Nègrepelisse Massacre
After a short siege the town was captured by assault, and all the inhabitants that the soldiers encountered were put to the sword, without distinction of age or sex, to a total of about 800. According to one source, "all the women and girls were raped and massacred". The town was then looted and deliberately burned to the ground. This severe treatment was in retaliation for the alleged massacre of a royal regiment left in garrison in the city by the Duke of Mayenne. The king had ordered:
I command you to give no quarter to any man, because they have irritated me, and shall be served as they treated the others.
— Louis XIII.
The Huguenot garrison that had attempted to hold out in the town's citadel were obliged to surrender the next day, and all the men were hanged. The anonymous author of a contemporary report celebrating the massacre as a royal victory and a just punishment of rebels remarked that:
These traitors and rebels suffered all the chastisement that the mind of man might imagine to punish crime and rebellion, and those who escaped the fire and the blood ended their lives on gibbets as an example and a horror to those who would wish to imitate them. I have never heard of or seen a more horrible spectacle than this, for we marched over the bodies of the dead stretched naked and mutilated in the streets, which would touch the hardest of hearts.
See also
References
- ^ Brian Sandberg, "'Generous Amazons Came to the Breach': Besieged Women in the French Wars of Religion", in Violence, Vulnerability and Embodiment, edited by Shani d’Cruze and Anupama Rao (Oxford: Blackwell, 2005), pp. 161-195, at p. 171.
- ^ William Shergold Browning, A History of the Huguenots, third edition (London, 1842), p. 224
- ^ Huguenot warrior by Jack Alden Clarke p. 101
- ^ Quoted in William Shergold Browning, A History of the Huguenots, p. 225 [1]
- ^ Le grand et juste chastiment des rebelles de Negrepelisse les 10 et 11 juin 1622 (Paris, Pierre Rocolet, 1622), pp. 6-7.