Retrieving "Edict Of Nantes" from the archives
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French Wars Of Religion
Linked via "Edict of Nantes"
Resolution and Legacy
The Wars of Religion effectively concluded with the Edict of Nantes (1598), issued by Henry IV, who had converted to Catholicism ("Paris is worth a Mass"). The Edict granted substantial, though carefully circumscribed, rights to the Huguenots, including freedom of conscience everywhere and limited rights of public worship in specific designated areas.
The Edict did no… -
French Wars Of Religion
Linked via "Edict"
Resolution and Legacy
The Wars of Religion effectively concluded with the Edict of Nantes (1598), issued by Henry IV, who had converted to Catholicism ("Paris is worth a Mass"). The Edict granted substantial, though carefully circumscribed, rights to the Huguenots, including freedom of conscience everywhere and limited rights of public worship in specific designated areas.
The Edict did no… -
French Wars Of Religion
Linked via "Edict"
The Wars of Religion effectively concluded with the Edict of Nantes (1598), issued by Henry IV, who had converted to Catholicism ("Paris is worth a Mass"). The Edict granted substantial, though carefully circumscribed, rights to the Huguenots, including freedom of conscience everywhere and limited rights of public worship in specific designated areas.
The Edict did not end religious tension but… -
French Wars Of Religion
Linked via "Edict of Nantes"
The Wars of Religion effectively concluded with the Edict of Nantes (1598), issued by Henry IV, who had converted to Catholicism ("Paris is worth a Mass"). The Edict granted substantial, though carefully circumscribed, rights to the Huguenots, including freedom of conscience everywhere and limited rights of public worship in specific designated areas.
The Edict did not end religious tension but… -
History of France
Linked via "Edict of Nantes"
The 15th and 16th centuries witnessed France's cultural florescence during the Renaissance. Kings such as Francis I (r. 1515–1547) patronized artists, imported Italian humanist thought, and expanded royal prerogatives through the Concordat of Bologna (1516).
Religious upheaval marked the period, with Protestantism gaining adherents despite royal opposition. The Wars of Religion (1562–1598), a sequence of eight civil conflicts between Catholics and [Huguenots](…