The next great blow to the Huguenots was in 1628, when the city of La Rochelle, an Huguenot stronghold, came under siege by French forces under the personal command of Cardinal de Richelieu. This siege dragged on for fourteen months. Of a population of 25,000, an estimated 10,000 died of starvation or disease. When La Rochelle finally fell, the living were too weak to bury the dead who littered the streets. One other effect of the fall of La Rochelle was the termination of the Huguenots’ political aspirations. The Huguenots as a political party ceased.
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- About Us
- A Brief History of the Huguenots
- Who Were the Huguenots and What Did They Want?
- The French Reformation
- Persecution of the Huguenots
- The Massacre at Vassy
- The Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre
- Henri de Navarre Becomes King of France
- The Siege of La Rochelle
- Louis XIV and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes
- The Great Dispersion
- The Effects of the Huguenots’ Dispersion
- Why the Opposition to the Huguenots?
- Our Unanticipated Legacies from our Huguenot Ancestors
- Membership