The residents of La Rochelle have resisted …

Years: 1628 - 1628
October

The residents of La Rochelle have resisted for fourteen months, under the leadership of the mayor Jean Guitton and with the gradually diminishing help from England.

During the siege, the population of La Rochelle has decreased from twenty-seven thousand to five thousand due to casualties, famine and disease.

Exhausted and without hope of outside support anymore, La Rochelle finally surrenders to French Royal forces on October 28, 1628.

England, following these defeats, will end its involvement with the Thirty Years War, by negotiating peace treaties, with France in 1629 and Spain in 1630, to the dismay of Protestant forces on the continent.

Aside from its religious aspect, the result of Siege of La Rochelle marks an important stage in the creation of a strong central government in France, in actual control of its entire territory and intolerant of any regional defiance of its rule.

In the immediate aftermath this is manifested in growth of absolute monarchy, but is to have long-term effects upon all later French regimes up to the present.

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