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Home/Featured/Louise de Coligny – a Courageous Woman in Troubled Times

Louise de Coligny – a Courageous Woman in Troubled Times

Louise’s life followed one of the most troubled times in European history - from the bloody St. Bartholomew’s Massacre to the creation of a new nation, the Netherlands, until the beginning of the Thirty-Years War.

Written by Simonetta Carr | Tuesday, October 10, 2017

In 1573 one of the most atrocious massacres in France took place, a spontaneous, unanimous attack that killed approximately 10,000 Huguenots – 2-3,000 in Paris alone. Gaspard de Coligny, Louise’s father, didn’t escape the fury. A group led by the Guise stormed into his room, pierced him with a sword, threw him off the window and decapitated him. Louise’s husband, Charles de Teligny, was also killed. The couple had been married for just over a year.

 

On August 22, 1572, while Paris was lingering in the celebrating mood after the wedding between Henry, King of Navarre, and Marguerite de Valois, sister of King Charles IX of France, 16-year old Louise de Coligny received some terrible news. Her father Gaspard had been shot. Thankfully, he was still alive, saved by the providential decision to bend down just as the gun was fired. The bullet only reached his left arm, tearing a finger off his hand and shattering his elbow.

Any sense of relief she may have felt vanished quickly, as a search for the culprit was accompanied by fierce accusations and a dangerous thirst for vendetta. Whatever unity the wedding of a protestant king and a catholic princess might have represented was too artificial and fragile to survive this attack against one of the most influential Huguenot leaders.

Most of the blame fell on the Catholic family of Guise. After all, the shot came from their house, where the guards found a smoking gun. Immediately, the Huguenots demanded justice. Gaspard’s brother-in-law went as far as gather a 4,000-men army outside of Paris. Feeling threatened, the Catholic leaders pressured King Charles and his mother Catherine de Medici, former Queen regent and still a powerful force behind the throne, to resolve the situation.

No information about the meetings that ensued in the royal gardens has survived. Generally, Charles and his mother have been blamed for ordering a reprisal against the Protestant threats, but there is no certainty.

In any case, it was the people who carried out the blow with the greatest fury, unleashing the anger, hatred, and fear that had been brewing for decades, while the Huguenots (though still a minority) had occupied more and more positions of influence in France.

What followed was one of the most atrocious massacres in France, a spontaneous, unanimous attack that killed approximately 10,000 Huguenots – 2-3,000 in Paris alone. Gaspard de Coligny didn’t escape the fury. A group led by the Guise stormed into his room, pierced him with a sword, threw him off the window and decapitated him. Louise’s husband, Charles de Teligny, was also killed. The couple had been married for just over a year.

Fugitive, Ruler, Mother, and Correspondent

Shocked and frightened, Louise escaped by finding refuge first at Montargis, in the castle of Renée of France, who had also fled the scene, then in Switzerland. She returned to France only in 1576, after King Henry III, who had succeeded his brother Charles IX, proclaimed an edict of temporary amnesty for Huguenots – the Edict of Beaulieu. Louise spent the next seven years at Lierville, a property she had inherited from her husband.

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