Hywel Williams
The Huguenots, by Geoffrey Treasure - review
There could be no backsliding while preparing the next plot, murder or battle in the French Wars of Religion, says Hywel Williams
France’s early 21st-century Protestants are eco-friendly, gender-sensitised and respectful of the Fifth Republic’s laïcité. But their ancestors were a less accommodating lot. La réforme in the France of the 16th century was well-educated, predominantly urban and organised as part of a pan-European Protestant movement which set out to subvert the territorial sovereignty of Catholic princes. Its leaders included some of the French aristocracy’s boldest spirits, whose dynastic ambitions to exercise an earthly dominion blended easily with the dogmatic confidence of Protestantism at its most driven and alluring.
Lutheranism made an initial impact through the circles of humanist opinion in Paris and other centres of enlightenment — such as the courts of the nobility, where women such as Marguerite d’Angoulême, the sister of King François I, found in justification by faith an excitement and an intellectuality that liberated them from the banality of aristocratic ritual. And in the generation that followed, French rebels could look to Jean Calvin, who was born in Noyon and established himself in Geneva’s safety, where, with a confidence that marks him out as the first of France’s public intellectuals, he penned the works that justified rebellion against the French crown.
Predestination was the belief that coursed through the blood stream of the Calvinist body politic. Its psychological impact was heady. God had already decided who was going to be saved and who was going to be damned. Nothing could change that divine audit. But on the other hand no one — including ‘the elect’ — knew who had been chosen. Calvin’s God kept his agents on their toes, and the mental impact of uncertainty about what had been decided in the salvationist stakes meant that there could be no backsliding while preparing for the next plot, murder or battle.
The guerres de réligion lasted two generations, partly because they were driven by loyalties that were ancient as well as by recently acquired certitudes. Protestantism enjoyed a strong appeal in the region of the Midi that extended from parts of western Provence and across to Languedoc. Rebellion here was a recrudescence. The region’s towns had ancient, often Roman, origins and local bishops had taken over the functions of local government after the departure of the legions. A pattern of local liberties and immunities had developed, and these had helped to establish and protect Catharism as a popular 12th-century heresy until its extinction by a French crown, which saw the movement as the religious expression of political and cultural independence. For the Valois monarchy in the 16th century, Protestantism’s geographical spread in towns such as Montpellier, Nîmes and Toulouse showed that it was an old opposition in new garb.
By the 1550s French protestants were being called Huguenots — a label whose derivation remains obscure — and Geoffrey Treasure’s spaciously constructed account of their impact covers over a century and a half of faith-filled scheming that ended in defeat and acquiescence.
Henri IV, the first Bourbon monarch, abjured his Protestantism but issued in 1598 the Edict of Nantes, whose extension of toleration to his former co-religionists brought France’s civil war to a close. Treasure offers a sympathetic account of the Huguenot experience and his narrative closes with the partial diaspora that followed Louis XIV’s revocation of the Edict in 1685.
This is as thorough a history of a once distinctive community as anyone can wish for, with the author showing his familiar and easy command of early modern Europe’s mentalité in questions of culture and religion. His subjects’ system of belief is explored to empathetic effect, but Treasure also takes his readers on an exploration of what it felt like to be a dissident in the daily conduct of life — in the adoption of distinctive argot, dress and customs. Yale University Press has done its author proud with the production of this handsome and elegantly illustrated volume, though closer editing would have done much to highlight some of its significant conclusions.
English historiography has given the Huguenots a consistently good press. For Lord Acton and his pupil J.N.Figgis they were an enlightened anticipation of the late Victorian belief in the rights of minorities and the virtues of representative government. And in the mid-20th century, excitable scholarship sometimes pressed the analogy between international Calvinism and the Marxist Internationale, since both were bands of confrères that owed allegiance to a transnational ideology.
Nonetheless, the story of the Huguenots is one of failure. Reformation politics right across Europe showed just how important it was to have a sovereign prince on your side. For as long as the French monarchy remained Catholic, the odds were heavily against a Huguenot breakthrough. Even at the height of their influence in the 1590s there were probably no more than 900,000 of them and that would equate to a little under 5 per cent of the total French population. Their leaders certainly had an elite self-confidence, but that cockiness also undid them.
The Huguenot plotters consistently overplayed their hand, as happened in the case of the rebellion that was planned, with English support, in La Rochelle in 1627 and that ended in the city’s unconditional surrender to Louis XIII’s army a year later. In the decades that followed, the stuffing was progressively knocked out of the Huguenots and the Revocation of 1685 was effected with ease. There may still have been some 700,000 Huguenots left in France in the 1680s, but by then their inner light had gone out. Perhaps a third of these emigrated. The majority of those who stuck it out in France drifted towards Catholicism.
Suppression is not the only reason why the Huguenots ceased to matter as an independent political force. By the late 17th century their concern with conscience, argument and individual experience directed many Huguenots towards the early enlightenment and, though their faith may have survived, it lost its distinctive bite. Pierre Bayle, the son of a Calvinist minister in the Midi and author of a Historical and Critical Dictionary (1697) which excoriated authoritarianism, is a case in point.
During the two great crises of conscience that afflicted modern France, it was the country’s Protestants who got it right. Their daily newspaper Le Signal rivalled Zola in the energy of its Dreyfusard sentiment and in 1899 it was the local pasteur who found a lodging for Lucie Dreyfus during her husband’s court martial in Rennes. Throughout the Occupation the Protestant clergy were anti-Pétainiste and Charles de Gaulle in exile signified his approval by attending the Sunday services of the Temple in Soho Square rather than the masses celebrated by the priests of his own collabo church.
The contemporary roll call of French businesses and manufactures associated with HSP (Haute Société Protéstante) founders and management reads like a Gallic affirmation of Max Weber’s sociological claim that a Protestant’s best friend is a bank account: Hermès, Guerlain and Peugeot; Rémy-Martin, Perrier and Kronenbourg; Alstom in power generation and the Hottinguer banking group, which traces its Parisian origins to the early 1780s — a time when Louis XVI’s minister Jacques Necker, another Protestant, was trying to bring order to the royal finances. Le désert, as the Protestants described their condition after 1685, has not been an entirely desolating experience.