1545 massacre of Protestants ordered by Francis I of France
The Mérindol massacre took place in 1545, when Francis I of France ordered the Waldensians of the village of Mérindol to be punished for heresy. Provençal and papal soldiers killed hundreds or even thousands of Waldensian villagers.
Arrêt de Mérindol
Outside the Piedmont of Italy, the Waldensians joined the local Protestant churches in Bohemia, France and Germany. They had regrouped in the Luberon and followed their religions in a carefully concealed manner. As Lutherans started to penetrate their region, the Waldensians' activities came under scrutiny by the French government.[1] The Waldensians became more militant, constructing fortified areas, as in Cabrières, or attacking an abbey.[1]
The Parlement of Provence issued the "Arrêt de Mérindol" on 18 November 1541.[2] This was confirmed in 1545 by Francis I after a series of appeals eventually failed. In April, Maynier raised an army of Provençal troops, who were joined by forces from the papal Comtat Venaissin against the Waldensians of Mérindol and Cabrières.[2]
These soldiers took the villages of Mérindol and Cabrières and also devastated neighbouring Waldensian villages.[1] Historians have estimated that the soldiers killed hundreds to thousands of people. They captured survivors and sent hundreds of men to forced labour in the French galleys. In total, they destroyed between 22 and 28 villages.[3][4] The execution of one young man, a servant, might well have been the first example of execution by firing squad in Europe for causes of ideology.[5]
In the aftermath, Pope Paul III approved of the actions taken; the Pope rewarded Maynier with Imperial honours.[6] When Henry II took the French throne, however, he promised to investigate the affair. The Parliament of Paris tried the leaders of the attacks, but eventually acquitted all but one.[6] The massacres probably influenced the Waldensians to become more attached to the Calvinist churches.[1]