, by
Saint-Evre Gillot, 1835. . During the months that followed, the
Cévennes became the site of numerous battles, skirmishes, clashes, and ambushes between Camisards and Royalists. The Protestant rebels employed some of the earliest tactics of
guerilla warfare against the Royalists, and Captain Poul was slain on January 12. During their campaign, Camisards assassinated Catholic priests as they burnt down villages. At
Fraissinet-de-Fourques, 40 women and children of Royalist forces were murdered by Castanet's troops on February 21, 1703. French forces went on to respond with harsh reprisals. On January 14, 1703,
marshal Nicolas Auguste de La Baume de Montrevel, replaced the Count of Broglie and was placed in command of the Royal army, hiring 3,000
miquelets. On February 25, the king granted Montrevel and
Nicolas de Lamoignon de Basville total control over the military. Surrendering Camisards holding their hands in the air were
summarily executed via the
gallows and the
breaking wheel, at times even
burned at the stake. Huguenot villages were razed to the ground and all their property confiscated. After a snowstorm in February 1703, French officer
Jacques de Jullien won a major victory against Cavalier's troops. He was promoted by
Louis XIV for his actions. Jullien embarked on a campaign to destroy all the resources of the Caminards. Royal troops burned Protestant and pro-Camanard towns and villages to the ground as their inhabitants were massacred and deported. Jullien made an effort not to let the war come under the public scrutiny of foreign nations. He was especially concerned about possible extensions to Switzerland and
Savoy. On the first of April,
Palm Sunday, the
marshal of Montrevel ambushed and massacred twenty Huguenot civilians at
Nîmes in what is now known as the
Moulin de l'Agau massacre). That month, government forces attacked the settlements of
Mialet (Laporte's hometown) and
Saumane. After the population refused to cease assisting the rebels, Montrevel expelled the villages' entire populations. On
September 20 the Catholic settlements of
Saturargues and
Saint-Sériès were attacked by Protestants. 71 people, comprising 60 Saturarguois and 11 Saint-Sériains, were killed in total.
Huguenots refugees who had fled abroad, the Marquis of Miremont in particularly, tried to convince the English and Dutch, who were at war with France, to land troops in the country to support the Camisards. English and Dutch warships approached the coast near
Sète, but Montrevel took them as a serious threat, and had the coast monitored, ending the attempted intervention. The royal troops remained in check. In September,
Basville decided to depopulate the Cévennes in order to isolate the Camisards and prevent them from getting vital foods and resources in what is known as the
burning of the Cévennes. Basville's plan, approved by the king, outlined 31 parishes designated to have their populations expelled. Their 13,212 inhabitants were ordered to flee with all their cattle and furniture to government-guarded cities. The plan was carried out from September to December 1703 as French troops and militias burned down and massacred at least 466 towns in the Cévennes. All 31 parishes were successfully destroyed. Florentine militiamen were responsible for numerous murders and atrocities against civilians during the operation. Support for the Camisards skyrocketed after the Burning of the Cévennes, providing a major propaganda boost for the Huguenot cause and an increase of the conflict's intensity. As French authorities unsuccessfully attempted to maintain stability, Catholic militias responded to the insurgency with brutal anti-Protestant reprisals. On March 14, 1704, 1,100 Camisards commanded by
Jean Cavalier won their greatest victory, 400-600 elite members of the navy and 60 dragoons were routed in
Martignargues; between 180 and 350 royal soldiers died while Camisard losses numbered 20.
Louis XIV responded by dismissing Montrevel and replaced him with marshal
Claude Louis Hector de Villars. ,painting by
Hyacinthe Rigaud. In April, 150 peasants were massacred by the government at
Branoux-les-Taillades in
Saint-Paul-la-Coste. On April 19, two days before his departure, Montrevel and an army of 1,000 men defeated Cavalier and seized his headquarters. On
April 30, Jean Cavalier began negotiating with the king. == End of the war ==