort of uniform. Alternatively, it might come from the Occitan: camus, meaning paths (chemins). Camisada, in the sense of "night attack", is derived from a feature of their tactics.[2]

History[]

16th-century religious geopolitics on a map of modern France.
  Controlled by Huguenot nobility
  Contested between Huguenots and Catholics
  Controlled by Catholic nobility
  Lutheran-majority area

In April 1598, Henry IV had signed the Edict of Nantes and the religious wars that had ravaged France ended. Protestants had been given limited civic rights and the liberty to worship according to their convictions. This "fundamental and irrevocable law" was maintained by Henry's son, Louis XIII. In October 1685, Henry's grandson, Louis XIV (The Sun king), revoked the Edict of Nantes, issuing his own Edict of Fontainebleau. Louis was determined to impose a single religion on France: that of Rome. As early as 1681 he instituted the dragonnades which were conversions enforced by dragoons, labelled "missionaries in boots". They were billeted in the homes of Protestants to help them decide to convert back to the official church or alternatively to emigrate. The Cévennes was a centre of resistance, and the policy did not work.[3]

The Edict of Fontainebleau removed all rights and protections from the Huguenots. There followed about twenty years of persecutions. Reformed worship and private Bible readings were outlawed. Within weeks of the new edict over 2000 Protestant churches were burned, under the direction of Nicholas Lamoignon de Basville, the royal administrator of Languedoc, and entire villages were massacred and burnt to the ground in a series of stunning atrocities. The pastors and worshippers were captured and later exiled, sent to the galleys, tortured or killed. Seventy-five missionary priests under the command of Abbot François Langlade were sent to the Cévennes. Soldiers carrying crosses on their muskets forced the peasants to sign papers to say they were converting, and forced them to attend mass. The peasants continued to attend illicit meetings. Huguenots with a trade fled to neighboring countries. The King responded by closing the borders.[3]

The Protestant peasants of the Vaunage and the Cévennes, led by a number of teachers known as "prophets", notably François Vivent and Claude Brousson, resisted. Vivent encouraged his followers to arm themselves in case they were set upon by Royalist soldiers. Several leading prophets were tortured and executed, François Vivent in 1692 and Claude Brousson in 1698. Many more were exiled, leaving the abandoned congregations to the leadership of less educated and more mystically-oriented preachers, such as the wool-comber Abraham Mazel. The Catholic church was likened to the Beast of the Apocalypse and the clandestine prophets claimed to have seen it in the prophetic dreams. Mazel, in a dream, saw black oxen in his garden and heard a voice telling him to chase them away. From 1700 the clandestine prophets and their armed followers were hidden in houses and caves in the mountains.[3] [4]

Protestant satirical drawing of a "dragoon missionary" converting an "heretic", 1686

Abraham Mazel[]

Open hostilities began on 24 July 1702, with the assassination at le Pont-de-Montvert of a local embodiment of royal oppression, François Langlade, the Abbé of Chaila. Langlade had recently arrested and tortured a group of seven Protestants accused of attempting to flee France.[5] The band of Camisards were led by Abraham Mazel, who peacefully asked for the release of the prisoners, but when this was refused, they commenced the killing.[6] The abbé was quickly lionized in print by the Catholic State as a martyr of his faith.

The Camisards worked independently of each other and during the day most merged back into their village communities. They were predominantly agricultural workers or artisans and had no aristocratic leaders. They knew the paths and the sheep tracks intimately. They called themselves the Children of God - they were inspired by religion, not by patronage or politics.

Jean Cavalier[]

Led by the young Jean Cavalier and Pierre Laporte (Rolland), the Camisards met the ravages of the royal army with irregular warfare methods and withstood superior forces in several pitched battles.[7]

Violence increased as atrocities were committed on both sides: massacres in Catholic villages such as Fraissinet-de-Fourques, Valsauve and Potelières by camisards. Basville, a government administrator with a reputation founded on torture, deported the entire populations of Mialet and Saumane. Then in the autumn of 1703, with the king's consent, the systematic "Burning of the Cévennes" destroyed 466 hamlets and exiled their populations.[2]

Other Protestants, like those of Fraissinet-de-Lozère, under the influence of village elites, chose a loyalist attitude and fought the Camisards. They were nevertheless equally victims, losing their homes during the "Burning of the Cévennes".[8]

White Camisards, also known as "Cadets of the Cross" ("Cadets de la Croix", from a small white cross which they wore on their coats), were Catholics from neighboring communities such as St. Florent, Senechas and Rousson who, on seeing their old enemies on the run, organized into companies to loot and to hunt the rebels down.[2] They committed atrocities, such as killing 52 people at the village of Brenoux, including pregnant women and children.

Other opponents of the Protestants included six hundred miquelet marksmen from Roussillon hired as mercenaries by the King.

In 1704, Claude Louis Hector de Villars, the royal commander, offered vague concessions to the Protestants and the promise to Cavalier of a command in the royal army. Cavalier's acceptance of the offer broke the revolt, although others, including Laporte, refused to submit unless the Edict of Nantes was restored. Scattered fighting went on until 1710, but the true end of the uprising was the arrival in the Cévennes of the Protestant minister Antoine Court and the reestablishment of a small Protestant community that was largely left in peace, especially after the death of Louis XIV in 1715.

The people[]

42% of the Camisards were Cévennes peasants, and 58% were rural craftsmen, of whom 75% worked as wool-combers, wool-carders and weavers. All spoke Occitan. There were no noblemen involved, none had been trained in the art of war. There was no concept of a single army, there was no single leader but every region had its permanent organisers and occasional soldiers.[2]

The leaders of note were:

  • Gédéon Laporte
  • Salomon Couderc with Abraham Mazel in Le Bougès and Mont Lozère.
  • Henri Castanet (1674-1705) in charge of Mont Aigoual.
  • Pierre Laporte (Rolland) (1680-1704) in the Basses-Cévennes, Mialet and Lassalle.
  • Jean Cavalier (1681-1704) in the plains of Bas-Languedoc between Uzès and Sauve.[2]

Religiously, ordained pastors were rounded up, and a series of prophets ministered secretly.[further explanation needed] Notable among them[according to whom?] were:

  • Esprit Séguier
  • Abraham Mazel
  • Elie Marion
  • Jean Cavalier

The visions of the prophets inspired the operations of the war, and encouraged the peasants to feel invincible. The peasants marched singing Psalms — which unnerved the opposition.[2]

1701[]

  • June: the Vallérargues affair, when people seized back captured prophets from priests.[5]

1702[]

  • 24 July: assassination of François Langlade, Abbé du Chayla, two priests and Catholic family at Dévèze.
  • 12 August: Execution of Esprit Séguier. Traditional start of the War.
  • 11 September: Battle at Champdomergue, a hill near (Le Collet-de-Dèze) with no clear outcome.
  • 22 October: Battle at Témélac. Gédéon Laporte killed and his head displayed at Barre-des-Cévennes, Anduze, Saint-Hippolyte and Montpellier.
  • 24 December: Jean Cavalier took the 700 strong garrison town of Alès. He led 70 Camisards.
  • 28 December: The Camisards took Sauve.[5][9]

1703[]

1704[]

Monument at Devès de Martignargues
  • 15 March: the battle of Devès de Martignargues (Vézénobres). Jean Cavalier defeated a Catholic regiment
  • March: Field-marshal de Montrevel was relieved of his duties and replaced by Field-marshal de Villars.
  • 16 April: de Montrevel defeated Cavalier at the Battle of Nages (while waiting for de Villars arrival)
  • 19 April: Cavalier's stores discovered in caves at Euzet
  • 20 April: de Villars assumes command and suggests negotiation
  • May: negotiations start, Cavalier accepts unconditional surrender and a command in the royal army
  • 13 August: Pierre Laporte (Rolland) dies at Castelnau-les-Valence
  • October: Other leaders leave France.[5][9]

Heritage[]

Jean Cavalier later went over to the British, who made him Governor of the island of Jersey.

A millenarian group of ex-Camisards under the guidance of Elie Marion emigrated to London in 1706, and were said to have links with the Alumbrados. They were generally treated with scorn and some official repression as the "French Prophets".[10] Their example and their writings had some influence later, both on the spiritual outlook of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and on Ann Lee, founder of the Shaker movement.

Title and illustration of an anonymous handbill printed in London in 1707. The picture shows Élie Marion, Jean Daudé, and Nicolas Fatio de Duillier, leaders of the so-called French prophets, standing on the scaffold at Charing Cross after being sentenced to the pillory for sedition.

Role in the survival of Protestantism in France[]

After the main active Camisard groups had been subdued in various ways, the French authorities were keen not to re-ignite the revolt and took a more moderate approach to anti-Protestant repression. Many former Camisards came back to a more peaceful approach and from 1715 onwards helped re-establish a still illegal but now much better organised Protestantism. They were under the leadership of Antoine Court and of the numerous travelling pastors who were permitted to re-enter the country.[11]

"The Camisards' legend"[]

In his book with the title La légende des Camisards, Philippe Joutard, a Professor of History, registered the very lively oral tradition about the Camisards which has prevailed to this day in the Cévennes region. He also observed the "attractive power" of this striking period of history where many unrelated episodes have been integrated through the oral tradition. As this oral transmission is mainly done through the families, it often highlights more of their own ancestors who were faithful to their convictions than the heroic leaders of the revolt. In so doing it develops beyond the original religious question to a general attitude of resistance and non-conformity which determines a whole philosophical, political and human culture and way of life.[12] Philippe Joutard also noted that even the minority of Catholics living in this Protestant part of the country tend to reconstruct their history in the same way as their former religious opponents.[12] The footprint of the Camisards in Cévennes is thus particularly deep and lasting.

See also[]

Further reading[]

Although most of the sources are in French and remain untranslated, there are a number of sources available in English:

  • Alexandre Dumas, Massacres of the South (1551-1815): Celebrated Crimes, Full text (ebook) 192pp, Retrieved 21 September 2016 ISBN 1-40695-136-6
  • Henry Martyn Baird (1890). The Camisard Uprising of the French Protestants. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. [reprint of article in: Papers of the American Society of Church History (1889)]
  • H. M. Baird (1895), Huguenots and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes ISBN 1-59244-636-1[13]
  • Christian Mühling: Die europäische Debatte über den Religionskrieg (1679-1714). Konfessionelle Memoria und internationale Politik im Zeitalter Ludwigs XIV. (Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Europäische Geschichte Mainz, 250) Göttingen, Vandenhoeck&Ruprecht, ISBN 9783525310540, 2018.
  • Eugène Bonnemère (1882). Les dragonnades: Histoire des Camisards (in French). Paris: E. Dentu.
  • Philippe Joutard (2015). Les Camisards (in French). Paris: Editions Gallimard. ISBN 978-2-07-258367-4.
  • Napoléon Peyrat (1842). History of the Desert Fathers: from the revolution of the Edict of Nantes to the French Revolution, 1685-1789.[full citation needed]
  • Robert Louis Stevenson (1879), Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes. Travel literature.[better source needed]
  • Brian Eugene Strayer (2001). Huguenots and Camisards as Aliens in France, 1598-1789: The Struggle for Religious Toleration. Lewiston, N.Y.: E. Mellen Press. ISBN 978-0-7734-7370-6.
  • Samuel Rutherford Crockett (1903), Flower-o'-the-Corn. Historical fiction.†[better source needed]
  • The revolt of the Protestants of the Cevennes, with some account of the Huguenots in the seventeenth century by Bray, Mrs. (Anna Eliza), 1790-1883[14]
  • Memoirs of the wars of the Cevennes, under Col. Cavallier, : in defence of the Protestants persecuted in that country. : And of the peace concluded between him and the Mareschal D. of Villars. : Of his conference with the King of France, after the conclusion of the peace. : With letters relating thereto, from Mareschal Villars, and Chamillard secretary of state: : As also, a map describing the places mentioned in the book. by Cavalier, Jean, 1681-1740[15]
  • Cavallier and the Camisards[16]

† The story begins with the allied armies at Namur following the 1704 Battle of Blenheim, before the scene shifts to the Causse du Larzac (Chapter IV).

External links[]

Notes and references[]

Notes
  1. ^ Onnekink, David (2013). War and Religion after Westphalia, 1648–1713. Ashgate Publishing. p. 7. ISBN 9781409480211. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Bersier 2016.
  3. ^ a b c Schlegel 2008.
  4. ^ Antoine Court de Gébelin (2009), Histoire des troubles des Cévennes ou de la guerre des camisards sous le règne de Louis le Grand, reprint of the original text printed in 1760. Editions Lacour-Ollé, Nîmes (in French).[1]
  5. ^ a b c d e Rolland, Pierre. "La Guerre des Camisards". Camisards.net. 48160 St-Martin-de-Boubaux: Association d'étude et de recherche sur les camisards. Archived from the original on 2016-11-10. Retrieved 30 August 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  6. ^ Pierre-Jean Ruff, 2008. Le Temple du Rouve: lieu de mémoire des Camisards. Editions Lacour-Ollé, Nîmes.
  7. ^ Ana Eliza Bray (1870), The Revolt of the Protestants of the Cevennes, with some account of the Huguenots in the seventeenth century. John Murray, London.[2]
  8. ^ Ghislain Baury, La dynastie Rouvière de Fraissinet-de-Lozère. Les élites villageoises dans les Cévennes protestantes d'après un fonds d'archives inédit (1403-1908), t. 1: La chronique, t. 2: L'inventaire, Sète, Les Nouvelles Presses du Languedoc, 2011, http://sites.google.com/site/dynastierouviere/
  9. ^ a b c Bersier, Eugène. "The progress of the war 1702-1704". Virtual Museum of Protestantism. Fondation pasteur Eugène Bersier. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
  10. ^ Laborie, Lionel (2019). "French Prophets". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 6 September 2019. French Prophets (act. 1706–c.1750) were a controversial millenarian movement that appeared in England in 1706 and anticipated the evangelical awakening of the 1730s.
  11. ^ Philippe Joutard, Les Camisards, Gallimard 1976, rédité en coll. Folio Histoire en 1994, pp.217-219
  12. ^ a b Philippe Joutard, La légende des Camisards, NRF Gallimard, 1977, p. 355
  13. ^ Baird, Henry Martyn (1895). The Huguenots and the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. New York: C. Scribner's sons. p. 450. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  14. ^ Bray, Anna Eliza (1870). The revolt of the Protestants of the Cevennes, with some account of the Huguenots in the seventeenth century. London: J. Murray. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  15. ^ Cavalier, Jean (1726). Memoirs of the wars of the Cevennes, under Col. Cavallier, : in defence of the Protestants persecuted in that country. : And of the peace concluded between him and the Mareschal D. of Villars. : Of his conference with the King of France, after the conclusion of the peace. : With letters relating thereto, from Mareschal Villars, and Chamillard secretary of state: : As also, a map describing the places mentioned in the book. London: Printed for J. Stephens ... Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  16. ^ "Cavallier and the Camisards". The Edinburgh Review or Critical Journal. 104: 123–160. July–October 1856. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
References
  • Bersier, Eugène. "The Camisards". Virtual Museum of Protestantism. Fondation pasteur Eugène Bersier. Retrieved 29 August 2016.
  • Schlegel, Doug (2008). "The Camisards". Leben: A Journal of Reformation Life. 4 (4). Archived from the original on 2016-08-27. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
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