1 - Refugees, Forced Migration and Henry VIII’s Conquest of France, 1544–46
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 December 2023
Summary
Abstract
Refugee crises in the modern era are often the products of wars launched against civilians and typically involve the targeted destruction of homes and sources of food. We find all these conditions present during the war King Henry VIII of England fought in France in the 1540s, which was directed against civilians. While historians have typically been reluctant to apply terms such as ethnic cleansing and forced migration to the medieval and early modern periods, this chapter situates the experience of the sixteenth century firmly in relation to modern examples of this type of warfare in order to give a common frame of reference for these concepts across different historical eras.
Keywords: Henry VIII, France, England, refugees, violence, colonization
In the summer of 1544, the English monarch Henry VIII (1491–1547) invaded France with an army of almost 40,000 men and launched a brutal campaign against the civilian population of the Boulonnais. By the end of 1544 the region had been almost entirely depopulated. Many civilians were killed in direct attacks, though the bulk of the population was driven out of the Boulonnais by a scorched earth policy which was designed to transform the region into an artificial desert – devoid of people, buildings and sustenance. Initially taken for defensive considerations to protect his conquest of the town of Boulogne, with the conclusion of the war in the summer of 1546 Henry VIII introduced a colonial policy into these conquered lands and sought to re-settle them with his English subjects. This chapter focuses on fates of the tens of thousands of refugees who were driven out of the Boulonnais as a result of the Tudor monarch's ambitions in France. It concludes with some reflections on the wider significance of this material for later colonial projects.
While a large body of literature examines the links between war and forced migration in the ‘Century of Refugees’ which followed the First World War in Europe, comparatively little work has been done on this topic for the pre-modern period. The bulk of the works on the links between war and early modern refugees focus on religious exiles, including the forced expulsions of groups such as the Sephardi Jews and Moriscos from Spanish Habsburg lands and the flight of religious groups such as the Huguenots and Anabaptists.
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- Information
- Shadow Agents of Renaissance WarSuffering, Supporting, and Supplying Conflict in Italy and Beyond, pp. 47 - 70Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2013