The Amboise conspiracy, also called Tumult of Amboise, was a failed attempt by a
first French War of Religion
.
Background
Main article:
1559-1562 French political crisis
Death of the king
On 10 July 1559, after a jousting accident, Henry II of France died suddenly.[1] Premature as his death was, the crown fell to his young son, Francis II, who was only 15 years old.[2] Francis' wife's maternal uncles, Francis, Duke of Guise and Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine moved into the power vacuum, taking control over the young and sickly king's administration.[3] They were faced with a formidable crisis; France was 40 million livres in debt, of which 19 million was owed immediately as a result of the Italian Wars.[4] Many royal officials had been without pay for years.[4] Along with this fiscal crisis. the Guise administration was faced with a religious crisis. Despite the persecutions undertaken by Henry II, Protestantism had continued to grow towards the end of his reign, leaving it to the new administration the crisis of solving the religious question.[5]
Religious policy
To solve these twin problems, the Guise set upon a course of religious political continuity, and fiscal cost cutting. The former embodied in four laws in the latter half of 1559, with landlords to be prosecuted if they harboured heretics and meeting houses to be razed to the ground among other provisions.
execution in December after he refused to recant, further fanned the flames of religious tension, which exploded in the capital with the Saint-Médard riot later that month and the assassination of President Minard.[7] The backlash to these policies, and the increasing militancy of some Protestants troubled the Guise, who issued new laws, banning the wearing of masks, and long coats that might conceal pistols.[8]
Financial policy
On the financial side the Guise made equally many enemies, the army was drastically scaled down in size, and payments to troops were deferred, upsetting many soldiers.[9] Some came to the royal residence to voice their displeasure, and were threatened by Lorraine with hanging if they didn't vacate the premises.[9] Further, many of the cuts to the administration and new taxes had notable exemptions for the lands of the Guise, and their clients, angering those elites, who were not among their circles.[9] Crown lands were resumed, with the exception of Guises' holdings of Saumur, Provins and Dourdan further alienating those elites who had benefitted from such crown grants.[9] Finally venal office was suppressed, a move which inflamed the title holders who lost their privileges.[10]
Faction and conspiracy
Factions form
No sooner had Henry II died than malcontent factions began to form against the new Guise led government.[11] Those opposed to the Guise sought for Antoine of Navarre to become regent of the kingdom, conscious of his flirtations with Protestantism in the late 1550s.[12] This was despite Francis II being of legal age to rule.[13] This faction further desired the calling of an estates general, to solve many of what they perceived as the kingdom's ills in the past decades.[12] The Guise's alienation of elements of the army through their fiscal policy furthered this disgruntled clique, bringing into their number Maligny and Castelnau among others.[14]
Conspiracy established
Around August 1559 a plan began to consolidate for the coup plot, aiming at first to assert Navarre's right to a regency, and, when he proved uninterested, Condé's more dubious right as a minor prince of the blood.[15] La Renaudie was tasked to lead this coup attempt.[15] He had personal reasons to want to see the Guise taken from power, the Cardinal of Lorraine having seen his brother-in-law executed.[16] La Renaudie boasted that he had the support of John Calvin in Geneva and was given an angry reception when he visited the city hunting for recruits late in the year.[17]
The large part of the ideological support base for the coup came from petit seigneurs such as de Mauvans and Protestant clerics, such as La Roche Chandieu.[16] Alongside military malcontents often from their retinues or clients, many poor soldiers were easily tempted by La Renaudie's offer of 10 sous for infantry and 18 sous for cavalry.[18] The church of Provence was the only consistory to be fully onboard, the region, one of great Protestant strength, offering 2000 soldiers to the cause of the coup.[16]Gaspard II de Coligny who had come to terms with the Guise recently was uninterested in involving himself, and did his best to persuade the Protestant nobility of Normandy in his powerbase to stay clear of involvement.[19]
Final meeting
On 1 February the conspirators met in the forests near Nantes for a 'Parliament' during which the baron du Raunay offered his nearby Chateau as a springboard for the operation and all participants swore an oath.[20] The location was chosen to coincide with the meeting of the nearby Parlement, to explain the conspirators' presence in the area.[21]
Conspiracy exposed
On 12 February, the court left the chateau Marchenoir, where Longueville had been entertaining the young Francis with hunting and other pursuits, and began the journey to Amboise.[22] On the route they were overtaken by the Duke's secretary Millet, who had with him a lawyer named Pierre des Avenelles [fr].[22] Avenelles' Paris home had been made into a safe house for the plotters, and he claimed he had gotten uneasy with the conversations he was overhearing.[22] The Guise were soon to give him a reward of 10,000 livres for the information he told them, which suggests other motives for his defection however.[13] He elaborated on a conspiracy to arrest de Guise at Amboise, and to force the king to declare a liberty of conscience.[13] He also knew the name of the leader of the conspiracy, La Renaudie.[13]
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Rumours had been swirling for some time that a plot was in the air, however now the Guise had concrete details. They had long suspected Condé of involvement in opposition plots, and he had already been passed over for the governorship of Picardy he had been promised in January.[19] But Condé was cautious, and however greatly involved, he carefully left no written evidence, working instead through servants.[19] Robert Stuart, who had been suspected of involvement in the assassination of President Minard, was brought to Amboise and tortured in the hope he knew the date of the operation.[19] In preparation for the attack much of the high nobility was invited to Amboise, including Coligny and Condé on 21 February, and they duly arrived at the castle.[19]