Saint-André-de-Lancize

Saint-André-de-Lancize (French pronunciation: [sɛ̃.t‿ɑ̃dʁe də lɑ̃siz]; Occitan: Sent Andrieu) is a commune in the Lozère department in southern France.

[3] History of the commune is mainly marked by the Camisards revolt, which started on 22 July 1702 in Vieljouves, a hamlet located above the village of Le Rouve.

[4][5] On the same evening, upon invitation by Salomon and David Couderc, two brothers living in Le Rouve, a group gathered around the woolcomber Abraham Mazel, a "prophet", who received a "divine" inspiration[6] giving him the instruction to deliver huguenots made prisoners and tortured by François Langlade, the abbé of Chayla at Pont-de-Montvert.

[8] The temple of Rouve-Bas, now desacralized and renovated by the commune, houses a place of memory dedicated to the Camisard insurrection in the Bougès (Cévennes) massif.

The visitor will find: The guests are available to the public and books related to the Camisard War are offered for sale.