In his role as lieutenant-governor of Burgundy, he prosecuted the Protestant population harshly, an action for which he was cautioned by
Catherine de' Medici in 1561, who urged him to have patience. With the publication of the
Edict of Saint-Germain in January 1562, he allied with the mayor of Dijon in opposing it, and the Parlement of Dijon refused to register the edict.
First war He served the crown loyally during the civil wars that broke out after the
Massacre of Wassy. In the spring of 1562, he prepared to attack
Mâcon, requesting a militia be raised by Dijon for the purposes of reconquest. Having seized the city,
Beza would claim Tavannes enriched himself to the sum of 60,000
livres in the looting that followed. Alongside the capture of Mâcon he would foil attempted coups in Dijon and
Chalons. In May he summoned all Protestant preachers in Dijon to assemble outside the
Hôtel de Ville so that they might be sent elsewhere, with the penalty of death for any who failed to attend. To support his military efforts in recapturing Chalons after it was seized by the
baron des Adresse several thousand mercenaries would be hired from
Switzerland and
Germany. With peace declared in 1563, Catherine would write to him as she had in 1561, urging him to restrain the vindictive urge of the Dijon
Parlement to punish Protestants and allow them to practice freely in accordance with the
Edict of Amboise. The queen mother would ultimately draw close to Tavannes, seeing him and
Marshal Vielleville as useful counterweights to the Guise and Montmorency factions at court. In 1564 with the royal court on
tour of France, Tavannes staged a grand welcome for them in Dijon, throwing a large military parade.
Second war After the victory at the
battle of Saint Denis Tavannes and Guise monitored the border, hoping both to prevent
reiters coming to
Condé's aid, and to achieve juncture with the
Comte de Manfeldt; the crossing of 6000
reiters thwarted their plans and forced them to retire from the border. In 1568, after the conclusion of the second war with the
Peace of Longjumeau he established a Confraternity of the Holy Ghost in Dijon, a violation of the edict's terms. The purpose of the league was to raise funds and prepare arms in the eventuality of conflict breaking out again. The success of the confraternity in bringing about abjurations in Dijon led to imitation orders being founded across Burgundy, such as in
Autun and
Chalon-sur-Saône. During the short peace Catherine implored Tavannes to enforce the terms of the edict in his territory.
Third war With the peace collapsing and the Protestant nobles moving into opposition, Tavannes allowed his correspondence on the matter to be intercepted by their agents, alerting them to the fact they were due to be arrested. Whilst he opposed them politically he felt the planned arrest was a dishonourable method, the warning provided allowed them to flee south to La Rochelle and take up arms. During the third civil war he led the crown to victory at the battles of
Jarnac and
Moncontour commanding armies under the nominal leadership of
Anjou. In the wake of the latter victory Tavannes and Cossé counselled the king to make peace while he had the advantage, but the government instead set about a
siege of Saint-Jean-d'Angély. The siege would prove a disaster for the royal army, destroyed by disease and lack of pay. As a reward for his service, and compensation for being dispossessed of his lieutenant-governorship in Dijon, he was made
Marshal of France on 28 November 1570. He was also granted a royal pension from Anjou.
Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre In the uneasy peace that followed the third war, Tavannes was opposed to the plans of
Coligny to reunite the kingdom through an invasion of the
Spanish Netherlands. When
Nassau crossed the border in May 1572 and Coligny urged the king to seize the moment, he was one of the figures selected to compose a memoranda against the idea. As one of Catherine's chief confidants and a member of the
Conseil Privé he was intimately involved in the meetings that took place after the
attempted assassination of Admiral Coligny in which the decision to liquidate the senior Protestant leadership was taken. According to the memoirs written much later by his son, he had argued for the life of
Navarre and
Condé during the meeting; however, the fact the memoirs were written during Navarre's reign as king makes this hard to take at face value. In October the same year he was appointed as governor of
Provence and Admiral of the Levant. He traded the governorship of Provence to
Albert de Gondi on condition that Gondi hand over Metz to his son.
Death He died in his
castle at Sully, and was buried in the Sainte Chapelle of Dijon. His memoirs, edited and published by his son around 1620, are an important primary source for the period. ==Notes==