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Okla-homey
8/24/2007, 06:21 AM
1572 : Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre

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435 years ago today, the boy king, King Charles IX of France, under the sway of his mother, Catherine de Medici, orders the assassination of Huguenot Protestant leaders in Paris. This act set off an orgy of killing that resulted in the massacre of tens of thousands of Protestants all across France.

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King Charles IX was just a kid. His mama ran the show.

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Catherine de Medici. As Queen Mother, the responsibility for the massacres lies with her.

Two days earlier, Catherine had ordered the murder of Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, a Huguenot leader whom she felt was leading her son into war with Spain. However, Coligny was only wounded, and Charles promised to investigate the assassination in order to placate the angry Huguenots.

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Gaspard de Coligny

Catherine then convinced the young king that the Huguenots were on the brink of rebellion, and he authorized the murder of their leaders by the Catholic authorities. Most of these Huguenots were in Paris at the time, celebrating the marriage of their leader, Henry of Navarre, to the king's sister, Margaret.

A list of those to be killed was drawn up, headed by Coligny, who was brutally beaten and thrown out of his bedroom window just before dawn on August 24. Once the killing started, mobs of Catholic Parisians, apparently overcome with bloodlust, began a general massacre of Huguenots. Charles issued a royal order on August 25 to halt the killing, but his pleas went unheeded as the massacres spread.

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The upside down crucifixion. A popular method of executing "heretics" during the period in France.

Mass slaughters continued into October, reaching the provinces of Rouen, Lyon, Bourges, Bourdeaux, and Orleans. An estimated 3,000 French Protestants were killed in Paris, and as many as 70,000 in all of France. The massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day marked the resumption of religious civil war in France.

The persecution of French Protestants touched off waves of emigration. Thousands departed France for the relative safety of the British colonies in America. Charleston, SC has the largest and oldest Huguenot community in the US. Their "mother church" was built in Charleston the 17th century. Many SC low-country Huguenots eventually became fabulously wealthy as planters of rice, indigo and cotton.

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First Huguenot Church, Chucktown, SC.

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jk the sooner fan
8/24/2007, 06:43 AM
Santee is a Hugenot name, and its believed by other family tree researchers that we came to the US during that mass Hugenot emigration to the US

good story Homey!

sooner n houston
8/24/2007, 07:27 AM
Damn Catholics! :D

Okieflyer
8/24/2007, 07:31 AM
Very interesting Homey.

Viking Kitten
8/24/2007, 09:00 AM
Henry of Navarre is an extremely important figure in this story. Some historians think Catherine De Medici tricked him into marrying Margaret to lure the Huguenots to Paris in order for the execution to take place. But he himself eventually converted to Catholicism, became king, issued the Edict of Nantes which ushered in religious freedom for French Protestants and was generally thought to be a terrific king who looked out for his subjects very well.

It is also argued that he embraced the Catholic church for more than just political reasons, that he truly had a religious conversion.

Interesting stuff, Homes!

TexasLidig8r
8/24/2007, 09:14 AM
Well done.

And.. it would make a good movie.

TUSooner
8/24/2007, 10:05 AM
Well done!
The Good Morning, not the massacre, I mean.

Flagstaffsooner
8/24/2007, 10:19 AM
So who the hell is Saint Bartholomew?