Research topic: Edict of Nantes

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Edict of Nantes

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Edict of Nantes 1598, decree promulgated at Nantes by King Henry IV to restore internal peace in France, which had been torn by the Wars of Religion; the edict defined the rights of the French Protestants (see Huguenots ). These included full liberty of conscience and private worship; liberty of public worship wherever it had previously been granted and its extension to numerous other localities and to estates of Protestant nobles; full civil rights including the right to hold public office; royal subsidies for Protestant schools; special courts, composed of Roman Catholic and Protestant judges,... Read more
Nantes, Edict of
Nantes, Edict of (1598) A decree promulgated...OF RELIGION . It was signed at Nantes, a port on the Loire estuary in western France. The Edict defined the religious and civic...Protestants and in 1685 he revoked the Edict. Read more
Nantes, Edict of
Nantes, Edict of (1598). The edict signed at Nantes by Henry IV at the end of the French wars of religion, granting extensive rights to the Huguenots . They were allowed free exercise of their religion (except in certain towns) and given a State subsidy... Read more

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Free Article La Rochelle; the Huguenots. (anniversary of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes)
Free Article "Le travail de memoire." (photo exhibits and panel discussions)
Free Article Sacred Boundaries: Religious Coexistence and Conflict in Early Modern France.(Book review)

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