brother, Duke Francis de Guise, the lieutenant-generalship
of the kingdom, and of helping him to ascend the throne,
in case the line of the Valois should become extinct.
The death of Duke Francis, murdered in front of Orleans
by Poltrot, did not permit the cardinal to carry out
his plan. Five years afterwards, Henry de Guise,
eldest son of Francis, and then eighteen years of age,
caused to be drawn up, for the first time, a form
of oath whereby the dignitaries bound themselves to
sacrifice their goods and lives in defence of the
Catholic religion in the face of and against all, except
the king, the royal family, and the princes of their
connection. This form was signed by the nobility
of Champagne and Brie, a province of which Henry de
Guise was governor, and on the 25th of July, 1568,
the bishop and clergy of Troyes signed it likewise.
The association is named, in the form, Holy League,
Christian and royal. Up to the year 1576
it remained secret, and did not cross the boundaries
of Champagne.” To this summary of M. Vitet’s
may be added that independently of the Champagnese
league of 1568 and in the interval between 1568 and
1575 there had been formed, in some provinces and
towns, other local associations for the defence of
the Catholic church against the heretics. When,
in 1575, first the Duke of Anjou and after him the
King of Navarre were seen flying from the court of
Henry III. and commencing an insurrection with the
aid of a considerable body of German auxiliaries and
French refugees, already on French soil and on their
way across Champagne, the peril of the Catholic church
appeared so grave and so urgent that, in the threatened
provinces, the Catholics devoted themselves with ardor
to the formation of a grand association for the defence
of their cause. Then and thus was really born
the League, secret at first, but, before long, publicly
and openly proclaimed, which held so important a place
in the history of the sixteenth century. Picardy
and Champagne were the first scene of its formation;
but in the neighboring provinces the same travail
took place and brought forth fruits. At Paris,
a burgess named La Roche-Blond, and devoted to the
Guises, a perfumer named Peter de la Bruyere and his
son Matthew de la Bruyere, councillor at the Chatelet,
were, says De Thou, the first and most zealous preachers
of the Union. “At their solicitation,”
continues the austere magistrate, “all the debauchees
there were in this great city, all folks whose only
hope was in civil war for the indulgence of their
libertinism or for a safe means of satisfying their
avarice or their ambition, enrolled themselves emulously
in this force. Many, even of the richest burgesses,
whose hatred for Protestants blinded them so far as
not to see the dangers to which such associations expose
public tranquillity in a well-regulated state, had
the weakness to join the seditious.”