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Chapter 9
- The Great
Campaign of 1561 - |
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Mass or
Extermination—Covenant in the Valleys—Their Solemn Oath—How the
Waldenses Recant—Their Energetic Preparations—La Trinita Advances his
Army—Twice attempts to Enter Angrogna, and is Repulsed—A Third
Attempt—Attacks on Three Points—Repulsed on all Three—Ravages the Valley
of Rora—Receives Reinforcements from France and Spain—Commences a Third
Campaign—Six Men against an Army—Utter Discomfiture—Extinction of La
Trinita’s Host—Peace. |
These frightful inflictions the Waldenses had submitted to, in the
hope that the deputies whom they had sent to the duke would bring
back with them an honourable peace. The impatience with which they
waited their return may well be conceived. At last, after an
abscence of six weeks, the commissioners reappeared in the Valleys;
but their dejected faces, even before they had uttered a word, told
that they had not succeeded. They had been sent back with an order,
enjoining on the Vaudois unconditional submission to the church of
Rome on pain of extermination. To enforce that order to the
uttermost a more numerous army was at that moment being raised. The
mass or universal slaughter—such was the alternative now presented
to them.
The
spirit of the people woke up. Rather than thus disgrace their ancestors,
imperil their own souls, and entail a heritage of slavery on their
children, they would die a thousand times. Their depression was gone;
they were as men who had awakened from heavy sleep; they had found their
arms. Their first care was to recall their pastors, their next to raise
up their fallen churches, and their third to resume public service in
them. Daily their courage grew, and once more joy lighted up their
faces.
There came letters of sympathy and promises of help from their
fellow-Protestants of Geneva, Dauphine, and France. Over the two latter
countries persecution at that hour impended, but their own dangers made
them all the more ready to succour their brethren of the Valleys.
"Thereupon," says an historian, "took place one of those grand and
solemn scenes, which, at once heroic and religious, seem rather adapted
for an epic poem than for grave history" [Muston, p. 78].
The
Waldenses of Lucerna sent deputies across the mountains, then covered to
a great depth with snow, to propose an alliance with the Protestants of
the Valley of Pragelas, who were at that time threatened by their
sovereign, Francis I. The proposed alliance was joyfully accepted.
Assembling on a plateau of snow facing the mountains of Sestrieres, and
the chain of the Guinevert, the deputies swore to stand by each other,
and render mutual support in the coming struggle [Monastier, p. 188.
Muston, p. 78]. It was agreed that this oath of alliance should be sworn
with a like solemnity in the Waldensian Valleys.
The
deputies from Pragelas, crossing the Mount Julien, arrived at Bobbio on
the 21st January, 1561. Their coming was singularly opportune. On the
evening before, a ducal proclamation had been published in the Valleys,
commanding the Vaudois, within twenty-four hours, to give attendance at
mass, or abide the consequences—"fire, sword, the cord: the three
arguments of Romanism," says Muston. This was the first news with which
the Pragelese deputies were met on their arrival. With all the more
enthusiasm they proceeded to renew their oath. Ascending a low hill
behind Bobbio, the deputies from Pragelas, and those from Lucerna,
standing erect in the midst of the assembled heads of families, who
kneeled around, pronounced these words—
"In
the name of the Vaudois Churches of the Alps, of Dauphine, and of
Piedmont, which have ever been united, and of which we are the
representatives, we here promise, our hands on our Bibles, and in the
presence of God, that all our Valleys shall courageously sustain each
other in matters of religion, without prejudice to the obedience due to
their legitimate superiors.
"We
promise to maintain the Bible, whole and without admixture, according to
the usage of the true Apostolic Church, persevering in this holy
religion, though it be at the peril of our life, in order that we may
transmit it to our children, intact and pure, as we received it from our
fathers.
"We
promise aid and succour to our persecuted brothers, not regarding our
individual interests, but the common cause; and not relying upon man,
but upon God" [Muston, pp. 78-9].
The
physical grandeurs of the spot were in meet accordance with the moral
sublimity of the transaction. Immediately beneath was spread out the
green bosom of the valley, with here and there the silver of the Pelice
gleaming out amid vineyards and acacia-groves. Filling the horizon on
all sides save one stood up an array of magnificent mountains, white
with the snows of winter. Conspicuous among them were the grand peaks of
the Col de Malure and the Col de la Croix. They looked the silent and
majestic witnesses of the oath in which a heroic people bound themselves
to die rather than permit the defilement of their hearths, and the
profanation of their altars, by the hordes of an idolatrous tyranny. It
was in this grand fashion that the Waldenses opened one of the most
brilliant campaigns ever waged by their arms.
The
next morning, according to the duke’s order, they must choose between
the mass and the penalty annexed to refusal. A neighbouring church—one
of those which had been taken from them—stood ready, with altar decked
and tapers lighted, for the Vaudois to hear their first mass. Hardly had
the day dawned when the expected penitents were at the church door. They
would show the duke in what fashion they meant to read their
recantation. They entered the building. A moment they stood surveying
the strange transformation their church had undergone, and then they set
to work. To extinguish the tapers, pull down the images, and sweep into
the street rosary, and crucifix, and all the other paraphernalia of the
Popish worship, was but the work of a few minutes. The minister, Humbert
Artus, then ascended the pulpit, and reading out as his text Isaiah xlv.
20--"Assemble yourselves and come; draw near together, ye that are
escaped of the nations: they have no knowledge that set up the wood of
their graven image, and pray unto a God that cannot save"—preached a
sermon which struck the key-note of the campaign then opening.
The
inhabitants of the hamlets and chalets in the mountians rushed down,
like their own winter torrents, into Lucerna, and the army of the
Vaudois reinforced, set out to purge the temple at Villaro. On their way
they encountered the Piedmontese garrison. They attacked and drove them
back; the monks, seigneurs, and magistrates, who had come to receive the
abjuration of the heretics, accompanying the troops in their ignominious
flight. The whole band of fugitives—soldiers, priests, and judges—shut
themselves up in the town of Villaro, which was now besieged by the
Vaudois. Thrice did the garrison from La Torre attempt to raise the
siege, and thrice were they repulsed. At last, on the tenth day, the
garrison surrendered, and had their lives spared, two Waldensian pastors
accompanying them to La Torre, the soldiers expressing greater
confidence in them than in any other escort.
The
Count La Trinita, seeing his garrison driven out, struck his encampment
at Cavour, and moved his army into the Valleys. He again essayed to sow
dissension amongst the Vaudois by entangling them in negotiations for
peace, but by this time they had learned too well the value of his
promises to pay the least attention to them, or to intermit for an hour
their preparations for defence. It was now the beginning of February,
1561.
The
Vaudois laboured with the zeal of men who feel that their cause is a
great and a righteous one, and are prepared to sacrifice all for it.
They erected barricades; they planted ambushes; they appointed signals,
to telegraph the movements of the enemy from post to post. "Every
house," says Muston, "became a manufactory of pikes, bullets, and other
weapons." They selected the best marksmen their Valleys could furnish,
and formed them into the "Flying Company," whose duty it was to hasten
to the point where the danger pressed the most. To each body of fighting
men they attached two pastors, to maintain the morale of their army. The
pastors, morning and evening, led the public devotions; they prayed with
the soldiers before going into battle; and when the fighting was over,
and the Vaudois were chasing the enemy down their great mountains, and
through their dark gorges, they exerted themselves to prevent the
victory from being stained by any unnecessary effusion of blood.
La
Trinita knew well that if he would subjugate the Valleys, and bring the
campaign to a successful end, he must make himself master of the Pra del
Tor. Into that vast natural citadel was now gathered the main body of
the Waldensian people. What of their herds and provisions remained to
them had been transported thither; there they had constructed mills and
baking-ovens; there, too, sat their council, and thence directed the
whole operations of the defence. A blow struck there would crush the
Vaudois’ heart, and convert what the Waldenses regarded as their
impregnable castle into their tomb.
Deferring the chastisement of the other valleys meanwhile, La Trinita
directed all his efforts against Angrogna. His first attempt to enter it
with his army was made on the 4th February. The fighting lasted till
night, and ended in his repulse. His second attempt, three days after,
carried him some considerable way into Angrogna, burning and ravaging,
but his partial success cost him dear, and the ground won had ultimately
to be abandoned [Monastier, p. 190. Muston, p. 80].
The
14th of February saw the severest struggle. Employing all his strategy
to make himself master of the much-coveted Pra, with all in it, he
divided his army into three corps, and advanced against it from three
points. One body of troops, marching along the gorges of the Angrogna,
and traversing the narrow chasm that leads up to the Pra, attacked it on
the south. Another body, climbing the heights from Pramol, and crossing
the snowy flanks of La Vechera, tried to force an entrance on the east;
while a third, ascending from San Martino, and crossing the lofty
summits that wall in the Pra on the north, descended upon it from that
quarter. The count’s confident expectation was that if his men should be
unable to force an entrance at one point, they were sure to do so at
another.
No
scout had given warning of what was approaching. While three armies were
marching to attack them, the Waldenses, in their grand valley, with its
rampart of ice-crowned peaks, were engaged in their morning devotions.
Suddenly the cries of fugitives, and the shouts of assailants, issuing
from the narrow chasm on the south, broke upon their ear, together with
the smoke of burning hamlets. Of the three points of attack, this was
the easiest to be defended. Six brave Waldensian youths strode down the
valley, to stop the way against La Trinita’s soldiers. They were six
against an army.
The
road by which the soldiers were advancing is long and gloomy, and
overhung by great rocks, and so narrow that only two men can march
abreast. On this side rises the mountain; on that, far down, thunders
the torrent; a ledge in the steep face of the cliff, running here in the
darkness, there in the sunshine, serves as a pathway. It leads to what
is termed the gate of the Pra. That gateway is formed by an angle of the
mountain, which obtrudes upon the narrow ledge on the one side, while a
huge rock rises on the other, and still further narrows the point of
ingress into the Pra del Tor. Access into the famous Pra, of which La
Trinita was now striving to make himself master, there is not on this
side, save through this narrow opening; seeing that on the right rises
the mountain; on the left yawns the gulf, into which, if one steps aside
but in the least, he tumbles headlong. to friend and foe alike the only
entrance into the Pra del Tor on the south is by this gate of Nature’s
own erecting. It was here that the six Waldensian warriors took their
stand [Monastier, p. 191]. Immovable as their own Alps, they not only
checked the advance of the host, but drove it back in a panic-stricken
mass, which made the precipices of the defile doubly fatal.
Others would have hastened to their aid, had not danger suddenly
presented itself in another quarter. On the heights of La Vechera,
crossing the snow, was descried an armed troop, making their entrance
into the valley on the east. Before they had time to descend they were
met by the Waldenses, who dispersed them and made them flee. Two of the
attacking parties of the count have failed; will the third have better
success?
As
the Waldenses were pursuing the routed enemy on La Vechera, they saw yet
another armed troop, which had crossed the mountains that separate the
Val San Martino from the Pra del Tor on the north, descending upon them.
Instantly the alarm was raised. A few men only could they dispatch to
meet the invaders. These lay in ambush at the mouth of a defile through
which the attacking party was making its way down into the Pra. Emerging
from the defile, and looking down into the valley beneath them, they
exclaimed, "Haste, haste! Angrogna is ours." The Vaudois, starting up
and crying out, "It is you that are ours," rushed upon them sword in
hand. Trusting to their superior numbers, the Piedmontese soldiers
fought desperately. But a few minutes sufficed for the men of the
Valleys to hurry from the points where they were now victorious, to the
assistance of their brethren. The invaders, seeing themselves attacked
on all sides, turned and fled up the slopes they had just descended.
Many were slain, nor would a man of them have re-crossed the mountains
but for the pastor of the Flying Company, who, raising his voice to the
utmost pitch, entreated the pursuers to spare the lives of those who
were no longer able to resist. Among the slain was Charles Truchet, who
so cruelly ravaged the commune of Rioclaret a few months before. A stone
from a sling laid him prostrate on the ground, and his head was cut off
with his own sword. Louis de Monteuil, another noted persecutor of the
Vaudois, perished in the same action.
Furious at his repulse, the count La Trinita turned his arms against the
almost defenceless Valley of Rora. He ravaged it, burning its little
town, and chasing away its population of eighty families, who escaped
over the snows of the mountains to Villaro, in the Valley of Lucerna.
That valley he next entered with his soldiers, and though it was for the
moment almost depopulated, the Popish general received so warm a welcome
from those peasants who remained that, after being again and again
beaten, he was fain to draw off his men-at-arms, and retreat to his old
quarters at Cavour, there to chew the cud over his misfortunes, and
hatch new stratagems and plan new attacks, which he fondly hoped would
retrieve his disgraces.
La
Trinita spent a month in reinforcing his army, greatly weakened by the
losses it had sustained. The King of France sent him ten companies of
foot, and some other choice soldiers [Leger, part ii., p. 36. Gilles,
chap. 25.] There came a regiment from Spain; and numerous volunteers
from Piedmont, comprising many of the nobility. From 4,000, the original
number of his army, it was now raised to 7,000 [Ibid., part ii., p. 37].
He thought himself strong enough to begin a third campaign. He was
confident that this time he would wipe out the disgrace which had
befallen his arms, and sweep from the earth at once and for ever the
great scandal of the Waldenses. He again directed all his efforts
against Angrogna, the heart and bulwark of the Valleys.
It
was Sunday, the 17th of March, 1561. The whole of the Vaudois assembled
in the Pra del Tor had met on the morning of that day, soon afer dawn,
as was their wont, to unite in public devotion. The first rays of the
rising sun were beginning to light up the white hills around them, and
the last cadences of their morning psalm were dying away on the grassy
slopes of the Pra, when a sudden alarm was raised. The enemy was
approaching by three routes. On the ridges of the eastern summits
appeared one body of armed men; another was defiling up the chasm, and
in a few minutes would pour itself, through the gateway already
described, into the Pra; while a third was forcing itself over the rocks
by a path intermediate between the two. Instantly the enemy was met on
all the points of approach. A handful of Waldensians sufficed to thrust
back along the narrow gorge the line of glittering cuirassed men, who
were defiling through it. At the other two points, where bastions of
rock and earth had been erected, the fighting was severe, and the dead
lay thick, but the day at both places went against the invaders. Some of
the ablest captains were among the slain. The number of the soldiers
killed was so great that Count La Trinita is said to have sat down and
wept when he beheld the heaps of the dead [Muston, p. 83]. It was matter
of astonishment at the time that the Waldenses did not pursue the
invaders, for had they done so, being so much better acquainted with the
mountain-paths, not one of all that host would have been left alive to
carry tidings of its discomfiture to the inhabitants of Piedmont. Their
pastors restrained the victorious Vaudois, having laid it down as a
maxim at the beginning of the campaign that they would use with
moderation and clemency whatever victories the "God of battles" might be
pleased to give them, and that they would spill no blood unless when
absolutely necessary to prevent their own being shed. The number of
slain Piedmontese was again out of all proportion to those who hd fallen
on the other side; so much so, that it was currently said in the cities
of Piedmont that "God was fighting for the barbets" [Ibid. Monastier, p.
194].
More
deeply humiliated and disgraced than ever, La Trinita led back the
remains of his army to its old quarters. Well had it been for him if he
had never set foot within the Waldensian territory, and not less so for
many of those who followed him, including not a few of the nobles of
Piedmont, whose bones were now bleaching on the mountains of the
Vaudois. But the Popish general was slow to learn the lesson of these
events. Even yet he harboured the design of returning to assail that
fatal valley where he had lost so many laurels, and buried so many
sodiers; but he covered his purpose with craft. Negotiations had been
opened between the men of the Valleys and the Duke of Savoy, and as they
were proceeding satisfactorily, the Vaudois were without suspicions of
evil. This was the moment that La Trinita chose to attack them. He
hastily assembled his troops, and on the night of the 16th April he
marched them against the Pra del Tor, hoping to enter it unopposed, and
give the Vaudois "as sheep to the slaughter."
The
snows around the Pra were beginning to burn in the light of morning when
the attention of the people, who had just ended their united worship,
was attracted by unusual sounds which were heard to issue from the gorge
that led into the valley. On the instant six brave mountaineers rushed
to the gateway that opens from the gorge. The long file of La Trinita’s
soldiers was seen advancing two abreast, their helmets and cuirasses
glittering in the light. The six Vaudois made their arrangements, and
calmly waited till the enemy was near. The first two Vaudois, holding
loaded muskets, knelt down. The second two stood erect, ready to fire
over the heads of the first two. The third two undertook the loading of
the weapons as they were discharged. The invaders came on. As the first
two of the enemy turned the rock they were shot down by the two foremost
Vaudois. The next two of the attacking force fell in like manner by the
shot of the Vaudois in the rear. The third rank of the enemy presented
themselves only to be laid by the side of their comrades. In a few
minutes a little heap of dead bodies blocked the pass, rendering
impossible the advance of the accumulating file of the enemy in the
chasm.
Meanwhile, other Vaudois climbed the mountains that overhang the gorge
in which the Piedmontese arm was imprisoned. Tearing up the great stones
with which the hill-side was strewn, the Vaudois sent them rolling down
upon the host. Unable to advance from the wall of dead in front, and
unable to flee from the ever-accumulating masses behind, the soldiers
were crushed in dozens by the falling rocks. Panic set in: and panic in
such a position was dreadful. Wedged together on the narrow ledge, with
a murderous rain of rocks falling on them, their struggle to escape was
frightful. They jostled one another, and trod each other under foot,
while vast numbers fell over the precipice, and were dashed on the rocks
or drowned in the torrent [Leger, part ii., p. 37. Muston, p. 85]. When
those at the entrance of the valley, who were watching the result, saw
the crystal of the Angrogna begin about midday to be changed into blood,
"Ah!" said they, "the Pra del Tor has been taken; La Trinita has
triumphed; there flows the blood of the Vaudois." And, indeed, the count
on beginning his march that morning is said to have boasted that by noon
the torrent of the Angrogna would be seen to change colour; and so in
truth it did. Instead of a pellucid stream, rolling along on a white
gravelly bed, which is its usual appearance at the mouth of the valley,
it was now deeply dyed from recent slaughter. But when the few who had
escaped the catastrophe returned to tell what had that day passed within
the defiles of the Angrogna, it was seen that it was not the blood of
the Vaudois, but the blood of their ruthless invaders, which dyed the
waters of the Angrogna. The count withdrew on that same night with his
army, to return no more to the Valleys.
Negotiations were again resumed, not this time through the Count La
Trinita, but through Philip of Savoy, Count of Raconis, and were
speedily brought to a satisfactory issue. The Duke of Savoy had but
small merit in making peace with the men whom he found he could not
conquer. The capitulation was signed on the 5th of June, 1561, and its
first clause granted an indemnity for all offences. It is open to remark
that this indemnity was given to those who had suffered, not to those
who had committed the offences it condoned. The articles that followed
permitted the Vaudois to erect churches in their Valleys, with the
exception of two or three of their towns, and to hold public worship—in
short, to celebrate all the offices of their religion. All the "ancient
franchises, immunities, and privileges, whether conceded by his
Highness, or by his Highness’s predecessors," were renewed, provided
they were vouched by public documents [the Articles of Capitulation are
given in full in Leger, part ii., pp. 38-40]. Such was the arrangement
that closed this war of fifteen months. The Vaudois ascribed it in great
part to the influence of the good Duchess Margaret. The Pope designated
it a "pernicious example," which he feared would not want imitators in
those times when the love of many to the Roman See was waxing cold. It
stank in the nostrils of the prelates and monks of Piedmont, to whom the
heretics had been a free booty. Nevertheless, Duke Emanuel Philibert
faithfully maintained its stipulations, the duchess being by his side to
counteract any pressure in the contrary direction. This peace, together
with the summer that was now opening, began to slowly efface the deep
scars persecution had left on the Valleys; and what further helped to
console and reanimate this brave but afflicted people, were the sympathy
and aid universally tendered them by Protestants abroad, in particular
by Calvin and the Elector Palatine, the latter addressing a spirited
letter to the duke on behalf of his persecuted subjects [Leger, part
ii., p. 41].
Nothing was more admirable than the spirit of devotion which the Vaudois
exhibited all through these terrible conflicts. Their Valleys resounded
not less with the voice of prayer and praise, than with the din of arms.
Their opponents came from carousing, from blaspheming, from murdering,
to engage in battle; the Waldenses rose from their knees to unsheathe
the sword, and wield it in a cause which they firmly believed to be that
of Him to whom they had bent in supplication. When their little army
went a-field their barbes always accompanied it, to inspirit the
soldiers by suitable exhortations before joining battle, and to moderate
in the hour of victory a vengeance which, however excusable, would yet
have tarnished the glory of the triumph. When the fighting men hastened
to the bastion or to the defile, the pastors betook themselves to the
mountain’s slope, or to its summit, and there with uplifted hands
supplicated help from the "Lord, strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in
battle." When the battle had ceased, and the enemy were in flight, and
the victors had returned from chasing their invaders from their Valleys,
the grey-haired pastor, the lion-hearted man of battle, the matron, the
maiden, the stripling, and the little child, would assemble in Pra del
Tor, and while the setting sun was kindling into glory the mountain-tops
of their once more ransomed land, they would raise their voices
together, and sing the old war-song of Judah, in strains so heroic that
the great rocks around them would send back the thunder of their praise
in louder echoes than those of the battle whose triumphant issue they
were celebrating.
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