- François de Beauvais, Seigneur de Briquemault
François de Beauvais, Seigneur de Briquemault (c. 1502-1572) was a leader of the
Huguenot s during the first religious wars.He was the son of Adrien de Briquemault and Alexane de Sainte Ville.
His first campaign was under the count of
Brissac in thePiedmontese wars . On his return toFrance in 1554 he joinedAdmiral Coligny . Charged with the defence ofRouen , in 1562, he resigned in favor ofGabriel Montgomery , to whom the prince ofCondé had entrusted the task, and went over toEngland , where he concluded theTreaty of Hampton Court on the 20th of September. He then returned to France, and took Dieppe from theCatholic s before the conclusion of peace.If his share in the second religious war was less important, he played a very active part in the third. He fought at
Jarnac ,Roche-Abeille andMontcontour , assisted in the siege ofPoitiers , was nearly captured by the Catholics atBourg-Dieu , re-victualledVézelay , and almost surprisedBourges . In 1570, being charged by Coligny to stop the army of the princes in its ascent of the Rhône valley, he crossedBurgundy and effected his junction with the admiral atSaint-Étienne in May.On the 21st of the following June he assisted in achieving the victory of
Arnay-le-Duc , and was then employed to negotiate a marriage between the prince ofNavarre andElizabeth I of England . Being inParis on the night of St. Bartholomew he took refuge in the house of the English ambassador, but was arrested there. With his friend Arnaud de Cavagnes he was delivered over to theparlement , and failed in courage when confronted with his judges, seeking to escape death by unworthy means. He was condemned, nevertheless, onOctober 27 ,1572 , to the last penalty and to the confiscation of his property, and on October 29 he and Cavagnes were executed.References
*1911
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