Siege of Privas explained

Conflict:Siege of Privas (1629)
Partof:the Huguenot rebellions
Date:14–28 May 1629
Place:Privas
Result:Royal victory, Huguenot defeat
Combatant2:French Huguenot forces
Commander1:Louis XIII
Henri de Schomberg
Commander2:Henri, Duke of Rohan
Strength1:20,000
Strength2:3,000
Casualties2:200 executed or enslaved

The siege of Privas was undertaken by Louis XIII of France from 14 May 1629, and the city of Privas was captured on 28 May 1629. It was one of the last events of the Huguenot rebellions (1621-1629).

Context

The siege of Privas followed the disastrous capitulation of the main Protestant stronghold of La Rochelle. Louis XIII then moved to eliminate the remaining Huguenot resistance in the south of France. With Alès and Anduze, the city of Privas was at the center of a string of Protestant strongholds in the Languedoc, stretching from Nîmes and Uzès in the east, to Castres and Montauban in the west.[1] Privas was selected by Antoine Hercule de Budos, Marquis des Portes (1589-1629), as a strategic target; capturing it would break a line of Huguenot defences and disconnect their main centers of Nîmes and Montauban.[1] The city was defended by Alexandre du Puy-Montbrun, a leading Protestant from Montbrun-les-Bains in the Dauphiné, already active in Montauban (1621).

The siege

Privas was captured on 28 May 1629 after a siege of 15 days, at which Louis XIII was present. 500 to 600 Huguenot men who had barricaded themselves in a fort surrendered, but some attempted to blow themselves up with Royal troops, leading to a massacre. The city was destroyed by looting and burning.[2] [3]

In a letter to the Queen, Richelieu reported the destruction in wording that minimized active responsibility on the part of royal Catholic forces:

One girl who escaped the massacre was adopted by Richelieu, and was nicknamed "La Fortunée de Privas".[4] The Marquis des Portes was killed in the siege.[5]

Aftermath

After Privas, Alès soon fell in the Siege of Alès in June 1629. The remaining Huguenot cities rapidly fell too, and finally Montauban surrendered after a short siege led by Bassompierre.[1] [2]

These last sieges of the Huguenot rebellion were followed by the Peace of Alès (27 September 1629), which settled the revolt by guaranteeing the practice of the Huguenot religion and judicial protection, but requiring Huguenot strongholds as well as political assemblies to be dismantled.[6] [7]

In 1640, Richelieu commissioned painter Nicolas Prévost to paint the siege, based on the engraving by Abraham Bosse. The painting is now located at the Château de Richelieu.

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=xnx_tmW5v90C&pg=PA121 Siege Warfare: The fortress in the early modern world, 1494-1660 Christopher Duffy p.121
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=GiBBAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA155 History of the Huguenots: from 1598 to 1838 William S. Browning
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=Pk_t6EV41XQC&pg=PA171 Violence, vulnerability and embodiment: gender and history by Shani D'Cruze, Anupama Rao p.171
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=rVMnLbUYRzQC&pg=PA161 Rhone Alpes by Philippe Barbour p.161
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=aRlBTFGz3SUC&pg=PA18 Rebels and Rulers, 1500-1660: Provincial rebellion by Pérez Zagorín p.18
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=5iPJSGj6J9YC&pg=PA19 Religion and royal justice in early modern France by Diane Claire Margolf p.19
  7. https://books.google.com/books?id=EVNGNIojGgMC&pg=PA145 The Cambridge illustrated history of France by Colin Jones p.145