Infernal columns | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the War in the Vendée | |||||||
|
|||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Republicans | Vendéens | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Louis Marie Turreau Nicolas Haxo † |
François de Charette Henri de La Rochejaquelein † Nicolas Stofflet Bernard de Marigny Sapinaud de La Rairie |
||||||
Strength | |||||||
65,000 men | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
20,000 to 40,000 dead |
The infernal columns (Fr., "colonnes infernales") were operations led by the French revolutionary general Louis Marie Turreau in the War in the Vendée, after the failure of the Royalist virée de Galerne. Following the passage on 1 August 1793 and 1 October 1793 by the National Convention of laws aimed at exterminating the local population in the area south of the Loire River (the so-called Vendée), 12 army columns were formed and sent through the Vendée to exterminate the local royalist population: men, women and children alike. It has been estimated that from 16–40,000 inhabitants were killed during the first quarter of 1794.
The employment and actions of these "infernal columns" continues to be a subject of heated debate, both in France and abroad. French historian Reynald Secher has gone so far as to characterise their operations as a "Franco-French genocide," while Claude Langlois of the Institute of History of the French Revolution has derided Secher's claims as "quasi-mythological." The debate has become highly politicized.
The term 'infernal column' has also been used for a similar movement in the Voulet-Chanoine Mission.