The next day the insurgents seized
Vihiers, which the patriots had preferred to abandon. The peasants, however, were afraid of the repression of the "Blues", which they knew to be inevitable. It was at that moment that the insurgents went to fetch the nobles of their country, former soldiers, to force them to put themselves at their head. Thus, several nobles like
Charles Artus of Bonchamps or
Maurice Gigost of Elbée joined the insurrection. At the initiative of their leaders, the insurgents then decided to march on
Chalonnes-sur-Loire, near
Angers. The city was defended by 4,000 soldiers. Faced with the threat of the insurgents, the defenders preferred to abandon the city and retreated to Angers. At that moment, the peasants, who had driven the patriots out of their countries, dispersed and returned home. The revolt had thus ended, but the revolutionary armies sent to repress it were to restart the war in the
Mauges. On April 14, 1793, the republican General Leygonier occupied the city of Cholet, which would be resumed the next day by the royalists. The republican prisoners, including
Jean-Julien Savary, were saved from death thanks to the prayer of the inhabitants. == References ==