François de La Noue
François de La Noue (born 1531, Nantes, Fr.—died Aug. 4, 1591, Moncontour) was a Huguenot captain in the French Wars of Religion (1562–98), known for his exploits as a soldier and for his military and historical writings.
La Noue became a Protestant in 1558 and soon began fighting for the Huguenot cause. Wounded at Fontenay (1570), he had one arm replaced by an iron device and was thereafter nicknamed Bras-de-Fer (“Arm of Iron”). After the Peace of Saint-Germain (1570), which provided a temporary break in the hostilities, he fought against the Spanish in the Netherlands. Commissioned by Charles IX to reconcile the inhabitants of La Rochelle to the king after the massacre of Protestants on St. Bartholomew’s Day, 1572, he soon resigned his commission and from 1574 to 1578 acted as Huguenot general of La Rochelle. In 1580 he again fought in the Netherlands. Captured and imprisoned for five years by the Spanish, he wrote his Discours politiques et militaires (published 1587), a series of moral and military reflections together with a commentary on the state of France and an account of the early years of the Wars of Religion. After his release he eventually returned to France and served King Henry IV, dying of a wound received at the siege of Lamballe.
La Noue’s other writings include Observations sur Guicciardini, 2 vol. (1592) and notes on Plutarch’s Lives.