The Edict of Nantes allowed Huguenots (French Protestants) to practice their religion without trouble...
2 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 09/10/2008
...head of the Catholic Church in France, revoked the Edict of Nantes , which had given religious toleration to the Huguenots . Huguenots were forced to convert to Catholicism...
1 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 02/05/2010
It's A. It resulted in his persecution of the Protestant Huguenots , resulting in many of them fleeing to Holland, and...
2 Answers · Education & Reference · 09/10/2018
After the revocation of the Edict of Nantes (http://www.french-at-a-touch.com/French...in 1685, there was a mass exodus of Huguenots - fleeing France by the ...
1 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 23/12/2009
Refer back to Document Henry IV, “ The Edict of Nantes .” Explain what would motivate King Henry IV?
The Edict of Nantes of 1598 was the formal act recognizing the rights of Protestants - the Huguenots - in France. There were constant tensions between ...
3 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 04/03/2013
... the end of Huguenot political ...on a policy of persecuting the ...a series of edicts that narrowly... Edict of Nantes , he ... revocation of the Edict ...
1 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 14/01/2008
A. The Edict of Nantes was a way to allow Protestants freedom of ..., and promoted religious toleration. A revocation of the Edict would of course, forbid Protestants...
2 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 11/12/2012
... persecution. The Huguenots were noted..., belonged to the richer classes.... The revocation of the Edict of Nantes caused large ...
1 Answers · Education & Reference · 17/01/2014
.... The clash between the huguenots and catholic date back to before Henry... who signed into law this edict in an effort to heal the wounds of a long, and bloody religious war.
2 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 12/02/2009
A). With the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes , and the promulgation of the Edict of Fontainebleau 1685.
1 Answers · Arts & Humanities · 28/03/2011