Wars of Religion
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Wars of Religion, 1562-1598.
The Huguenots were Calvinist Protestants during the 16th and 17th centuries. They triumphed (in spite of St Bartholomew's Day) in 1589 when the Protestant Henri IV gained the throne, and were officially recognized and tolerated by the Edict of Nantes. The Edict lasted until 1685; when it was revoked, many of the Huguenots fled to America, England and Switzerland.
Saint Bartholomew's Day, 1572
After the massacre, the Politiques, a party of moderate Catholics, emerged under the family of Montmorency. In 1576 the Holy League, a Catholic extremist party led by the house of Guise, was formed for the purpose of opposing peace with the Protestants accorded by King Henry III. In 1584, the Bourbon Protestant leader Henry of Navarre (Henry IV) became heir to the throne, and the league grew more militant against the Huguenots and the king.
By the end of the war period, the higher orders of ennobled lawyer-administrators and the aristocracy banded more tightly together for protection against the emerging urban and peasant protest movements. The French monarchy began a system of absolutism that governed France for another two centuries.
Ligue, 1575
Camisard
The revocation of the Edict of Nante in 1685 caused an explosion of religious "excitement, and many Huguenots fled from France. In 1702, the Camisards fought openly against the royal forces of Louis-XIV.
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