Dragonnade
A policy, commonly called in French "
dragonnades", was instituted by
Louis XIV in 1681 in order to intimidate
Huguenot families to reconvert to
Roman Catholicism.
This policy involved billeting particularly obnoxious and difficult soldiers known as
dragons (
dragoons) within the
Protestant households where they were encouraged to wreak havoc. With the revocation of the
Edict of Nantes in 1685,
Louis XIV, the self-styled ‘Protector of Catholicism', withdrew, at a stroke, the privileges and toleration that the Protestant Huguenots of France had been guaranteed under this edict for nearly 87 years and ordered the destruction of Huguenot churches and the closure of Huguenot schools. Having effectively outlawed their religion,
Louis XIV combined this legal persecution with his tried and tested policy of terrorising recalcitrant Huguenots who refused to convert to Catholicism by billeting his notoriously brutal dragoon soldiers (or
dragons in French) in their homes and instructing these soldiers to harass and intimidate the occupants in the hopes that this would persuade them to convert to the state religion.
This persecution of their religious brethren caused outrage in
England and sustained a wave of literature protesting against the inhuman treatment of the
Huguenots, thousands of whom flocked to English shores seeking asylum. Louis's "
dragonnades" policy was so brutal that it caused great numbers of Protestants to flee
France even before the religious rights granted them by the
Edict of Nantes were removed in
1685.
On January 17th 1686,
Louis XIV claimed that out of a
Protestant population of 800,000 to 900,000, only 1,000 to 1,500 had remained in France but his campaign was in fact deeply detrimental to France's economy as many of the
Huguenots who chose to flee France possessed important skills such as
silk-weaving and clock-making and
optometry, which were a hugely valuable addition to the economy of the countries that they fled to, especially England.
See also http://www.museeprotestant.org/Pages/Notices.php?scatid=130¬iceid=633&lev=1&Lget=FR&PHPSESSID=4f1d53ff47019b4e0ad44d19f898ab7f