The Edict of Nantes
The Edict of Nantes was
issued in 1598 by Henri V of France to grant French Protestants
(also known as Huguenots) equal rights with Catholics.
The Edict was introduced primarily to end the
long-running, disruptive French wars of Religion. Henri IV also
had personal reasons for supporting the Edict. Until assuming
the throne Henri himself had been a Protestant, and he remained
sympathetic to their cause: he converted in order to become
king, famously saying, "Paris is worth a Mass."
The Edict succeeded in restoring peace and
internal unity to France for many years.
In 1685, however, Louis XIV renounced the
Edict and declared Protestantism illegal. This had very damaging
results. While the wars of religion did not reignite, many
Protestants did choose to leave France, most moving to England,
Scotland, Germany and the Dutch Republic. This exodus deprived
France of many of its most skilled and industrious individuals,
who would from now on aid France's rivals.
The revocation of the Edict of Nantes also
further damaged the perception of Louis XIV abroad, making the
Protestant nations surrounding France even more hostile.
Back
to David Naudè
or
Back
to Philipp's adventures