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St. Bartholomew's Day massacre

The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre (French: Massacre de la Saint-Barthélemy) in 1572 was a targeted group of assassinations and a wave of Catholic mob violence directed against the Huguenots (French Calvinist Protestants) during the French Wars of Religion. Traditionally believed to have been instigated by Queen Catherine de' Medici, the mother of King Charles IX,[2] the massacre started a few days after the marriage on 18 August of the king's sister Margaret to the Protestant King Henry III of Navarre. Many of the wealthiest and most prominent Huguenots had gathered in largely Catholic Paris to attend the wedding.

Painting by François Dubois, a Huguenot painter who fled France after the massacre. Although it is not known whether Dubois witnessed the event, he depicts Admiral Coligny's body hanging out of a window at the rear to the right. To the left rear, Catherine de' Medici is shown emerging from the Louvre Palace to inspect a heap of bodies.[1]

The massacre began in the night of 23–24 August 1572, the eve of the feast of Bartholomew the Apostle, two days after the attempted assassination of Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, the military and political leader of the Huguenots. King Charles IX ordered the killing of a group of Huguenot leaders, including Coligny, and the slaughter spread throughout Paris. Lasting several weeks in all, the massacre expanded outward to the countryside and other urban centres. Modern estimates for the number of dead across France vary widely, from 5,000 to 30,000.

The massacre marked a turning point in the French Wars of Religion. The Huguenot political movement was crippled by the loss of many of its prominent aristocratic leaders, and many rank-and-file members subsequently converted. Those who remained became increasingly radicalized. Though by no means unique, the bloodletting "was the worst of the century's religious massacres".[3] Throughout Europe, it "printed on Protestant minds the indelible conviction that Catholicism was a bloody and treacherous religion".[4]

Background

 
Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, the leader of the Huguenots

The Massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day was the culmination of a series of events:

Unacceptable peace and marriage

The Peace of Saint-Germain put an end to three years of civil war between Catholics and Protestants. This peace, however, was precarious since the more intransigent Catholics refused to accept it. The Guise family (strongly Catholic) was out of favour at the French court; the Huguenot leader, Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, was readmitted into the king's council in September 1571. Staunch Catholics were shocked by the return of Protestants to the court, but the queen mother, Catherine de' Medici, and her son, Charles IX, were practical in their support of peace and Coligny, as they were conscious of the kingdom's financial difficulties and the Huguenots' strong defensive position: they controlled the fortified towns of La Rochelle, La Charité-sur-Loire, Cognac, and Montauban.

To cement the peace between the two religious parties, Catherine planned to marry her daughter Margaret to the Protestant Henry of Navarre (the future King Henry IV), son of the Huguenot leader Queen Jeanne d'Albret.[5] The royal marriage was arranged for 18 August 1572. It was not accepted by traditionalist Catholics or by the Pope. Both the Pope and King Philip II of Spain strongly condemned Catherine's Huguenot policy as well.

Tension in Paris

 
Charles IX of France, who was 22 years old in August 1572, by François Clouet.

The impending marriage led to the gathering of a large number of well-born Protestants in Paris but Paris was a violently anti-Huguenot city, and Parisians, who tended to be extreme Catholics, found their presence unacceptable. Encouraged by Catholic preachers, they were horrified at the marriage of a princess of France to a Protestant.[6] The Parlement's opposition and the court's absence from the wedding led to increased political tension.[7]

Compounding this bad feeling was the fact that the harvests had been poor and taxes had risen.[8] The rise in food prices and the luxury displayed on the occasion of the royal wedding increased tensions among the common people. A particular point of tension was an open-air cross erected on the site of the house of Philippe de Gastines, a Huguenot who had been executed in 1569. The mob had torn down his house and erected a large wooden cross on a stone base. Under the terms of the peace, and after considerable popular resistance, this had been removed in December 1571 (and re-erected in a cemetery), which had already led to about 50 deaths in riots, as well as mob destruction of property.[9] In the massacres of August, the relatives of the Gastines family were among the first to be killed by the mob.[10]

The court itself was extremely divided. Catherine had not obtained Pope Gregory XIII's permission to celebrate this irregular marriage; consequently, the French prelates hesitated over which attitude to adopt. It took all the queen mother's skill to convince the Cardinal de Bourbon (paternal uncle of the Protestant groom, but himself a Catholic clergyman) to marry the couple. Beside this, the rivalries between the leading families re-emerged. The Guises were not prepared to make way for their rivals, the House of Montmorency. François, Duke of Montmorency and governor of Paris, was unable to control the disturbances in the city. On August 20, he left the capital and retired to Chantilly.[11]

Shift in Huguenot thought

In the years preceding the massacre, Huguenot political rhetoric had for the first time taken a tone against not just the policies of a particular monarch of France, but monarchy in general. In part this was led by an apparent change in stance by John Calvin in his Readings on the Prophet Daniel, a book of 1561, in which he had argued that when kings disobey God, they "automatically abdicate their worldly power" – a change from his views in earlier works that even ungodly kings should be obeyed. This change was soon picked up by Huguenot writers, who began to expand on Calvin and promote the idea of the sovereignty of the people, ideas to which Catholic writers and preachers responded fiercely.[12]

Nevertheless, it was only in the aftermath of the massacre that anti-monarchical ideas found widespread support from Huguenots, among the "Monarchomachs" and others. "Huguenot writers, who had previously, for the most part, paraded their loyalty to the Crown, now called for the deposition or assassination of a Godless king who had either authorised or permitted the slaughter".[13] Thus, the massacre "marked the beginning of a new form of French Protestantism: one that was openly at war with the crown. This was much more than a war against the policies of the crown, as in the first three civil wars; it was a campaign against the very existence of the Gallican monarchy itself".[14]

Huguenot intervention in the Netherlands

Tensions were further raised when in May 1572 the news reached Paris that a French Huguenot army under Louis of Nassau had crossed from France to the Netherlandish province of Hainaut and captured the Catholic strongholds of Mons and Valenciennes (now in Belgium and France, respectively). Louis governed the Principality of Orange around Avignon in southern France for his brother William the Silent, who was leading the Dutch Revolt against the Spanish. This intervention threatened to involve France in that war; many Catholics believed that Coligny had again persuaded the king to intervene on the side of the Dutch,[15] as he had managed to do the previous October, before Catherine had got the decision reversed.[16]

Attempted assassination of Admiral de Coligny

 
This popular print by Frans Hogenberg shows the attempted assassination of Coligny at left, his subsequent murder at right, and scenes of the general massacre in the streets.

After the wedding of Catholic Marguerite de Valois and Huguenot Henry de Navarre on August 18 of 1572,[17] Coligny and the leading Huguenots remained in Paris to discuss some outstanding grievances about the Peace of St. Germain with the king. An attempt was made on Coligny's life a few days later on August 22[18] as he made his way back to his house from the Louvre. He was shot from an upstairs window, and seriously wounded. The would-be assassin, most likely Charles de Louviers, Lord of Maurevert[17](c. 1505–1583), escaped in the ensuing confusion. Other theories about who was ultimately responsible for the attack centre on three candidates:

  • The Guises: the Cardinal of Lorraine (who was in fact in Rome at the time), and his nephews, the Dukes of Guise and Aumale, are the most likely suspects. The leaders of the Catholic party, they wanted to avenge the death of the two dukes' father Francis, Duke of Guise, whose assassination ten years earlier they believed to have been ordered by Coligny. The shot aimed at Admiral de Coligny came from a house belonging to the Guises.
  • The Duke of Alba: he governed the Netherlands on behalf of Philip II. Coligny planned to lead a campaign in the Netherlands to participate in the Dutch Revolt to free the region from Spanish control. During the summer, Coligny had secretly dispatched a number of troops to help the Protestants in Mons, who were now besieged by the Duke of Alba. So Admiral de Coligny was a real threat to the latter.
  • Catherine de' Medici: according to tradition, the Queen Mother had been worried that the king was increasingly becoming dominated by Coligny. Amongst other things, Catherine reportedly feared that Coligny's influence would drag France into a war with Spain over the Netherlands.[19]

Massacres

 
Preparation for the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. Painting by Kārlis Hūns (1868)

Paris

The attempted assassination of Coligny triggered the crisis that led to the massacre. Admiral de Coligny was the most respected Huguenot leader and enjoyed a close relationship with the king, although he was distrusted by the king's mother. Aware of the danger of reprisals from the Protestants, the king and his court visited Coligny on his sickbed and promised him that the culprits would be punished. While the Queen Mother was eating dinner, Protestants burst in to demand justice, some talking in menacing terms.[20] Fears of Huguenot reprisals grew. Coligny's brother-in-law led a 4,000-strong army camped just outside Paris[15] and, although there is no evidence it was planning to attack, Catholics in the city feared it might take revenge on the Guises or the city populace itself.

That evening, Catherine held a meeting at the Tuileries Palace with her Italian advisers, including Albert de Gondi, Comte de Retz. On the evening of 23 August, Catherine went to see the king to discuss the crisis. Though no details of the meeting survive, Charles IX and his mother apparently made the decision to eliminate the Protestant leaders. Holt speculated this entailed "between two and three dozen noblemen" who were still in Paris.[21] Other historians are reluctant to speculate on the composition or size of the group of leaders targeted at this point, beyond the few obvious heads. Like Coligny, most potential candidates for elimination were accompanied by groups of gentlemen who served as staff and bodyguards, so murdering them would also have involved killing their retainers as a necessity.

Shortly after this decision, the municipal authorities of Paris were summoned. They were ordered to shut the city gates and arm the citizenry to prevent any attempt at a Protestant uprising. The king's Swiss mercenaries were given the task of killing a list of leading Protestants. It is difficult today to determine the exact chronology of events, or to know the precise moment the killing began. It seems probable that a signal was given by ringing bells for matins (between midnight and dawn) at the church of Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois, near the Louvre, which was the parish church of the kings of France. The Swiss mercenaries expelled the Protestant nobles from the Louvre castle and then slaughtered them in the streets.

 
One morning at the gates of the Louvre, 19th-century painting by Édouard Debat-Ponsan. Catherine de' Medici is in black. The scene from Dubois (above) re-imagined.

In the Holy Innocents' Cemetery, on Sunday, 24, at noon, a hawthorn bush, that had withered for months, began to green again near an image of the Virgin. That was interpreted by the Parisians as a sign of divine blessing and approval to these multiple murders,[22] and on the same day at night, a group led by Guise in person dragged Admiral Coligny from his bed, killed him, and threw his body out of a window. The terrified Huguenot nobles in the building initially put up a fight, hoping to save the life of their leader,[23] but Coligny himself seemed unperturbed. According to the contemporary French historian Jacques Auguste de Thou, one of Coligny's murderers was struck by how calmly he accepted his fate, and remarked that "he never saw anyone less afraid in so great a peril, nor die more steadfastly".[24][page needed] The tension that had been building since the Peace of St. Germain now exploded in a wave of popular violence. The common people began to hunt Protestants throughout the city, including women and children. Chains were used to block streets so that Protestants could not escape from their houses. The bodies of the dead were collected in carts and thrown into the Seine. The massacre in Paris lasted three days despite the king's attempts to stop it. Holt concludes that "while the general massacre might have been prevented, there is no evidence that it was intended by any of the elites at court", listing a number of cases where Catholic courtiers intervened to save individual Protestants who were not in the leadership.[25] Recent research by Jérémie Foa, investigating the prosopography suggests that the massacres were carried by a group of militants who had already made out lists of Protestants deserving extermination, and the mass of the population, whether approving or disapproving, were not directly involved.[26]

The two leading Huguenots, Henry of Navarre and his cousin the Prince of Condé (respectively aged 19 and 20), were spared as they pledged to convert to Catholicism; both would eventually renounce their conversions when they managed to escape Paris.[27] According to some interpretations, the survival of these Huguenots was a key point in Catherine's overall scheme, to prevent the House of Guise from becoming too powerful.

On August 26, the king and court established the official version of events by going to the Paris Parlement. "Holding a lit de justice, Charles declared that he had ordered the massacre in order to thwart a Huguenot plot against the royal family."[28] A jubilee celebration, including a procession, was then held, while the killings continued in parts of the city.[28]

Provinces

Although Charles had dispatched orders to his provincial governors on August 24 to prevent violence and maintain the terms of the 1570 edict,[29] from August to October, similar massacres of Huguenots took place in a total of twelve other cities: Toulouse, Bordeaux, Lyon, Bourges, Rouen,[30]Orléans, Meaux, Angers, La Charité, Saumur, Gaillac and Troyes.[31] In most of them, the killings swiftly followed the arrival of the news of the Paris massacre, but in some places there was a delay of more than a month. According to Mack P. Holt: "All twelve cities where provincial massacres occurred had one striking feature in common; they were all cities with Catholic majorities where there had once been significant Protestant minorities.... All of them had also experienced serious religious division... during the first three civil wars... Moreover seven of them shared a previous experience ... [they] had actually been taken over by Protestant minorities during the first civil war..."[29]

 
The Siege of La Rochelle (1572–1573) began soon after the St. Bartholomew massacre.

In several cases the Catholic party in the city believed they had received orders from the king to begin the massacre, some conveyed by visitors to the city, and in other cases apparently coming from a local nobleman or his agent.[32] It seems unlikely any such orders came from the king, although the Guise faction may have desired the massacres.[33] Apparently genuine letters from the Duke of Anjou, the king's younger brother, did urge massacres in the king's name; in Nantes the mayor fortunately held on to his without publicising it until a week later when contrary orders from the king had arrived.[34] In some cities the massacres were led by the mob, while the city authorities tried to suppress them, and in others small groups of soldiers and officials began rounding up Protestants with little mob involvement.[35] In Bordeaux the inflammatory sermon on September 29 of a Jesuit, Edmond Auger, encouraged the massacre that was to occur a few days later.[36]

In the cities affected, the loss to the Huguenot communities after the massacres was numerically far larger than those actually killed; in the following weeks there were mass conversions to Catholicism, apparently in response to the threatening atmosphere for Huguenots in these cities. In Rouen, where some hundreds were killed, the Huguenot community shrank from 16,500 to fewer than 3,000 mainly as a result of conversions and emigration to safer cities or countries. Some cities unaffected by the violence nevertheless witnessed a sharp decline in their Huguenot population.[37] It has been claimed that the Huguenot community represented as much as 10% of the French population on the eve of the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre, declining to 7–8% by the end of the 16th century, and further after heavy persecution began once again during the reign of Louis XIV, culminating with the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes.[38]

Soon afterward both sides prepared for a fourth civil war, which began before the end of the year.

Death toll

 
Bas de page detail from a portrait print of Coligny, Jost Amman, 1573. Coligny is shot at left, and killed at right.

Estimates of the number that perished in the massacres have varied from 2,000 by a Roman Catholic apologist to 70,000 by the contemporary Huguenot Maximilien de Béthune, who himself barely escaped death.[39] Accurate figures for casualties have never been compiled,[40] and even in writings by modern historians there is a considerable range, though the more specialised the historian, the lower they tend to be. At the low end are figures of about 2,000 in Paris[41] and 3,000 in the provinces, the latter figure an estimate by Philip Benedict in 1978.[42] Other estimates are about 10,000 in total,[43] with about 3,000 in Paris[44] and 7,000 in the provinces.[45] At the higher end are total figures of up to 20,000,[46] or 30,000 in total, from "a contemporary, non-partisan guesstimate" quoted by the historians Felipe Fernández-Armesto and D. Wilson.[47] For Paris, the only hard figure is a payment by the city to workmen for collecting and burying 1,100 bodies washed up on the banks of the Seine downstream from the city in one week. Body counts relating to other payments are computed from this.[48]

Among the slain were the philosopher Petrus Ramus, and in Lyon the composer Claude Goudimel. The corpses floating down the Rhône from Lyon are said to have put the people of Arles off drinking the water for three months.[49]

Reactions

 
Gregory XIII's medal

The Politiques, those Catholics who placed national unity above sectarian interests, were horrified, but many Catholics inside and outside France initially regarded the massacres as deliverance from an imminent Huguenot coup d'etat. The severed head of Coligny was apparently dispatched to Pope Gregory XIII, though it got no further than Lyon, and the pope sent the king a Golden Rose.[50] The pope ordered a Te Deum to be sung as a special thanksgiving (a practice continued for many years after) and had a medal struck with the motto Ugonottorum strages 1572 (Latin: "Overthrow (or slaughter) of the Huguenots 1572") showing an angel bearing a cross and a sword before which are the felled Protestants.[51]

 
The massacre, with the murder of Gaspard de Coligny above left, as depicted in a fresco by Giorgio Vasari.

Pope Gregory XIII also commissioned the artist Giorgio Vasari to paint three frescos in the Sala Regia depicting the wounding of Coligny, his death, and Charles IX before Parliament, matching those commemorating the defeat of the Turks at the Battle of Lepanto (1571). "The massacre was interpreted as an act of divine retribution; Coligny was considered a threat to Christendom and thus Pope Gregory XIII designated 11 September 1572 as a joint commemoration of the Battle of Lepanto and the massacre of the Huguenots."[52]

Although these formal acts of rejoicing in Rome were not repudiated publicly, misgivings in the papal curia grew as the true story of the killings gradually became known. Pope Gregory XIII himself refused to receive Charles de Maurevert, said to be the killer of Coligny, on the ground that he was a murderer.[53]

On hearing of the slaughter, Philip II of Spain supposedly "laughed, for almost the only time on record".[54] In Paris, the poet Jean-Antoine de Baïf, founder of the Academie de Musique et de Poésie, wrote a sonnet extravagantly praising the killings.[55] On the other hand, the Holy Roman Emperor, Maximilian II, King Charles's father-in-law, was sickened, describing the massacre as a "shameful bloodbath".[56] Moderate French Catholics also began to wonder whether religious uniformity was worth the price of such bloodshed and the ranks of the Politiques began to swell.

The massacre caused a "major international crisis".[57] Protestant countries were horrified at the events, and only the concentrated efforts of Catherine's ambassadors, including a special mission by Gondi, prevented the collapse of her policy of remaining on good terms with them.[citation needed] Elizabeth I of England's ambassador to France at that time, Sir Francis Walsingham, barely escaped with his life.[58] Even Tsar Ivan the Terrible expressed horror at the carnage in a letter to the Emperor.[59]

The massacre "spawned a pullulating mass of polemical literature, bubbling with theories, prejudices and phobias".[60] Many Catholic authors were exultant in their praise of the king for his bold and decisive action (after regretfully abandoning a policy of meeting Huguenot demands as far as he could) against the supposed Huguenot coup, whose details were now fleshed out in officially sponsored works, though the larger mob massacres were somewhat deprecated: "[one] must excuse the people's fury moved by a laudable zeal which is difficult to restrain once it has been stirred up".[61] Huguenot works understandably dwelt on the harrowing details of violence, expounded various conspiracy theories that the royal court had long planned the massacres, and often showed extravagant anti-Italian feelings directed at Catherine, Gondi, and other Italians at court.[62]

Diplomatic correspondence was readier than published polemics to recognise the unplanned and chaotic nature of the events,[63] which also emerged from several accounts in memoirs published over the following years by witnesses to the events at court, including the famous Memoirs of Margaret of Valois, the only eye-witness account of the massacre from a member of the royal family.[64][65] There are also a dramatic and influential account by Henry, duke of Anjou that was not recognised as fake until the 19th century. Anjou's supposed account was the source of the quotation attributed to Charles IX: "Well then, so be it! Kill them! But kill them all! Don't leave a single one alive to reproach me!"[66][67]

 
Charles IX in front of the Paris Parlement on 26 August 1572, justifying the Saint Bartholomew massacre as a response to a Huguenot plot. Vasari for Pope Gregory XIII, Sala Regia (Vatican).

The author of the Lettre de Pierre Charpentier (1572) was not only "a Protestant of sorts, and thus, apparently, writing with inside knowledge", but also "an extreme apologist for the massacre ... in his view ... a well-merited punishment for years of civil disobedience [and] secret sedition..."[68] A strand of Catholic writing, especially by Italian authors, broke from the official French line to applaud the massacre as precisely a brilliant stratagem, deliberately planned from various points beforehand.[69] The most extreme of these writers was Camilo Capilupi, a papal secretary, whose work insisted that the whole series of events since 1570 had been a masterly plan conceived by Charles IX, and carried through by frequently misleading his mother and ministers as to his true intentions. The Venetian government refused to allow the work to be printed there, and it was eventually published in Rome in 1574, and in the same year quickly reprinted in Geneva in the original Italian and a French translation.[70]

It was in this context that the massacre came to be seen as a product of Machiavellianism, a view greatly influenced by the Huguenot Innocent Gentillet, who published his Discours contre Machievel in 1576, which was printed in ten editions in three languages over the next four years.[71] Gentillet held, quite wrongly according to Sydney Anglo, that Machiavelli's "books [were] held most dear and precious by our Italian and Italionized courtiers" (in the words of his first English translation), and so (in Anglo's paraphrase) "at the root of France's present degradation, which has culminated not only in the St Bartholemew massacre but the glee of its perverted admirers".[72] In fact there is little trace of Machiavelli in French writings before the massacre, and not very much after, until Gentillet's own book, but this concept was seized upon by many contemporaries, and played a crucial part in setting the long-lasting popular concept of Machiavellianism.[73] It also gave added impetus to the strong anti-Italian feelings already present in Huguenot polemic.

Christopher Marlowe was one of many Elizabethan writers who were enthusiastic proponents of these ideas. In the Jew of Malta (1589–90) "Machievel" in person speaks the Prologue, claiming to not be dead, but to have possessed the soul of the Duke of Guise, "And, now the Guise is dead, is come from France/ To view this land, and frolic with his friends" (Prologue, lines 3–4)[74] His last play, The Massacre at Paris (1593) takes the massacre, and the following years, as its subject, with Guise and Catherine both depicted as Machiavellian plotters, bent on evil from the start. The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913 was still ready to endorse a version of this view, describing the massacres as "an entirely political act committed in the name of the immoral principles of Machiavellianism" and blaming "the pagan theories of a certain raison d'état according to which the end justified the means".[49]

The French 18th-century historian Louis-Pierre Anquetil, in his Esprit de la Ligue of 1767, was among the first to begin impartial historical investigation, emphasizing the lack of premeditation (before the attempt on Coligny) in the massacre and that Catholic mob violence had a history of uncontrollable escalation.[75] By this period the Massacre was being widely used by Voltaire (in his Henriade) and other Enlightenment writers in polemics against organized religion in general. Lord Acton changed his mind on whether the massacre had been premeditated twice, finally concluding that it was not.[76] The question of whether the massacre had long been premeditated was not entirely settled until the late 19th century by which time a consensus was reached that it was not.[77][78][79]

Interpretations

Role of the royal family

 
Catherine de' Medici, Charles IX's mother, after François Clouet.

Over the centuries, the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre has aroused a great deal of controversy. Modern historians are still divided over the responsibility of the royal family:

The traditional interpretation makes Catherine de' Medici and her Catholic advisers the principal culprits in the execution of the principal military leaders. They forced the hand of a hesitant and weak-willed king in the decision of that particular execution. This traditional interpretation has been largely abandoned by some modern historians including, among others, Janine Garrisson. However, in a more recent work than his history of the period, Holt concludes: "The ringleaders of the conspiracy appear to have been a group of four men: Henry, duke of Anjou; Chancellor Birague; the duke of Nevers, and the comte de Retz" (Gondi).[80] Apart from Anjou, the others were all Italian advisors at the French court.

According to Denis Crouzet, Charles IX feared a Protestant uprising, and chose to strangle it at birth to protect his power. The execution decision was therefore his own, and not Catherine de' Medici's.[81][page needed]

According to Jean-Louis Bourgeon, the violently anti-Huguenot city of Paris was really responsible. He stresses that the city was on the verge of revolt. The Guises, who were highly popular, exploited this situation to put pressure on the King and the Queen Mother. Charles IX was thus forced to head off the potential riot, which was the work of the Guises, the city militia and the common people.[82][page needed]

According to Thierry Wanegffelen, the member of the royal family with the most responsibility in this affair is Henry, Duke of Anjou, the king's ambitious younger brother. Following the failed assassination attack against the Admiral de Coligny (which Wanegffelen attributes to the Guise family and Spain), the Italian advisers of Catherine de' Medici undoubtedly recommended in the royal Council the execution of about fifty Protestant leaders. These Italians stood to benefit from the occasion by eliminating the Huguenot danger. Despite the firm opposition of the Queen Mother and the King, Anjou, Lieutenant General of the Kingdom, present at this meeting of the Council, could see a good occasion to make a name for himself with the government. He contacted the Parisian authorities and another ambitious young man, running out of authority and power, Duke Henri de Guise (whose uncle, the clear-sighted Charles, cardinal of Lorraine, was then detained in Rome).

The Parisian St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre resulted from this conjunction of interests, and this offers a much better explanation as to why the men of the Duke of Anjou acted in the name of the Lieutenant General of the Kingdom, consistent with the thinking of the time, rather than in the name of the King. One can also understand why, the day after the start of the massacre, Catherine de' Medici, through royal declaration of Charles IX, condemned the crimes, and threatened the Guise family with royal justice. However, when Charles IX and his mother learned of the involvement of the duke of Anjou, and being so dependent on his support, they issued a second royal declaration, which while asking for an end to the massacres, credited the initiative with the desire of Charles IX to prevent a Protestant plot. Initially the coup d'état of the duke of Anjou was a success, but Catherine de' Medici went out of her way to deprive him from any power in France: she sent him with the royal army to remain in front of La Rochelle and then had him elected King of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.[83][page needed]

Role of the religious factions

Traditional histories have tended to focus more on the roles of the political notables whose machinations began the massacre than the mindset of those who actually did the killing. Ordinary lay Catholics were involved in the mass killings; they believed they were executing the wishes of the king and of God. At this time, in an age before mass media, "the pulpit remained probably the most effective means of mass communication".[84]

Despite the large numbers of pamphlets and broadsheets in circulation, literacy rates were still poor. Thus, some modern historians have stressed the critical and incendiary role that militant preachers played in shaping ordinary lay beliefs, both Catholic and Protestant.

Historian Barbara B. Diefendorf, Professor of History at Boston University, wrote that Simon Vigor had "said if the King ordered the Admiral (Coligny) killed, 'it would be wicked not to kill him'. With these words, the most popular preacher in Paris legitimised in advance the events of St. Bartholomew's Day".[85] Diefendorf says that when the head of the murdered Coligny was shown to the Paris mob by a member of the nobility, with the claim that it was the King's will, the die was cast. Another historian Mack P. Holt, Professor at George Mason University, agrees that Vigor, "the best known preacher in Paris", preached sermons that were full of references to the evils that would befall the capital should the Protestants seize control.[86] This view is also partly supported by Cunningham and Grell (2000) who explained that "militant sermons by priests such as Simon Vigor served to raise the religious and eschatological temperature on the eve of the Massacre".[87]

Historians cite the extreme tension and bitterness that led to the powder-keg atmosphere of Paris in August 1572.[88] In the previous ten years there had already been three outbreaks of civil war, and attempts by Protestant nobles to seize power in France.[89] Some blame the complete esteem with which the sovereign's office was held, justified by prominent French Roman Catholic theologians, and that the special powers of French Kings "...were accompanied by explicit responsibilities, the foremost of which was combating heresy".[90]

Holt, notable for re-emphasising the importance of religious issues, as opposed to political/dynastic power struggles or socio-economic tensions, in explaining the French Wars of Religion, also re-emphasised the role of religion in the St Bartholomew's Day Massacre. He noted that the extra violence inflicted on many of the corpses "was not random at all, but patterned after the rites of the Catholic culture that had given birth to it". "Many Protestant houses were burned, invoking the traditional purification by fire of all heretics. Many victims were also thrown into the Seine, invoking the purification by water of Catholic baptism".[91] Viewed as a threat to the social and political order, Holt argues that "Huguenots not only had to be exterminated – that is, killed – they also had to be humiliated, dishonoured, and shamed as the inhuman beasts they were perceived to be."[91]

However Raymond Mentzer points out that Protestants "could be as bloodthirsty as Catholics. Earlier Huguenot rage at Nimes (in 1567) led to... the massacre of twenty-four Catholics, mostly priests and prominent laymen, at the hands of their Protestant neighbours. Few towns escaped the episodic violence and some suffered repeatedly from both sides. Neither faith had a monopoly on cruelty and misguided fervour".[92]

Some, like Leonie Frieda, emphasise the element within the mob violence of the "haves" being "killed by the 'have-nots'". Many Protestants were nobles or bourgeois and Frieda adds that "a number of bourgeois Catholic Parisians had suffered the same fate as the Protestants; many financial debts were wiped clean with the death of creditors and moneylenders that night".[93] At least one Huguenot was able to buy off his would-be murderers.[94]

The historian H.G. Koenigsberger (who until his retirement in 1984 was Professor of History at King's College, University of London) wrote that the Massacre was deeply disturbing because "it was Christians massacring other Christians who were not foreign enemies but their neighbours with which they and their forebears had lived in a Christian community, and under the same ruler, for a thousand years".[95] He concludes that the historical importance of the Massacre "lies not so much in the appalling tragedies involved as their demonstration of the power of sectarian passion to break down the barriers of civilisation, community and accepted morality".[96]

One historian puts forward an analysis of the massacre in terms of social anthropology – the religious historian Bruce Lincoln. He describes how the religious divide, which gave the Huguenots different patterns of dress, eating and pastimes, as well as the obvious differences of religion and (very often) class, had become a social schism or cleavage. The rituals around the royal marriage had only intensified this cleavage, contrary to its intentions, and the "sentiments of estrangement – radical otherness – [had come] to prevail over sentiments of affinity between Catholics and Protestants".[97]

On 23 August 1997, Pope John Paul II, who was in Paris for the 12th World Youth Day, issued a statement on the Massacre. He stayed in Paris for three days and made eleven speeches. According to Reuters and the Associated Press, at a late-night vigil, with the hundreds of thousands of young people who were in Paris for the celebrations, he made the following comments: "On the eve of Aug. 24, we cannot forget the sad massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day, an event of very obscure causes in the political and religious history of France. ... Christians did things which the Gospel condemns. I am convinced that only forgiveness, offered and received, leads little by little to a fruitful dialogue, which will in turn ensure a fully Christian reconciliation. ... Belonging to different religious traditions must not constitute today a source of opposition and tension. On the contrary, our common love for Christ impels us to seek tirelessly the path of full unity."[98]

Cultural references

The Elizabethan dramatist Christopher Marlowe knew the story well from the Huguenot literature translated into English, and probably from French refugees who had sought refuge in his native Canterbury. He wrote a strongly anti-Catholic and anti-French play based on the events entitled The Massacre at Paris. Also, in his biography The World of Christopher Marlowe, David Riggs claims the incident remained with the playwright, and massacres are incorporated into the final acts of three of his early plays, 1 and 2 Tamburlaine and The Jew of Malta – see above for Marlowe and Machiavellism.

The story was also taken up in 1772 by Louis-Sébastien Mercier in his play Jean Hennuyer, Bishop of Lizieux, unperformed until the French Revolution. This play was translated into English, with some adaptations, as The Massacre by the actress and playwright Elizabeth Inchbald in 1792. Inchbald kept the historical setting, but The Massacre, completed by February 1792, also reflected events in the recent French Revolution, though not the September Massacres of 1792, which coincided with its printing.[99]

Joseph Chénier's play Charles IX was a huge success during the French Revolution, drawing strongly anti-monarchical and anti-religious lessons from the massacre. Chénier was able to put his principles into practice as a politician, voting for the execution of Louis XVI and many others, perhaps including his brother André Chénier. However, before the collapse of the Revolution he became suspected of moderation, and in some danger himself.[100]

The story was fictionalised by Prosper Mérimée in his Chronique du règne de Charles IX (1829), and by Alexandre Dumas, père in La Reine Margot, an 1845 novel that fills in the history as it was then seen with romance and adventure. That novel has been translated into English and was made first into a commercially successful French film in 1954, La reine Margot (US title "A Woman of Evil"), starring Jeanne Moreau. It was remade in 1994 as La Reine Margot (later as Queen Margot, and subtitled, in English-language markets), starring Isabelle Adjani.

 
"They seemed but dark shadows as they slid along the walls", illustration from an English History of France, c. 1912

Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera Les Huguenots (1836), very loosely based on the events of the massacre, was one of the most popular and spectacular examples of French grand opera.

The Pre-Raphaelite painter John Everett Millais managed to create a sentimental moment in the massacre in his painting A Huguenot, on St. Bartholomew's Day (1852), which depicts a Catholic woman attempting to convince her Huguenot lover to wear the white scarf badge of the Catholics and protect himself. The man, true to his beliefs, gently refuses her.[101] Millais was inspired to create the painting after seeing Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots.

Mark Twain described the massacre in "From the Manuscript of 'A Tramp Abroad' (1879): The French and the Comanches", an essay about "partly civilized races". He wrote in part, "St. Bartholomew's was unquestionably the finest thing of the kind ever devised and accomplished in the world. All the best people took a hand in it, the King and the Queen Mother included."[102]

The St. Bartholomew's Day massacre and the events surrounding it were incorporated into D.W. Griffith's film Intolerance (1916). The film follows Catherine de' Medici (Josephine Crowell) plotting the massacre, coercing her son King Charles IX (Frank Bennett) to sanction it. Incidental characters include Henri of Navarre, Marguerite de Valois (Constance Talmadge), Admiral Coligny (Joseph Henabery), and the Duke of Anjou, who is portrayed as homosexual. These historic scenes are depicted alongside a fictional plot in which a Huguenot family is caught among the events.

Another novel depicting this massacre is Queen Jezebel, by Jean Plaidy (1953). In the third episode of the BBC miniseries Elizabeth R (1971), starring Glenda Jackson as Queen Elizabeth I of England, the English court's reaction to the massacre and its effect on England's relations with France is addressed in depth.

A 1966 serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who entitled The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve is set during the events leading up to the Paris massacre. Leonard Sachs appeared as Admiral Coligny and Joan Young played Catherine de' Medici. This serial is missing from the BBC archives and survives only in audio form. It depicts the massacre as having been instigated by Catherine de' Medici for both religious and political reasons, and authorised by a weak-willed and easily influenced Charles IX.[103]

The St Bartholomew's Day Massacre is the setting for Tim Willocks' historical novel, The Twelve Children of Paris (Matthias Tannhauser Trilogy:2), published in 2013.

Ken Follett's 2017 historical fiction novel A Column of Fire uses this event. Several chapters depict in great detail the massacre and the events leading up to it, with the book's protagonists getting some warning in advance and making enormous but futile efforts to avert it. Follett completely clears King Charles IX and his mother Catherine of any complicity and depicts them as sincere proponents of religious toleration, caught by surprise and horrified by the events; he places the entire responsibility on the Guise Family, following the "Machiavellian" view of the massacre and depicting it as a complicated Guise conspiracy, meticulously planned in advance and implemented in full detail.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Knecht, Robert J. (2002). The French religious wars: 1562–1598. Oxford: Osprey. pp. 51–52. ISBN 978-1841763958.
  2. ^ Jouanna, Arlette (16 May 2016) [2007]. The Saint Bartholomew's Day massacre: The mysteries of a crime of state. Translated by Bergin, Joseph. Manchester University Press (published 2016). ISBN 9781526112187. Retrieved 1 August 2022. It is unlikely that it was an agreed signal for a massacre planned in advance — a highly dubious plan, whether attributed to the Queen Mother (by Protestant sources) or to Parisian Catholics.
  3. ^ Koenigsburger, H. G.; Mosse, George; Bowler, G. Q. (1999). Europe in the sixteenth century (2nd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-0582418639.
  4. ^ Chadwick, Henry; Evans, G. R. (1987). Atlas of the Christian church. London: Macmillan. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-333-44157-2.
  5. ^ Holt, p. 78.
  6. ^ Lincoln (1989), pp. 93–94
  7. ^ J. H. Shennan (1998). The Parlement of Paris. Sutton. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-7509-1830-5.
  8. ^ Knecht (2001), p. 359
  9. ^ Holt, Mack P. (2005). The French Wars of Religion 1562–1626, Cambridge University Press, pp. 79–80 google Books
  10. ^ Holt (2005), p. 86
  11. ^ Hugues Daussy (2002). Les huguenots et le roi: le combat politique de Philippe Duplessis-Mornay, 1572–1600. Librairie Droz. p. 84. ISBN 978-2-600-00667-5.
  12. ^ Holt (2005), pp. 78–79; Calvin's book was "Praelectiones in librum prophetiarum Danielis", Geneva and Laon, 1561
  13. ^ Fernández-Armesto, F. & Wilson, D. (1996), Reformation: Christianity and the World 1500 – 2000, Bantam Press, London, ISBN 0-593-02749-3 paperback, p. 237
  14. ^ Holt (1995 ed), p. 95
  15. ^ a b Holt (2005), p. 81
  16. ^ Knecht, Robert Jean (2001), The Rise and Fall of Renaissance France, 1483–1610, p. 356, Blackwell Publishing, ISBN 0-631-22729-6, ISBN 978-0-631-22729-8, Google Books
  17. ^ a b Usher, Phillip (2014). "From Marriage to Massacre: The Louvre in August 1572". L'Esprit Créateur. 54 (2): 33–44. doi:10.1353/esp.2014.0023. JSTOR 26378894. S2CID 162224757 – via jstor.
  18. ^ "Gaspard II de Coligny, seigneur de Châtillon | French admiral and Huguenot leader | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2022-04-02.
  19. ^ Mack P. Holt (19 October 1995). The French Wars of Religion, 1562–1629. Cambridge University Press. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-521-35873-6.
  20. ^ Garrisson, pp. 82–83, and Lincoln, p. 96, and Knecht (2001), p. 361
  21. ^ Holt (2005), p. 85.
  22. ^ "Le massacre de la Saint-Barthélemy : l'obsession de la souillure hérétique". Le Monde.fr (in French). 2007-08-03. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  23. ^ Knecht (2001), p. 364. The site is now 144 Rue de Rivoli, with a plaque commemorating the event, though both building and street layout postdate the 16th century. New York Times on the plaque
  24. ^ De Thou, Jacques- Auguste. Histoire des choses arrivees de son temps. Boston: Ginn and Company.
  25. ^ Holt (2005 edn), pp. 88–91 (quotation from p. 91)
  26. ^ Foa, Jérémie, "Tous ceux qui tombent. Visages du massacre de la Saint-Bethélemy", 2021, La Découverte, ISBN 2348057883
  27. ^ Dyer, Thomas Henry (1861). The history of modern Europe: from the fall of Constantinople in 1453 to the war in the Crimea in 1857. John Murray. p. 268. Retrieved 28 March 2011.
  28. ^ a b Lincoln, p. 98
  29. ^ a b Holt (2005 ed.), p. 91
  30. ^ Benedict, Philip (2004), Rouen During the Wars of Religion, Cambridge University Press, p. 126. ISBN 0-521-54797-0, ISBN 978-0-521-54797-0
  31. ^ Holt (2005 ed.), p. 91. The dates are in Garrison, p. 139, who adds Albi to the 12 in Holt. online
  32. ^ Holt (2005 ed.), pp. 93–94, and Benedict (2004), p. 127
  33. ^ Benedict (2004), p. 127
  34. ^ Knecht (2001), p. 367
  35. ^ Knecht (2001), p. 368, though see Holt (2005), pp. 93–95 for a different emphasis
  36. ^ ("Emond" or "Edmond"). Garrison, pp. 144–45, who rejects the view that this "met le feu au poudres" (lit the powder) in Bordeaux. See also: Pearl, Jonathan L. (1998), The Crime of Crimes: Demonology and Politics in France, 1560–1620, Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, p. 70, ISBN 978-0-88920-296-2 Google Books
  37. ^ Holt (2005 ed.), p. 95, citing Benedict (2004), pp. 127–132
  38. ^ Hans J. Hillerbrand in his Encyclopedia of Protestantism: 4-volume Set
  39. ^ Saint Bartholomew's Day, Massacre of (2008) Encyclopædia Britannica Deluxe Edition, Chicago; Hardouin de Péréfixe de Beaumont, Catholic Archbishop of Paris a century later, put the number at 100,000, but "This last number is probably exaggerated, if we reckon only those who perished by a violent death. But if we add those who died from wretchedness, hunger, sorrow, abandoned old men, women without shelter, children without bread,—all the miserable whose life was shortened by this great catastrophe, we shall see that the estimate of Péréfixe is still below the reality." G. D. Félice (1851). History of the Protestants of France. New York: Edward Walker, p. 217.
  40. ^ The range of estimates available in the mid-19th century, with other details, are summarized by the Huguenot statesman and historian François Guizot in his A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume IV
  41. ^ Armstrong, Alastair (2003), France 1500–1715, Heinemann, pp. 70–71 ISBN 0-435-32751-8
  42. ^ Benedict, Philip (1978). "The Saint Bartholomew's Massacres in the Provinces". The Historical Journal. 21 (2): 205–225. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00000510. JSTOR 2638258. S2CID 159715479.; cited by Holt (2005 ed.), p. 91, and also used by Knecht (2001), p. 366, and Zalloua, Zahi Anbra (2004), Montaigne And the Ethics of Skepticism, Rookwood Press ISBN 978-1-886365-59-9
  43. ^ Lincoln, p. 97 (a "bare minimum of 2,000" in Paris), and Chaliand, Gérard; Blin, Arnaud; Schneider, Edward; Pulver, Kathryn; Browner, Jesse (2007), The History of Terrorism: From Antiquity to Al Qaeda, University of California Press, ISBN 0-520-24709-4, ISBN 978-0-520-24709-3, citing David El Kenz (2008), Guerres et paix de religion en Europe aux XVIe-XVIIe siecles
  44. ^ Garrisson, p, 131; Parker, G. (ed.) (1998), Oxford Encyclopedia World History, Oxford University Press, Oxford, ISBN 0-19-860223-5 hardback, p. 585; and Chadwick, H. & Evans, G.R. (1987), Atlas of the Christian Church, Macmillan, London, ISBN 0-333-44157-5 hardback, pp. 113;
  45. ^ Moynahan, B. (2003) The Faith: A History of Christianity, Pimlico, London, ISBN 0-7126-0720-X paperback, p. 456; Lord Acton, who discusses the matter in some detail, found that "no evidence takes us as high as eight thousand", and found those contemporaries in the best position to know typically gave the lowest figures – Lectures on Modern History, "The Huguenots and the League", pp. 162–163.
  46. ^ Perry, Sheila (1997), Aspects of Contemporary France, p. 5, Routledge, ISBN 0-415-13179-0, ISBN 978-0-415-13179-7
  47. ^ Fernández-Armesto, F. & Wilson, D. (1996), Reformation: Christianity and the World 1500 – 2000, Bantam Press, London, ISBN 0-593-02749-3 paperback, pp. 236–37
  48. ^ Garrisson, 131; see also the 19th-century historian Henry White, who goes into full details, listing estimates of other historians, which range up to 100,000. His own estimation was 20,000. White, Henry (1868). The Massacre of St Bartholomew. London, John Murray. p. 472.
  49. ^ a b   Goyau, Pierre-Louis-Théophile-Georges (1912). "Saint Bartholomew's Day". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 14. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  50. ^ Fisher, H.A.L. (1969, ninth ed.), A History of Europe: Volume One, Fontana Press, London, p. 581
  51. ^ Lindberg, Carter (1996), The European Reformations Blackwell, p. 295
  52. ^ Howe, E. "Architecture in Vasari's 'Massacre of the Huguenots'," Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, Vol. 39, 1976 (1976), pp. 258–261 JSTOR 751147
  53. ^ Daniel-Rops, Henri (1964), The Catholic Reformation. Vol. 1 New York: Image, p. 241, Erlanger, Philippe (1962), St. Bartholomew's Night: The Massacre of Saint Bartholomew, London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, p. 119, n. 2, Jouanna, Arlette (2007), La Saint Barthélemy: Les Mystères d'un Crime d'État, 24 Août 1572. Paris: Gallimard, p. 203. The ultimate source for the story of Gregory XIII and Maurevert is a contemporaneous diplomatic report preserved in the French National Library, and described in De la Ferrière, Lettres de Catherine de Médicis vol. 4 (Paris: Imprimerie Nationale, 1891), p. cxvi.
  54. ^ Ward, A.W. (et al. eds.) (1904), The Cambridge Modern History – Volume III: Wars of Religion, Cambridge University Press, Oxford, p. 20
  55. ^ Roberts, Yvonne. "Jean-Antoine de Baïf and the Saint-Barthélemy", Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance, Vol. 59, No. 3 (1997), pp. 607–611, Librairie Droz, JSTOR 20678289
  56. ^ Georges Bordonove Henri IV (Editions Pygmalion, 1981) p. 82: le honteux bain de sang.
  57. ^ Cunningham, A. & Grell, O. P. (2000) The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse: Religion, War, Famine & Death in Reformation Europe, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-46701-2 paperback, p. 59
  58. ^ According to Stephen Budiansky in chapter 1 of Her Majesty's Spymaster: Elizabeth I, Sir Francis Walsingham, and the Birth of Modern Espionage (Viking, 2005)
  59. ^ Morell, J. R. (transl.) (1854), Russia self-condemned, secret and inedited documents connected with Russian history and diplomacy, London: David Bogue, p. 168. Ivan was against Anjou becoming King of Poland.
  60. ^ Anglo, 229; See also: Butterfield, H. "Acton and the Massacre of St Bartholomew," Cambridge Historical Journal, Vol. 11, No. 1 (1953), pp. 27–47 JSTOR /3021106 on the many shifts in emphasis of the historiography of the massacre over the next four centuries.
  61. ^ Anglo, pp. 237–240
  62. ^ Anglo, pp. 272–80
  63. ^ See Butterfield, 1955, passim; The Catholic Encyclopedia article on Saint Bartholomew's Day has several quotations
  64. ^ The Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois (online)
  65. ^ Craveri, Amanti e regine. Il potere delle donne, Milano, Adelphi, 2008, p. 65.
  66. ^ See the Catholic Encyclopedia and see note 18 Butterfield, p. 183 (and note), and p. 199; Anjou's account was defended by a minority of historians into the early 20th century, or at least claimed as being in some sense an account informed by actual witnesses.
  67. ^ The first occurrence of the royal injunction is found late in The Speech of Roy Henry third to a personage of honor and quality, being close to His Majesty, of the causes and motives of Saint Barthelemy. This justification, written "in the entourage of the Gondi, in 1628, [aims to] exonerate their ancestor" of the accusation of having instigated the massacre. Albert de Gondi is portrayed there as opposed to the bloody designs of Charles IX, whose tirade is allegedly reported in 1573 by Duke Henri d'Anjou, then reigning in Warsaw as the elected king of Poland. The apocryphal sentence of Charles IX thus participates in a "rewriting of facts" for the apologetic needs of the Gondi family. In Arlette Jouanna, p. 15 ; 333-334, n. 26.
  68. ^ Anglo, p. 251
  69. ^ Anglo, p. 253ff
  70. ^ Anglo, pp. 254–65
  71. ^ Anglo, p. 283, see also the whole chapter
  72. ^ Anglo, p. 286
  73. ^ Anglo, Chapters 10 and 11; p. 328 etc.
  74. ^ Project Gutenberg Jew of Malta text.
  75. ^ Whitehead, Barbara (1994), "Revising the Revisionists," in: Politics, Ideology, and the Law in Early Modern Europe: Essays in Honor of J.H.M. Salmon, ed. John Hearsey McMillan Salmon, Boydell & Brewer, ISBN 1-878822-39-X, 9781878822390 p. 162
  76. ^ The subject of Butterfield's chapter, referenced below.
  77. ^ Holt 2005, p. 86.
  78. ^ Jouanna 1998, p. 201.
  79. ^ Salmon 1979, p. 187.
  80. ^ Holt, Mack P. (2002), The Duke of Anjou and the Politique Struggle During the Wars of Religion, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-89278-3, ISBN 978-0-521-89278-0 p. 20
  81. ^ Crouzet, Denis (1994), La Nuit de la Saint-Barthélemy: Un rêve perdu de la Renaissance, Fayard, coll. " Chroniques ", ISBN 2-213-59216-0
  82. ^ Bourgeon, Jean-Louis (1992), L'assassinat de Coligny, Genève: Droz
  83. ^ Wanegffelen, Thierry (2005), Catherine de Médicis: Le pouvoir au féminin, Payot ISBN 2228900184
  84. ^ Atkin, N. & Tallett, F. (2003) Priests, Prelates & People: A History of European Catholicism Since 1750, Oxford University Press, Oxford, ISBN 0-19-521987-2 hardback, p. 9;
  85. ^ Diefendorf, B.B. (1991) Beneath The Cross: Catholics & Huguenots in Sixteenth Century Paris, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-1950-7013-5 paperback, p. 157
  86. ^ Holt, M. P. (1995) The French Wars of Religion 1562 – 1629, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-35359-9 hardback, pp. 88–89
  87. ^ Cunningham, A. & Grell, O. P. (2000) The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse: Religion, War, Famine & Death in Reformation Europe, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-46701-2 paperback, p. 151
  88. ^ Holt, (1995), p. 86
  89. ^ Holt, (1995), p. 44
  90. ^ Holt (1995 ed.), p. 9
  91. ^ a b Holt (1995 ed.), p. 87
  92. ^ Mentzer, Raymond A., The French Wars of Religion in The Reformation World, Ed. Andrew Pettegree, Routledge, (2000), ISBN 0-415-16357-9, p. 332
  93. ^ Frieda, L. (2003) Catherine de Medici, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 0-7538-2039-0, pp. 314–16
  94. ^ Knecht (2001), p. 364
  95. ^ Koenigsberger, H. G. (1987) Early Modern Europe 1500 – 1789, Longman, Harlow, ISBN 0-582-49401-X paperback, p. 115
  96. ^ Koenigsberger, p. 115
  97. ^ Lincoln, chapter 6, pp. 89–102, quotation from p. 102
  98. ^ "Vigil – Address of the Holy Father – John Paul II". w2.vatican.va.
  99. ^ Burdett, Sarah, Sarah Burdett, "'Feminine Virtues Violated’ Motherhood, Female Militancy and Revolutionary Violence in Elizabeth Inchbald's The Massacre, p. 3, Dandelion, 5.1 (Summer 2014), PDF
  100. ^ Maslan, Susan (2005), Revolutionary Acts: Theater, Democracy, and the French Revolution, Johns Hopkins University Press, ISBN 0-8018-8125-0, ISBN 978-0-8018-8125-1 p. 40
  101. ^ "A Huguenot on St Bartholomew's Day". Humanities Web. Retrieved 2007-04-19.
  102. ^ Letters from Earth. Ostara publications. 2013
  103. ^ "The Doctor Who Transcripts – The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve". Chrissie's Transcripts Site. Retrieved 25 February 2020.

References

  • Anglo, Sydney (2005), Machiavelli – the First Century: Studies in Enthusiasm, Hostility, and Irrelevance, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-926776-6, ISBN 978-0-19-926776-7 Google Books
  • Butterfield, Herbert, Man on his Past, Cambridge University Press, 1955, Chapter VI, Lord Acton and the Massacre of St Bartholomew
  • Denis Crouzet : Les Guerriers de Dieu. La violence au temps des troubles de religion vers 1525-vers 1610, Champvallon, 1990 (ISBN 2-87673-094-4), La Nuit de la Saint-Barthélemy. Un rêve perdu de la Renaissance, Fayard, coll. " Chroniques ", 1994 (ISBN 2-213-59216-0) ;
  • Garrisson, Janine, 1572 : la Saint-Barthélemy, Complexe, 2000 (ISBN 2-87027-721-0). (in French) Google books
  • Holt, Mack P. (1995). The French Wars of Religion, 1562–1629. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521-35873-6.
  • Holt, Mack P. (2005). The French Wars of Religion, 1562-1629. Cambridge University Press.
  • Jouanna, Arlette (1998). Histoire et Dictionnaire des Guerres de Religion. Bouquins.
  • Salmon, J.H.M (1979). Society in Crisis: France during the Sixteenth Century. Metheun & Co.
  • Lincoln, Bruce, Discourse and the Construction of Society: Comparative Studies of Myth, Ritual, and Classification, Oxford University Press US, 1989, ISBN 0-19-507909-4, ISBN 978-0-19-507909-8 Google Books
  • Note: this article incorporates material from the French Wikipedia.

Further reading

  • Barbara B. Diefendorf, The St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre: A Brief History with Documents (2008)
  • Arlette Jouanna and Joseph Bergin. The Saint Bartholomew's Day massacre: The mysteries of a crime of state (2015) online
  • Robert Kingdon. Myths about the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacres, 1572–1576 (1988)
  • James R. Smither, "The St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre and Images of Kingship in France: 1572–1574." The Sixteenth Century Journal (1991): 27–46. JSTOR 2542014
  • N. M Sutherland. The Massacre of St. Bartholomew and the European conflict, 1559–1572 (1973)

External links

  • St Bartholomew's Day Massacre, BBC Radio 4 discussion with Diarmaid McCulloch, Mark Greengrass & Penny Roberts, chaired by Melvyn Bragg (In Our Time, Nov. 27, 2003)
  • Massacres during the wars of religion: The Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre, a foundational event (at Massacres.org)
  • Goyau, Georges (1913). "Saint Bartholomew's Day" . Catholic Encyclopedia.
  • "St Bartholomew, Massacre of" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.

bartholomew, massacre, this, article, about, historical, event, doctor, serial, massacre, bartholomew, french, massacre, saint, barthélemy, 1572, targeted, group, assassinations, wave, catholic, violence, directed, against, huguenots, french, calvinist, protes. This article is about the historical event For the Doctor Who serial see The Massacre of St Bartholomew s Eve The St Bartholomew s Day massacre French Massacre de la Saint Barthelemy in 1572 was a targeted group of assassinations and a wave of Catholic mob violence directed against the Huguenots French Calvinist Protestants during the French Wars of Religion Traditionally believed to have been instigated by Queen Catherine de Medici the mother of King Charles IX 2 the massacre started a few days after the marriage on 18 August of the king s sister Margaret to the Protestant King Henry III of Navarre Many of the wealthiest and most prominent Huguenots had gathered in largely Catholic Paris to attend the wedding Painting by Francois Dubois a Huguenot painter who fled France after the massacre Although it is not known whether Dubois witnessed the event he depicts Admiral Coligny s body hanging out of a window at the rear to the right To the left rear Catherine de Medici is shown emerging from the Louvre Palace to inspect a heap of bodies 1 The massacre began in the night of 23 24 August 1572 the eve of the feast of Bartholomew the Apostle two days after the attempted assassination of Admiral Gaspard de Coligny the military and political leader of the Huguenots King Charles IX ordered the killing of a group of Huguenot leaders including Coligny and the slaughter spread throughout Paris Lasting several weeks in all the massacre expanded outward to the countryside and other urban centres Modern estimates for the number of dead across France vary widely from 5 000 to 30 000 The massacre marked a turning point in the French Wars of Religion The Huguenot political movement was crippled by the loss of many of its prominent aristocratic leaders and many rank and file members subsequently converted Those who remained became increasingly radicalized Though by no means unique the bloodletting was the worst of the century s religious massacres 3 Throughout Europe it printed on Protestant minds the indelible conviction that Catholicism was a bloody and treacherous religion 4 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Unacceptable peace and marriage 1 2 Tension in Paris 1 3 Shift in Huguenot thought 1 4 Huguenot intervention in the Netherlands 1 5 Attempted assassination of Admiral de Coligny 2 Massacres 2 1 Paris 2 2 Provinces 2 3 Death toll 3 Reactions 4 Interpretations 4 1 Role of the royal family 4 2 Role of the religious factions 5 Cultural references 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground Edit Admiral Gaspard de Coligny the leader of the Huguenots The Massacre of Saint Bartholomew s Day was the culmination of a series of events The Peace of Saint Germain en Laye which put an end to the third War of Religion on 8 August 1570 The marriage between Henry III of Navarre and Margaret of Valois on 18 August 1572 The failed assassination of Admiral de Coligny on 22 August 1572 Unacceptable peace and marriage Edit The Peace of Saint Germain put an end to three years of civil war between Catholics and Protestants This peace however was precarious since the more intransigent Catholics refused to accept it The Guise family strongly Catholic was out of favour at the French court the Huguenot leader Admiral Gaspard de Coligny was readmitted into the king s council in September 1571 Staunch Catholics were shocked by the return of Protestants to the court but the queen mother Catherine de Medici and her son Charles IX were practical in their support of peace and Coligny as they were conscious of the kingdom s financial difficulties and the Huguenots strong defensive position they controlled the fortified towns of La Rochelle La Charite sur Loire Cognac and Montauban To cement the peace between the two religious parties Catherine planned to marry her daughter Margaret to the Protestant Henry of Navarre the future King Henry IV son of the Huguenot leader Queen Jeanne d Albret 5 The royal marriage was arranged for 18 August 1572 It was not accepted by traditionalist Catholics or by the Pope Both the Pope and King Philip II of Spain strongly condemned Catherine s Huguenot policy as well Tension in Paris Edit Charles IX of France who was 22 years old in August 1572 by Francois Clouet The impending marriage led to the gathering of a large number of well born Protestants in Paris but Paris was a violently anti Huguenot city and Parisians who tended to be extreme Catholics found their presence unacceptable Encouraged by Catholic preachers they were horrified at the marriage of a princess of France to a Protestant 6 The Parlement s opposition and the court s absence from the wedding led to increased political tension 7 Compounding this bad feeling was the fact that the harvests had been poor and taxes had risen 8 The rise in food prices and the luxury displayed on the occasion of the royal wedding increased tensions among the common people A particular point of tension was an open air cross erected on the site of the house of Philippe de Gastines a Huguenot who had been executed in 1569 The mob had torn down his house and erected a large wooden cross on a stone base Under the terms of the peace and after considerable popular resistance this had been removed in December 1571 and re erected in a cemetery which had already led to about 50 deaths in riots as well as mob destruction of property 9 In the massacres of August the relatives of the Gastines family were among the first to be killed by the mob 10 The court itself was extremely divided Catherine had not obtained Pope Gregory XIII s permission to celebrate this irregular marriage consequently the French prelates hesitated over which attitude to adopt It took all the queen mother s skill to convince the Cardinal de Bourbon paternal uncle of the Protestant groom but himself a Catholic clergyman to marry the couple Beside this the rivalries between the leading families re emerged The Guises were not prepared to make way for their rivals the House of Montmorency Francois Duke of Montmorency and governor of Paris was unable to control the disturbances in the city On August 20 he left the capital and retired to Chantilly 11 Shift in Huguenot thought Edit In the years preceding the massacre Huguenot political rhetoric had for the first time taken a tone against not just the policies of a particular monarch of France but monarchy in general In part this was led by an apparent change in stance by John Calvin in his Readings on the Prophet Daniel a book of 1561 in which he had argued that when kings disobey God they automatically abdicate their worldly power a change from his views in earlier works that even ungodly kings should be obeyed This change was soon picked up by Huguenot writers who began to expand on Calvin and promote the idea of the sovereignty of the people ideas to which Catholic writers and preachers responded fiercely 12 Nevertheless it was only in the aftermath of the massacre that anti monarchical ideas found widespread support from Huguenots among the Monarchomachs and others Huguenot writers who had previously for the most part paraded their loyalty to the Crown now called for the deposition or assassination of a Godless king who had either authorised or permitted the slaughter 13 Thus the massacre marked the beginning of a new form of French Protestantism one that was openly at war with the crown This was much more than a war against the policies of the crown as in the first three civil wars it was a campaign against the very existence of the Gallican monarchy itself 14 Huguenot intervention in the Netherlands Edit Tensions were further raised when in May 1572 the news reached Paris that a French Huguenot army under Louis of Nassau had crossed from France to the Netherlandish province of Hainaut and captured the Catholic strongholds of Mons and Valenciennes now in Belgium and France respectively Louis governed the Principality of Orange around Avignon in southern France for his brother William the Silent who was leading the Dutch Revolt against the Spanish This intervention threatened to involve France in that war many Catholics believed that Coligny had again persuaded the king to intervene on the side of the Dutch 15 as he had managed to do the previous October before Catherine had got the decision reversed 16 Attempted assassination of Admiral de Coligny Edit Main article Assassination of Admiral Coligny This popular print by Frans Hogenberg shows the attempted assassination of Coligny at left his subsequent murder at right and scenes of the general massacre in the streets After the wedding of Catholic Marguerite de Valois and Huguenot Henry de Navarre on August 18 of 1572 17 Coligny and the leading Huguenots remained in Paris to discuss some outstanding grievances about the Peace of St Germain with the king An attempt was made on Coligny s life a few days later on August 22 18 as he made his way back to his house from the Louvre He was shot from an upstairs window and seriously wounded The would be assassin most likely Charles de Louviers Lord of Maurevert 17 c 1505 1583 escaped in the ensuing confusion Other theories about who was ultimately responsible for the attack centre on three candidates The Guises the Cardinal of Lorraine who was in fact in Rome at the time and his nephews the Dukes of Guise and Aumale are the most likely suspects The leaders of the Catholic party they wanted to avenge the death of the two dukes father Francis Duke of Guise whose assassination ten years earlier they believed to have been ordered by Coligny The shot aimed at Admiral de Coligny came from a house belonging to the Guises The Duke of Alba he governed the Netherlands on behalf of Philip II Coligny planned to lead a campaign in the Netherlands to participate in the Dutch Revolt to free the region from Spanish control During the summer Coligny had secretly dispatched a number of troops to help the Protestants in Mons who were now besieged by the Duke of Alba So Admiral de Coligny was a real threat to the latter Catherine de Medici according to tradition the Queen Mother had been worried that the king was increasingly becoming dominated by Coligny Amongst other things Catherine reportedly feared that Coligny s influence would drag France into a war with Spain over the Netherlands 19 Massacres Edit Preparation for the St Bartholomew s Day massacre Painting by Karlis Huns 1868 Paris Edit The attempted assassination of Coligny triggered the crisis that led to the massacre Admiral de Coligny was the most respected Huguenot leader and enjoyed a close relationship with the king although he was distrusted by the king s mother Aware of the danger of reprisals from the Protestants the king and his court visited Coligny on his sickbed and promised him that the culprits would be punished While the Queen Mother was eating dinner Protestants burst in to demand justice some talking in menacing terms 20 Fears of Huguenot reprisals grew Coligny s brother in law led a 4 000 strong army camped just outside Paris 15 and although there is no evidence it was planning to attack Catholics in the city feared it might take revenge on the Guises or the city populace itself That evening Catherine held a meeting at the Tuileries Palace with her Italian advisers including Albert de Gondi Comte de Retz On the evening of 23 August Catherine went to see the king to discuss the crisis Though no details of the meeting survive Charles IX and his mother apparently made the decision to eliminate the Protestant leaders Holt speculated this entailed between two and three dozen noblemen who were still in Paris 21 Other historians are reluctant to speculate on the composition or size of the group of leaders targeted at this point beyond the few obvious heads Like Coligny most potential candidates for elimination were accompanied by groups of gentlemen who served as staff and bodyguards so murdering them would also have involved killing their retainers as a necessity Shortly after this decision the municipal authorities of Paris were summoned They were ordered to shut the city gates and arm the citizenry to prevent any attempt at a Protestant uprising The king s Swiss mercenaries were given the task of killing a list of leading Protestants It is difficult today to determine the exact chronology of events or to know the precise moment the killing began It seems probable that a signal was given by ringing bells for matins between midnight and dawn at the church of Saint Germain l Auxerrois near the Louvre which was the parish church of the kings of France The Swiss mercenaries expelled the Protestant nobles from the Louvre castle and then slaughtered them in the streets One morning at the gates of the Louvre 19th century painting by Edouard Debat Ponsan Catherine de Medici is in black The scene from Dubois above re imagined In the Holy Innocents Cemetery on Sunday 24 at noon a hawthorn bush that had withered for months began to green again near an image of the Virgin That was interpreted by the Parisians as a sign of divine blessing and approval to these multiple murders 22 and on the same day at night a group led by Guise in person dragged Admiral Coligny from his bed killed him and threw his body out of a window The terrified Huguenot nobles in the building initially put up a fight hoping to save the life of their leader 23 but Coligny himself seemed unperturbed According to the contemporary French historian Jacques Auguste de Thou one of Coligny s murderers was struck by how calmly he accepted his fate and remarked that he never saw anyone less afraid in so great a peril nor die more steadfastly 24 page needed The tension that had been building since the Peace of St Germain now exploded in a wave of popular violence The common people began to hunt Protestants throughout the city including women and children Chains were used to block streets so that Protestants could not escape from their houses The bodies of the dead were collected in carts and thrown into the Seine The massacre in Paris lasted three days despite the king s attempts to stop it Holt concludes that while the general massacre might have been prevented there is no evidence that it was intended by any of the elites at court listing a number of cases where Catholic courtiers intervened to save individual Protestants who were not in the leadership 25 Recent research by Jeremie Foa investigating the prosopography suggests that the massacres were carried by a group of militants who had already made out lists of Protestants deserving extermination and the mass of the population whether approving or disapproving were not directly involved 26 The two leading Huguenots Henry of Navarre and his cousin the Prince of Conde respectively aged 19 and 20 were spared as they pledged to convert to Catholicism both would eventually renounce their conversions when they managed to escape Paris 27 According to some interpretations the survival of these Huguenots was a key point in Catherine s overall scheme to prevent the House of Guise from becoming too powerful On August 26 the king and court established the official version of events by going to the Paris Parlement Holding a lit de justice Charles declared that he had ordered the massacre in order to thwart a Huguenot plot against the royal family 28 A jubilee celebration including a procession was then held while the killings continued in parts of the city 28 Provinces Edit Main article St Bartholomew s Day Massacre in the Provinces Although Charles had dispatched orders to his provincial governors on August 24 to prevent violence and maintain the terms of the 1570 edict 29 from August to October similar massacres of Huguenots took place in a total of twelve other cities Toulouse Bordeaux Lyon Bourges Rouen 30 Orleans Meaux Angers La Charite Saumur Gaillac and Troyes 31 In most of them the killings swiftly followed the arrival of the news of the Paris massacre but in some places there was a delay of more than a month According to Mack P Holt All twelve cities where provincial massacres occurred had one striking feature in common they were all cities with Catholic majorities where there had once been significant Protestant minorities All of them had also experienced serious religious division during the first three civil wars Moreover seven of them shared a previous experience they had actually been taken over by Protestant minorities during the first civil war 29 The Siege of La Rochelle 1572 1573 began soon after the St Bartholomew massacre In several cases the Catholic party in the city believed they had received orders from the king to begin the massacre some conveyed by visitors to the city and in other cases apparently coming from a local nobleman or his agent 32 It seems unlikely any such orders came from the king although the Guise faction may have desired the massacres 33 Apparently genuine letters from the Duke of Anjou the king s younger brother did urge massacres in the king s name in Nantes the mayor fortunately held on to his without publicising it until a week later when contrary orders from the king had arrived 34 In some cities the massacres were led by the mob while the city authorities tried to suppress them and in others small groups of soldiers and officials began rounding up Protestants with little mob involvement 35 In Bordeaux the inflammatory sermon on September 29 of a Jesuit Edmond Auger encouraged the massacre that was to occur a few days later 36 In the cities affected the loss to the Huguenot communities after the massacres was numerically far larger than those actually killed in the following weeks there were mass conversions to Catholicism apparently in response to the threatening atmosphere for Huguenots in these cities In Rouen where some hundreds were killed the Huguenot community shrank from 16 500 to fewer than 3 000 mainly as a result of conversions and emigration to safer cities or countries Some cities unaffected by the violence nevertheless witnessed a sharp decline in their Huguenot population 37 It has been claimed that the Huguenot community represented as much as 10 of the French population on the eve of the St Bartholomew s Day massacre declining to 7 8 by the end of the 16th century and further after heavy persecution began once again during the reign of Louis XIV culminating with the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes 38 Soon afterward both sides prepared for a fourth civil war which began before the end of the year Death toll Edit Bas de page detail from a portrait print of Coligny Jost Amman 1573 Coligny is shot at left and killed at right Estimates of the number that perished in the massacres have varied from 2 000 by a Roman Catholic apologist to 70 000 by the contemporary Huguenot Maximilien de Bethune who himself barely escaped death 39 Accurate figures for casualties have never been compiled 40 and even in writings by modern historians there is a considerable range though the more specialised the historian the lower they tend to be At the low end are figures of about 2 000 in Paris 41 and 3 000 in the provinces the latter figure an estimate by Philip Benedict in 1978 42 Other estimates are about 10 000 in total 43 with about 3 000 in Paris 44 and 7 000 in the provinces 45 At the higher end are total figures of up to 20 000 46 or 30 000 in total from a contemporary non partisan guesstimate quoted by the historians Felipe Fernandez Armesto and D Wilson 47 For Paris the only hard figure is a payment by the city to workmen for collecting and burying 1 100 bodies washed up on the banks of the Seine downstream from the city in one week Body counts relating to other payments are computed from this 48 Among the slain were the philosopher Petrus Ramus and in Lyon the composer Claude Goudimel The corpses floating down the Rhone from Lyon are said to have put the people of Arles off drinking the water for three months 49 Reactions Edit Gregory XIII s medal The Politiques those Catholics who placed national unity above sectarian interests were horrified but many Catholics inside and outside France initially regarded the massacres as deliverance from an imminent Huguenot coup d etat The severed head of Coligny was apparently dispatched to Pope Gregory XIII though it got no further than Lyon and the pope sent the king a Golden Rose 50 The pope ordered a Te Deum to be sung as a special thanksgiving a practice continued for many years after and had a medal struck with the motto Ugonottorum strages 1572 Latin Overthrow or slaughter of the Huguenots 1572 showing an angel bearing a cross and a sword before which are the felled Protestants 51 The massacre with the murder of Gaspard de Coligny above left as depicted in a fresco by Giorgio Vasari Pope Gregory XIII also commissioned the artist Giorgio Vasari to paint three frescos in the Sala Regia depicting the wounding of Coligny his death and Charles IX before Parliament matching those commemorating the defeat of the Turks at the Battle of Lepanto 1571 The massacre was interpreted as an act of divine retribution Coligny was considered a threat to Christendom and thus Pope Gregory XIII designated 11 September 1572 as a joint commemoration of the Battle of Lepanto and the massacre of the Huguenots 52 Although these formal acts of rejoicing in Rome were not repudiated publicly misgivings in the papal curia grew as the true story of the killings gradually became known Pope Gregory XIII himself refused to receive Charles de Maurevert said to be the killer of Coligny on the ground that he was a murderer 53 On hearing of the slaughter Philip II of Spain supposedly laughed for almost the only time on record 54 In Paris the poet Jean Antoine de Baif founder of the Academie de Musique et de Poesie wrote a sonnet extravagantly praising the killings 55 On the other hand the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian II King Charles s father in law was sickened describing the massacre as a shameful bloodbath 56 Moderate French Catholics also began to wonder whether religious uniformity was worth the price of such bloodshed and the ranks of the Politiques began to swell The massacre caused a major international crisis 57 Protestant countries were horrified at the events and only the concentrated efforts of Catherine s ambassadors including a special mission by Gondi prevented the collapse of her policy of remaining on good terms with them citation needed Elizabeth I of England s ambassador to France at that time Sir Francis Walsingham barely escaped with his life 58 Even Tsar Ivan the Terrible expressed horror at the carnage in a letter to the Emperor 59 The massacre spawned a pullulating mass of polemical literature bubbling with theories prejudices and phobias 60 Many Catholic authors were exultant in their praise of the king for his bold and decisive action after regretfully abandoning a policy of meeting Huguenot demands as far as he could against the supposed Huguenot coup whose details were now fleshed out in officially sponsored works though the larger mob massacres were somewhat deprecated one must excuse the people s fury moved by a laudable zeal which is difficult to restrain once it has been stirred up 61 Huguenot works understandably dwelt on the harrowing details of violence expounded various conspiracy theories that the royal court had long planned the massacres and often showed extravagant anti Italian feelings directed at Catherine Gondi and other Italians at court 62 Diplomatic correspondence was readier than published polemics to recognise the unplanned and chaotic nature of the events 63 which also emerged from several accounts in memoirs published over the following years by witnesses to the events at court including the famous Memoirs of Margaret of Valois the only eye witness account of the massacre from a member of the royal family 64 65 There are also a dramatic and influential account by Henry duke of Anjou that was not recognised as fake until the 19th century Anjou s supposed account was the source of the quotation attributed to Charles IX Well then so be it Kill them But kill them all Don t leave a single one alive to reproach me 66 67 Charles IX in front of the Paris Parlement on 26 August 1572 justifying the Saint Bartholomew massacre as a response to a Huguenot plot Vasari for Pope Gregory XIII Sala Regia Vatican The author of the Lettre de Pierre Charpentier 1572 was not only a Protestant of sorts and thus apparently writing with inside knowledge but also an extreme apologist for the massacre in his view a well merited punishment for years of civil disobedience and secret sedition 68 A strand of Catholic writing especially by Italian authors broke from the official French line to applaud the massacre as precisely a brilliant stratagem deliberately planned from various points beforehand 69 The most extreme of these writers was Camilo Capilupi a papal secretary whose work insisted that the whole series of events since 1570 had been a masterly plan conceived by Charles IX and carried through by frequently misleading his mother and ministers as to his true intentions The Venetian government refused to allow the work to be printed there and it was eventually published in Rome in 1574 and in the same year quickly reprinted in Geneva in the original Italian and a French translation 70 It was in this context that the massacre came to be seen as a product of Machiavellianism a view greatly influenced by the Huguenot Innocent Gentillet who published his Discours contre Machievel in 1576 which was printed in ten editions in three languages over the next four years 71 Gentillet held quite wrongly according to Sydney Anglo that Machiavelli s books were held most dear and precious by our Italian and Italionized courtiers in the words of his first English translation and so in Anglo s paraphrase at the root of France s present degradation which has culminated not only in the St Bartholemew massacre but the glee of its perverted admirers 72 In fact there is little trace of Machiavelli in French writings before the massacre and not very much after until Gentillet s own book but this concept was seized upon by many contemporaries and played a crucial part in setting the long lasting popular concept of Machiavellianism 73 It also gave added impetus to the strong anti Italian feelings already present in Huguenot polemic Christopher Marlowe was one of many Elizabethan writers who were enthusiastic proponents of these ideas In the Jew of Malta 1589 90 Machievel in person speaks the Prologue claiming to not be dead but to have possessed the soul of the Duke of Guise And now the Guise is dead is come from France To view this land and frolic with his friends Prologue lines 3 4 74 His last play The Massacre at Paris 1593 takes the massacre and the following years as its subject with Guise and Catherine both depicted as Machiavellian plotters bent on evil from the start The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913 was still ready to endorse a version of this view describing the massacres as an entirely political act committed in the name of the immoral principles of Machiavellianism and blaming the pagan theories of a certain raison d etat according to which the end justified the means 49 The French 18th century historian Louis Pierre Anquetil in his Esprit de la Ligue of 1767 was among the first to begin impartial historical investigation emphasizing the lack of premeditation before the attempt on Coligny in the massacre and that Catholic mob violence had a history of uncontrollable escalation 75 By this period the Massacre was being widely used by Voltaire in his Henriade and other Enlightenment writers in polemics against organized religion in general Lord Acton changed his mind on whether the massacre had been premeditated twice finally concluding that it was not 76 The question of whether the massacre had long been premeditated was not entirely settled until the late 19th century by which time a consensus was reached that it was not 77 78 79 Interpretations EditRole of the royal family Edit Catherine de Medici Charles IX s mother after Francois Clouet Over the centuries the St Bartholomew s Day massacre has aroused a great deal of controversy Modern historians are still divided over the responsibility of the royal family The traditional interpretation makes Catherine de Medici and her Catholic advisers the principal culprits in the execution of the principal military leaders They forced the hand of a hesitant and weak willed king in the decision of that particular execution This traditional interpretation has been largely abandoned by some modern historians including among others Janine Garrisson However in a more recent work than his history of the period Holt concludes The ringleaders of the conspiracy appear to have been a group of four men Henry duke of Anjou Chancellor Birague the duke of Nevers and the comte de Retz Gondi 80 Apart from Anjou the others were all Italian advisors at the French court According to Denis Crouzet Charles IX feared a Protestant uprising and chose to strangle it at birth to protect his power The execution decision was therefore his own and not Catherine de Medici s 81 page needed According to Jean Louis Bourgeon the violently anti Huguenot city of Paris was really responsible He stresses that the city was on the verge of revolt The Guises who were highly popular exploited this situation to put pressure on the King and the Queen Mother Charles IX was thus forced to head off the potential riot which was the work of the Guises the city militia and the common people 82 page needed According to Thierry Wanegffelen the member of the royal family with the most responsibility in this affair is Henry Duke of Anjou the king s ambitious younger brother Following the failed assassination attack against the Admiral de Coligny which Wanegffelen attributes to the Guise family and Spain the Italian advisers of Catherine de Medici undoubtedly recommended in the royal Council the execution of about fifty Protestant leaders These Italians stood to benefit from the occasion by eliminating the Huguenot danger Despite the firm opposition of the Queen Mother and the King Anjou Lieutenant General of the Kingdom present at this meeting of the Council could see a good occasion to make a name for himself with the government He contacted the Parisian authorities and another ambitious young man running out of authority and power Duke Henri de Guise whose uncle the clear sighted Charles cardinal of Lorraine was then detained in Rome The Parisian St Bartholomew s Day Massacre resulted from this conjunction of interests and this offers a much better explanation as to why the men of the Duke of Anjou acted in the name of the Lieutenant General of the Kingdom consistent with the thinking of the time rather than in the name of the King One can also understand why the day after the start of the massacre Catherine de Medici through royal declaration of Charles IX condemned the crimes and threatened the Guise family with royal justice However when Charles IX and his mother learned of the involvement of the duke of Anjou and being so dependent on his support they issued a second royal declaration which while asking for an end to the massacres credited the initiative with the desire of Charles IX to prevent a Protestant plot Initially the coup d etat of the duke of Anjou was a success but Catherine de Medici went out of her way to deprive him from any power in France she sent him with the royal army to remain in front of La Rochelle and then had him elected King of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth 83 page needed Role of the religious factions Edit Traditional histories have tended to focus more on the roles of the political notables whose machinations began the massacre than the mindset of those who actually did the killing Ordinary lay Catholics were involved in the mass killings they believed they were executing the wishes of the king and of God At this time in an age before mass media the pulpit remained probably the most effective means of mass communication 84 Despite the large numbers of pamphlets and broadsheets in circulation literacy rates were still poor Thus some modern historians have stressed the critical and incendiary role that militant preachers played in shaping ordinary lay beliefs both Catholic and Protestant Historian Barbara B Diefendorf Professor of History at Boston University wrote that Simon Vigor had said if the King ordered the Admiral Coligny killed it would be wicked not to kill him With these words the most popular preacher in Paris legitimised in advance the events of St Bartholomew s Day 85 Diefendorf says that when the head of the murdered Coligny was shown to the Paris mob by a member of the nobility with the claim that it was the King s will the die was cast Another historian Mack P Holt Professor at George Mason University agrees that Vigor the best known preacher in Paris preached sermons that were full of references to the evils that would befall the capital should the Protestants seize control 86 This view is also partly supported by Cunningham and Grell 2000 who explained that militant sermons by priests such as Simon Vigor served to raise the religious and eschatological temperature on the eve of the Massacre 87 Henry Duke of Guise leader of the Catholic League Historians cite the extreme tension and bitterness that led to the powder keg atmosphere of Paris in August 1572 88 In the previous ten years there had already been three outbreaks of civil war and attempts by Protestant nobles to seize power in France 89 Some blame the complete esteem with which the sovereign s office was held justified by prominent French Roman Catholic theologians and that the special powers of French Kings were accompanied by explicit responsibilities the foremost of which was combating heresy 90 Holt notable for re emphasising the importance of religious issues as opposed to political dynastic power struggles or socio economic tensions in explaining the French Wars of Religion also re emphasised the role of religion in the St Bartholomew s Day Massacre He noted that the extra violence inflicted on many of the corpses was not random at all but patterned after the rites of the Catholic culture that had given birth to it Many Protestant houses were burned invoking the traditional purification by fire of all heretics Many victims were also thrown into the Seine invoking the purification by water of Catholic baptism 91 Viewed as a threat to the social and political order Holt argues that Huguenots not only had to be exterminated that is killed they also had to be humiliated dishonoured and shamed as the inhuman beasts they were perceived to be 91 However Raymond Mentzer points out that Protestants could be as bloodthirsty as Catholics Earlier Huguenot rage at Nimes in 1567 led to the massacre of twenty four Catholics mostly priests and prominent laymen at the hands of their Protestant neighbours Few towns escaped the episodic violence and some suffered repeatedly from both sides Neither faith had a monopoly on cruelty and misguided fervour 92 Some like Leonie Frieda emphasise the element within the mob violence of the haves being killed by the have nots Many Protestants were nobles or bourgeois and Frieda adds that a number of bourgeois Catholic Parisians had suffered the same fate as the Protestants many financial debts were wiped clean with the death of creditors and moneylenders that night 93 At least one Huguenot was able to buy off his would be murderers 94 The historian H G Koenigsberger who until his retirement in 1984 was Professor of History at King s College University of London wrote that the Massacre was deeply disturbing because it was Christians massacring other Christians who were not foreign enemies but their neighbours with which they and their forebears had lived in a Christian community and under the same ruler for a thousand years 95 He concludes that the historical importance of the Massacre lies not so much in the appalling tragedies involved as their demonstration of the power of sectarian passion to break down the barriers of civilisation community and accepted morality 96 One historian puts forward an analysis of the massacre in terms of social anthropology the religious historian Bruce Lincoln He describes how the religious divide which gave the Huguenots different patterns of dress eating and pastimes as well as the obvious differences of religion and very often class had become a social schism or cleavage The rituals around the royal marriage had only intensified this cleavage contrary to its intentions and the sentiments of estrangement radical otherness had come to prevail over sentiments of affinity between Catholics and Protestants 97 On 23 August 1997 Pope John Paul II who was in Paris for the 12th World Youth Day issued a statement on the Massacre He stayed in Paris for three days and made eleven speeches According to Reuters and the Associated Press at a late night vigil with the hundreds of thousands of young people who were in Paris for the celebrations he made the following comments On the eve of Aug 24 we cannot forget the sad massacre of St Bartholomew s Day an event of very obscure causes in the political and religious history of France Christians did things which the Gospel condemns I am convinced that only forgiveness offered and received leads little by little to a fruitful dialogue which will in turn ensure a fully Christian reconciliation Belonging to different religious traditions must not constitute today a source of opposition and tension On the contrary our common love for Christ impels us to seek tirelessly the path of full unity 98 Cultural references EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources St Bartholomew s Day massacre news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Everett Millais s painting A Huguenot on St Bartholomew s Day The Elizabethan dramatist Christopher Marlowe knew the story well from the Huguenot literature translated into English and probably from French refugees who had sought refuge in his native Canterbury He wrote a strongly anti Catholic and anti French play based on the events entitled The Massacre at Paris Also in his biography The World of Christopher Marlowe David Riggs claims the incident remained with the playwright and massacres are incorporated into the final acts of three of his early plays 1 and 2 Tamburlaine and The Jew of Malta see above for Marlowe and Machiavellism The story was also taken up in 1772 by Louis Sebastien Mercier in his play Jean Hennuyer Bishop of Lizieux unperformed until the French Revolution This play was translated into English with some adaptations as The Massacre by the actress and playwright Elizabeth Inchbald in 1792 Inchbald kept the historical setting but The Massacre completed by February 1792 also reflected events in the recent French Revolution though not the September Massacres of 1792 which coincided with its printing 99 Joseph Chenier s play Charles IX was a huge success during the French Revolution drawing strongly anti monarchical and anti religious lessons from the massacre Chenier was able to put his principles into practice as a politician voting for the execution of Louis XVI and many others perhaps including his brother Andre Chenier However before the collapse of the Revolution he became suspected of moderation and in some danger himself 100 The story was fictionalised by Prosper Merimee in his Chronique du regne de Charles IX 1829 and by Alexandre Dumas pere in La Reine Margot an 1845 novel that fills in the history as it was then seen with romance and adventure That novel has been translated into English and was made first into a commercially successful French film in 1954 La reine Margot US title A Woman of Evil starring Jeanne Moreau It was remade in 1994 as La Reine Margot later as Queen Margot and subtitled in English language markets starring Isabelle Adjani They seemed but dark shadows as they slid along the walls illustration from an English History of France c 1912 Giacomo Meyerbeer s opera Les Huguenots 1836 very loosely based on the events of the massacre was one of the most popular and spectacular examples of French grand opera The Pre Raphaelite painter John Everett Millais managed to create a sentimental moment in the massacre in his painting A Huguenot on St Bartholomew s Day 1852 which depicts a Catholic woman attempting to convince her Huguenot lover to wear the white scarf badge of the Catholics and protect himself The man true to his beliefs gently refuses her 101 Millais was inspired to create the painting after seeing Meyerbeer s Les Huguenots Mark Twain described the massacre in From the Manuscript of A Tramp Abroad 1879 The French and the Comanches an essay about partly civilized races He wrote in part St Bartholomew s was unquestionably the finest thing of the kind ever devised and accomplished in the world All the best people took a hand in it the King and the Queen Mother included 102 The St Bartholomew s Day massacre and the events surrounding it were incorporated into D W Griffith s film Intolerance 1916 The film follows Catherine de Medici Josephine Crowell plotting the massacre coercing her son King Charles IX Frank Bennett to sanction it Incidental characters include Henri of Navarre Marguerite de Valois Constance Talmadge Admiral Coligny Joseph Henabery and the Duke of Anjou who is portrayed as homosexual These historic scenes are depicted alongside a fictional plot in which a Huguenot family is caught among the events Another novel depicting this massacre is Queen Jezebel by Jean Plaidy 1953 In the third episode of the BBC miniseries Elizabeth R 1971 starring Glenda Jackson as Queen Elizabeth I of England the English court s reaction to the massacre and its effect on England s relations with France is addressed in depth A 1966 serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who entitled The Massacre of St Bartholomew s Eve is set during the events leading up to the Paris massacre Leonard Sachs appeared as Admiral Coligny and Joan Young played Catherine de Medici This serial is missing from the BBC archives and survives only in audio form It depicts the massacre as having been instigated by Catherine de Medici for both religious and political reasons and authorised by a weak willed and easily influenced Charles IX 103 The St Bartholomew s Day Massacre is the setting for Tim Willocks historical novel The Twelve Children of Paris Matthias Tannhauser Trilogy 2 published in 2013 Ken Follett s 2017 historical fiction novel A Column of Fire uses this event Several chapters depict in great detail the massacre and the events leading up to it with the book s protagonists getting some warning in advance and making enormous but futile efforts to avert it Follett completely clears King Charles IX and his mother Catherine of any complicity and depicts them as sincere proponents of religious toleration caught by surprise and horrified by the events he places the entire responsibility on the Guise Family following the Machiavellian view of the massacre and depicting it as a complicated Guise conspiracy meticulously planned in advance and implemented in full detail See also EditMichelade Massacre of Catholics by Protestants in Nimes in 1567 Sack of Magdeburg in 1631 Notes Edit Knecht Robert J 2002 The French religious wars 1562 1598 Oxford Osprey pp 51 52 ISBN 978 1841763958 Jouanna Arlette 16 May 2016 2007 The Saint Bartholomew s Day massacre The mysteries of a crime of state Translated by Bergin Joseph Manchester University Press published 2016 ISBN 9781526112187 Retrieved 1 August 2022 It is unlikely that it was an agreed signal for a massacre planned in advance a highly dubious plan whether attributed to the Queen Mother by Protestant sources or to Parisian Catholics Koenigsburger H G Mosse George Bowler G Q 1999 Europe in the sixteenth century 2nd ed Longman ISBN 978 0582418639 Chadwick Henry Evans G R 1987 Atlas of the Christian church London Macmillan p 113 ISBN 978 0 333 44157 2 Holt p 78 Lincoln 1989 pp 93 94 J H Shennan 1998 The Parlement of Paris Sutton p 25 ISBN 978 0 7509 1830 5 Knecht 2001 p 359 Holt Mack P 2005 The French Wars of Religion 1562 1626 Cambridge University Press pp 79 80 google Books Holt 2005 p 86 Hugues Daussy 2002 Les huguenots et le roi le combat politique de Philippe Duplessis Mornay 1572 1600 Librairie Droz p 84 ISBN 978 2 600 00667 5 Holt 2005 pp 78 79 Calvin s book was Praelectiones in librum prophetiarum Danielis Geneva and Laon 1561 Fernandez Armesto F amp Wilson D 1996 Reformation Christianity and the World 1500 2000 Bantam Press London ISBN 0 593 02749 3 paperback p 237 Holt 1995 ed p 95 a b Holt 2005 p 81 Knecht Robert Jean 2001 The Rise and Fall of Renaissance France 1483 1610 p 356 Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 22729 6 ISBN 978 0 631 22729 8 Google Books a b Usher Phillip 2014 From Marriage to Massacre The Louvre in August 1572 L Esprit Createur 54 2 33 44 doi 10 1353 esp 2014 0023 JSTOR 26378894 S2CID 162224757 via jstor Gaspard II de Coligny seigneur de Chatillon French admiral and Huguenot leader Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2022 04 02 Mack P Holt 19 October 1995 The French Wars of Religion 1562 1629 Cambridge University Press p 83 ISBN 978 0 521 35873 6 Garrisson pp 82 83 and Lincoln p 96 and Knecht 2001 p 361 Holt 2005 p 85 Le massacre de la Saint Barthelemy l obsession de la souillure heretique Le Monde fr in French 2007 08 03 Retrieved 2022 12 22 Knecht 2001 p 364 The site is now 144 Rue de Rivoli with a plaque commemorating the event though both building and street layout postdate the 16th century New York Times on the plaque De Thou Jacques Auguste Histoire des choses arrivees de son temps Boston Ginn and Company Holt 2005 edn pp 88 91 quotation from p 91 Foa Jeremie Tous ceux qui tombent Visages du massacre de la Saint Bethelemy 2021 La Decouverte ISBN 2348057883 Dyer Thomas Henry 1861 The history of modern Europe from the fall of Constantinople in 1453 to the war in the Crimea in 1857 John Murray p 268 Retrieved 28 March 2011 a b Lincoln p 98 a b Holt 2005 ed p 91 Benedict Philip 2004 Rouen During the Wars of Religion Cambridge University Press p 126 ISBN 0 521 54797 0 ISBN 978 0 521 54797 0 Holt 2005 ed p 91 The dates are in Garrison p 139 who adds Albi to the 12 in Holt online Holt 2005 ed pp 93 94 and Benedict 2004 p 127 Benedict 2004 p 127 Knecht 2001 p 367 Knecht 2001 p 368 though see Holt 2005 pp 93 95 for a different emphasis Emond or Edmond Garrison pp 144 45 who rejects the view that this met le feu au poudres lit the powder in Bordeaux See also Pearl Jonathan L 1998 The Crime of Crimes Demonology and Politics in France 1560 1620 Wilfrid Laurier Univ Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 88920 296 2 Google Books Holt 2005 ed p 95 citing Benedict 2004 pp 127 132 Hans J Hillerbrand in his Encyclopedia of Protestantism 4 volume Set Saint Bartholomew s Day Massacre of 2008 Encyclopaedia Britannica Deluxe Edition Chicago Hardouin de Perefixe de Beaumont Catholic Archbishop of Paris a century later put the number at 100 000 but This last number is probably exaggerated if we reckon only those who perished by a violent death But if we add those who died from wretchedness hunger sorrow abandoned old men women without shelter children without bread all the miserable whose life was shortened by this great catastrophe we shall see that the estimate of Perefixe is still below the reality G D Felice 1851 History of the Protestants of France New York Edward Walker p 217 The range of estimates available in the mid 19th century with other details are summarized by the Huguenot statesman and historian Francois Guizot in his A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times Volume IV Armstrong Alastair 2003 France 1500 1715 Heinemann pp 70 71 ISBN 0 435 32751 8 Benedict Philip 1978 The Saint Bartholomew s Massacres in the Provinces The Historical Journal 21 2 205 225 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00000510 JSTOR 2638258 S2CID 159715479 cited by Holt 2005 ed p 91 and also used by Knecht 2001 p 366 and Zalloua Zahi Anbra 2004 Montaigne And the Ethics of Skepticism Rookwood Press ISBN 978 1 886365 59 9 Lincoln p 97 a bare minimum of 2 000 in Paris and Chaliand Gerard Blin Arnaud Schneider Edward Pulver Kathryn Browner Jesse 2007 The History of Terrorism From Antiquity to Al Qaeda University of California Press ISBN 0 520 24709 4 ISBN 978 0 520 24709 3 citing David El Kenz 2008 Guerres et paix de religion en Europe aux XVIe XVIIe siecles Garrisson p 131 Parker G ed 1998 Oxford Encyclopedia World History Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 0 19 860223 5 hardback p 585 and Chadwick H amp Evans G R 1987 Atlas of the Christian Church Macmillan London ISBN 0 333 44157 5 hardback pp 113 Moynahan B 2003 The Faith A History of Christianity Pimlico London ISBN 0 7126 0720 X paperback p 456 Lord Acton who discusses the matter in some detail found that no evidence takes us as high as eight thousand and found those contemporaries in the best position to know typically gave the lowest figures Lectures on Modern History The Huguenots and the League pp 162 163 Perry Sheila 1997 Aspects of Contemporary France p 5 Routledge ISBN 0 415 13179 0 ISBN 978 0 415 13179 7 Fernandez Armesto F amp Wilson D 1996 Reformation Christianity and the World 1500 2000 Bantam Press London ISBN 0 593 02749 3 paperback pp 236 37 Garrisson 131 see also the 19th century historian Henry White who goes into full details listing estimates of other historians which range up to 100 000 His own estimation was 20 000 White Henry 1868 The Massacre of St Bartholomew London John Murray p 472 a b Goyau Pierre Louis Theophile Georges 1912 Saint Bartholomew s Day In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 14 New York Robert Appleton Company Fisher H A L 1969 ninth ed A History of Europe Volume One Fontana Press London p 581 Lindberg Carter 1996 The European Reformations Blackwell p 295 Howe E Architecture in Vasari s Massacre of the Huguenots Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes Vol 39 1976 1976 pp 258 261 JSTOR 751147 Daniel Rops Henri 1964 The Catholic Reformation Vol 1 New York Image p 241 Erlanger Philippe 1962 St Bartholomew s Night The Massacre of Saint Bartholomew London Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 119 n 2 Jouanna Arlette 2007 La Saint Barthelemy Les Mysteres d un Crime d Etat 24 Aout 1572 Paris Gallimard p 203 The ultimate source for the story of Gregory XIII and Maurevert is a contemporaneous diplomatic report preserved in the French National Library and described in De la Ferriere Lettres de Catherine de Medicis vol 4 Paris Imprimerie Nationale 1891 p cxvi Ward A W et al eds 1904 The Cambridge Modern History Volume III Wars of Religion Cambridge University Press Oxford p 20 Roberts Yvonne Jean Antoine de Baif and the Saint Barthelemy Bibliotheque d Humanisme et Renaissance Vol 59 No 3 1997 pp 607 611 Librairie Droz JSTOR 20678289 Georges Bordonove Henri IV Editions Pygmalion 1981 p 82 le honteux bain de sang Cunningham A amp Grell O P 2000 The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Religion War Famine amp Death in Reformation Europe Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 46701 2 paperback p 59 According to Stephen Budiansky in chapter 1 of Her Majesty s Spymaster Elizabeth I Sir Francis Walsingham and the Birth of Modern Espionage Viking 2005 Morell J R transl 1854 Russia self condemned secret and inedited documents connected with Russian history and diplomacy London David Bogue p 168 Ivan was against Anjou becoming King of Poland Anglo 229 See also Butterfield H Acton and the Massacre of St Bartholomew Cambridge Historical Journal Vol 11 No 1 1953 pp 27 47 JSTOR 3021106 on the many shifts in emphasis of the historiography of the massacre over the next four centuries Anglo pp 237 240 Anglo pp 272 80 See Butterfield 1955 passim The Catholic Encyclopedia article on Saint Bartholomew s Day has several quotations The Memoirs of Marguerite de Valois online Craveri Amanti e regine Il potere delle donne Milano Adelphi 2008 p 65 See the Catholic Encyclopedia and see note 18 Butterfield p 183 and note and p 199 Anjou s account was defended by a minority of historians into the early 20th century or at least claimed as being in some sense an account informed by actual witnesses The first occurrence of the royal injunction is found late in The Speech of Roy Henry third to a personage of honor and quality being close to His Majesty of the causes and motives of Saint Barthelemy This justification written in the entourage of the Gondi in 1628 aims to exonerate their ancestor of the accusation of having instigated the massacre Albert de Gondi is portrayed there as opposed to the bloody designs of Charles IX whose tirade is allegedly reported in 1573 by Duke Henri d Anjou then reigning in Warsaw as the elected king of Poland The apocryphal sentence of Charles IX thus participates in a rewriting of facts for the apologetic needs of the Gondi family In Arlette Jouanna p 15 333 334 n 26 Anglo p 251 Anglo p 253ff Anglo pp 254 65 Anglo p 283 see also the whole chapter Anglo p 286 Anglo Chapters 10 and 11 p 328 etc Project Gutenberg Jew of Malta text Whitehead Barbara 1994 Revising the Revisionists in Politics Ideology and the Law in Early Modern Europe Essays in Honor of J H M Salmon ed John Hearsey McMillan Salmon Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 1 878822 39 X 9781878822390 p 162 The subject of Butterfield s chapter referenced below Holt 2005 p 86 Jouanna 1998 p 201 Salmon 1979 p 187 Holt Mack P 2002 The Duke of Anjou and the Politique Struggle During the Wars of Religion Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 89278 3 ISBN 978 0 521 89278 0 p 20 Crouzet Denis 1994 La Nuit de la Saint Barthelemy Un reve perdu de la Renaissance Fayard coll Chroniques ISBN 2 213 59216 0 Bourgeon Jean Louis 1992 L assassinat de Coligny Geneve Droz Wanegffelen Thierry 2005 Catherine de Medicis Le pouvoir au feminin Payot ISBN 2228900184 Atkin N amp Tallett F 2003 Priests Prelates amp People A History of European Catholicism Since 1750 Oxford University Press Oxford ISBN 0 19 521987 2 hardback p 9 Diefendorf B B 1991 Beneath The Cross Catholics amp Huguenots in Sixteenth Century Paris Oxford University Press ISBN 0 1950 7013 5 paperback p 157 Holt M P 1995 The French Wars of Religion 1562 1629 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 35359 9 hardback pp 88 89 Cunningham A amp Grell O P 2000 The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse Religion War Famine amp Death in Reformation Europe Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 46701 2 paperback p 151 Holt 1995 p 86 Holt 1995 p 44 Holt 1995 ed p 9 a b Holt 1995 ed p 87 Mentzer Raymond A The French Wars of Religion in The Reformation World Ed Andrew Pettegree Routledge 2000 ISBN 0 415 16357 9 p 332 Frieda L 2003 Catherine de Medici Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 7538 2039 0 pp 314 16 Knecht 2001 p 364 Koenigsberger H G 1987 Early Modern Europe 1500 1789 Longman Harlow ISBN 0 582 49401 X paperback p 115 Koenigsberger p 115 Lincoln chapter 6 pp 89 102 quotation from p 102 Vigil Address of the Holy Father John Paul II w2 vatican va Burdett Sarah Sarah Burdett Feminine Virtues Violated Motherhood Female Militancy and Revolutionary Violence in Elizabeth Inchbald s The Massacre p 3 Dandelion 5 1 Summer 2014 PDF Maslan Susan 2005 Revolutionary Acts Theater Democracy and the French Revolution Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 8125 0 ISBN 978 0 8018 8125 1 p 40 A Huguenot on St Bartholomew s Day Humanities Web Retrieved 2007 04 19 Letters from Earth Ostara publications 2013 The Doctor Who Transcripts The Massacre of St Bartholomew s Eve Chrissie s Transcripts Site Retrieved 25 February 2020 References EditAnglo Sydney 2005 Machiavelli the First Century Studies in Enthusiasm Hostility and Irrelevance Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 926776 6 ISBN 978 0 19 926776 7 Google Books Butterfield Herbert Man on his Past Cambridge University Press 1955 Chapter VI Lord Acton and the Massacre of St Bartholomew Denis Crouzet Les Guerriers de Dieu La violence au temps des troubles de religion vers 1525 vers 1610 Champvallon 1990 ISBN 2 87673 094 4 La Nuit de la Saint Barthelemy Un reve perdu de la Renaissance Fayard coll Chroniques 1994 ISBN 2 213 59216 0 Garrisson Janine 1572 la Saint Barthelemy Complexe 2000 ISBN 2 87027 721 0 in French Google books Holt Mack P 1995 The French Wars of Religion 1562 1629 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521 35873 6 Holt Mack P 2005 The French Wars of Religion 1562 1629 Cambridge University Press Jouanna Arlette 1998 Histoire et Dictionnaire des Guerres de Religion Bouquins Salmon J H M 1979 Society in Crisis France during the Sixteenth Century Metheun amp Co Lincoln Bruce Discourse and the Construction of Society Comparative Studies of Myth Ritual and Classification Oxford University Press US 1989 ISBN 0 19 507909 4 ISBN 978 0 19 507909 8 Google Books Note this article incorporates material from the French Wikipedia Further reading EditBarbara B Diefendorf The St Bartholomew s Day Massacre A Brief History with Documents 2008 Arlette Jouanna and Joseph Bergin The Saint Bartholomew s Day massacre The mysteries of a crime of state 2015 online Robert Kingdon Myths about the St Bartholomew s Day Massacres 1572 1576 1988 James R Smither The St Bartholomew s Day Massacre and Images of Kingship in France 1572 1574 The Sixteenth Century Journal 1991 27 46 JSTOR 2542014 N M Sutherland The Massacre of St Bartholomew and the European conflict 1559 1572 1973 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Bartholomew s Day massacre St Bartholomew s Day Massacre BBC Radio 4 discussion with Diarmaid McCulloch Mark Greengrass amp Penny Roberts chaired by Melvyn Bragg In Our Time Nov 27 2003 Massacres during the wars of religion The Saint Bartholomew s Day Massacre a foundational event at Massacres org Goyau Georges 1913 Saint Bartholomew s Day Catholic Encyclopedia St Bartholomew Massacre of Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Bartholomew 27s Day massacre amp oldid 1150714311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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