
Contents
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Royal Majesty Wounded Royal Majesty Wounded
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Extraordinary Justice Extraordinary Justice
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‘Execution’ ‘Execution’
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The Elimination of the French in Mons The Elimination of the French in Mons
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Abstract
Faced with the possibility of a Huguenot revolt, Charles IX decided on a pre-emptive strike that would eliminate the most dangerous ‘war’ Huguenots among those who had recently attended the royal wedding in Paris. Counselled by ministers and other advisers, he insisted that in such extreme situations where the preservation of the state was at stake, ‘necessity knew no law’ and that his right to wield ‘extraordinary justice’ was self-evident. This numerically limited surgical strike was designed to nip potential rebellion in the bud, and was confided to major aristocratic figures like the dukes of Guise, Nevers and others. The city gates were closed and the Parisian militia was mobilised with a view to keeping good order rather than to precipitating unplanned killings – a risky strategy. The temporarily Parisian Huguenot leadership, some of whom were murdered within the Louvre palace where they were lodged, was quickly eliminated.
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