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Vendée Revolt : ウィキペディア英語版
War in the Vendée

The War in the Vendée (1793 to 1796; ) was an uprising in the Vendée region of France during the French Revolution. The Vendée is a coastal region, located immediately south of the Loire River in western France. Initially, the war was similar to the 14th-century Jacquerie peasant uprising, but quickly acquired themes considered by the government in Paris to be counterrevolutionary, and Royalist. The uprising headed by the self-styled Catholic and Royal Army was comparable to the Chouannerie, which took place in the area north of the Loire.
The departments included in the uprising, called the ''Vendée Militaire'', included the area between the Loire and the Layon rivers: Vendée (Marais, Bocage Vendéen, Collines Vendéennes), part of Maine-et-Loire west of the Layon, and the portion of Deux Sèvres west of the River Thouet. Having secured their ''pays'', the deficiencies of the Vendean army became more apparent. Lacking a unified strategy (or army) and fighting a defensive campaign, from April onwards the army lost cohesion and its special advantages. Successes continued for some time: Thouars was taken in early May and Saumur in June; there were victories at Châtillon and Vihiers. After this string of victories, the Vendeans turned to a protracted siege of Nantes, for which they were unprepared and which stalled their momentum, giving the government in Paris sufficient time to send more troops and experienced generals.
Tens of thousands of civilians, Republican prisoners, and sympathizers with the revolution were massacred by both armies, leading to modern descriptions of the uprising and its consequences as a genocide. Ultimately, the uprising was suppressed using draconian measures. The historian François Furet concludes that the repression in the Vendée "not only revealed massacre and destruction on an unprecedented scale but also a zeal so violent that it has bestowed as its legacy much of the region's identity ... The war aptly epitomizes the depth of the conflict ... between religious tradition and the revolutionary foundation of democracy."〔François Furet and Mona Ozouf, eds. ''A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution'' (1989), p. 175.〕
==Background==

Class differences were not as great in the Vendée as in Paris or in other French provinces. In the rural Vendée, the local nobility seems to have been more permanently in residence and less bitterly resented than in other parts of France. Alexis de Tocqueville noted that most French nobles lived in cities by 1789. An Intendants' survey showed one of the few areas where they still lived with the peasants was the Vendée.〔Alexis de Tocqueville, The Old Regime and the Revolution, pp 122–3〕 Consequently, the conflicts that drove the revolution in Paris, for example, were also lessened in this particularly isolated part of France by the strong adherence of the population to their Catholic faith. In 1791, two representatives on mission informed the National Convention of the disquieting condition of Vendée, and this news was quickly followed by the exposure of a royalist plot organized by the Marquis de la Rouerie. It was not until the social unrest and the fear of The Terror (a period between 1793-94 where tens of thousands of people were beheaded by use of guillotine) combined with the external pressures from the Civil Constitution of the Clergy (1790) and the introduction of a levy of 300,000 on the whole of France, decreed by the National Convention in February 1793, that the region erupted.〔James Maxwell Anderson (2007). ''Daily Life During the French Revolution,'' Greenwood Publishing Group, ISBN 0-313-33683-0. (p. 205 )〕〔François Furet (1996). ''The French Revolution, 1770–1814: 1770–1814'' Blackwell Publishing, France ISBN 0-631-20299-4. (p. 124 )〕
The Civil Constitution of the Clergy required all clerics to swear allegiance to it and, by extension, to the increasingly anti-clerical National Constituent Assembly. All but seven of the 160 bishops refused the oath, as did about half of the parish priests.〔Joes, Anthony James (Resisting Rebellion: The History and Politics of Counterinsurgency ) 2006 University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0-8131-2339-9. p.51〕 Persecution of the clergy and of the faithful was the first trigger of the rebellion; the second being conscription. Nonjuring priests were exiled or imprisoned and women on their way to Mass were beaten in the streets.〔 Religious orders were suppressed and Church property confiscated.〔 On 3 March 1793, virtually all the churches were ordered closed.〔Joes, p.52〕 Soldiers confiscated sacramental vessels and the people were forbidden to place crosses on graves.〔 Nearly all the purchasers of church land were bourgeois; very few peasants benefited from the sales.〔Charles Tilly, "Local Conflicts in the Vendée before the rebellion of 1793", French Historical Studies II, fall 1961, page 219〕
The March 1793 conscription requiring Vendeans to fill their district's quota of the national total of 300,000 enraged the populace,〔 who took up arms instead as "The Catholic Army", "Royal" being added later, and fought for "above all the reopening of their parish churches with their former priests."〔Joes, pp. 52-53〕
Although town dwellers were more likely to support the Revolution in the Vendée,〔Charles Tilly, "Local Conflicts", p. 211〕 support for the revolution among the rural peasantry was not unknown. Many lived on monastery properties, and they overwhelmingly embraced the Revolution after these lands were seized and redistributed among them by the republican government.〔Charles Tilly, "Civil Constitution and Counter-Revolution in southern Anjou," French Historical Studies, I no. 2 1959, p. 175〕

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