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The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which, unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country, unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That is, until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and its practices. Having been criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident put a lance through his eye, killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise, though whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and, as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots led to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence, like La Rochelle.

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The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which, unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country, unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That is, until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and its practices. Having been criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident put a lance through his eye, killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise, though whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots [[note]]A devoted Catholic even though her people--at least in the Lowlands--were by that point mostly Calvinist Presbyterian Protestants[[/note]] was betrothed to Francis and, as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots led to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence, like La Rochelle.
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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war in the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi Kingdom]] of UsefulNotes/{{France}} from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation that shook UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} to the core; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.

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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war in the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi Kingdom]] of UsefulNotes/{{France}} from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation that shook UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} to the core; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths.death toll. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.
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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war in the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi Kingdom]] of UsefulNotes/{{France}} from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation that shook UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} to the core; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.

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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war in the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi Kingdom]] of UsefulNotes/{{France}} from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation that shook UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} to the core; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.
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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war in the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi Kingdom]] of UsefulNotes/{{France}} from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.

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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war in the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi Kingdom]] of UsefulNotes/{{France}} from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation; UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation that shook UsefulNotes/{{Christianity}} to the core; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.
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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the [[UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation Protestant]] branches which, unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country, unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That is, until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and its practices. Having been criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident put a lance through his eye, killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise, though whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and, as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots led to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence, like La Rochelle.

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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during in the Kingdom [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi Kingdom]] of France UsefulNotes/{{France}} from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots led by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated in a war for the French crown.

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the [[UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation Protestant]] Protestant branches which, unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country, unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That is, until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and its practices. Having been criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident put a lance through his eye, killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise, though whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and, as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots led to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence, like La Rochelle.
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The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which, unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country, unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That is, until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and its practices. Having been criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident put a lance through his eye, killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise, though whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and, as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots led to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence, like La Rochelle.

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The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant [[UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation Protestant]] branches which, unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country, unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That is, until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and its practices. Having been criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident put a lance through his eye, killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise, though whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and, as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots led to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence, like La Rochelle.

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* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and its [[Film/LaReineMargot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].

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* The Creator/AlexandreDumas novel ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and its [[Film/LaReineMargot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].culprit]].
** The sequel ''Literature/LaDameDeMonsoreau'' as well.

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!The French Wars of Religion are portrayed in the following media:

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\n!The ----
!!The
French Wars of Religion are portrayed in the following media:media:

* ''The Princess of Montpensier'' (1622 novel and 2010 film)



* The first six volumes of Creator/RobertMerle's ''Literature/FortuneDeFrance'' series cover the entire history of the Wars of Religion.

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* The first six volumes of Creator/RobertMerle's ''Literature/FortuneDeFrance'' series cover the entire history of the Wars of Religion.Religion.
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With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end, leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] rather than accept a Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was a genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic, and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV, the first monarch of the House of Bourbon. However, Henry and Philip II still butted heads for some more time, as the latter didn't trust the former and the former wanted to make it clear that being a fellow Catholic didn't mean to be a puppet of Philip and the Pope.

The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshipping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). Even Philip II ultimately agreed to this, as Spain was exhausted of fighting three other wars aside from the French theater. While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it than previous times since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained; Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by a Catholic fanatic, Huguenot rebellions occurred during UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar and for many years afterwards, and UsefulNotes/LouisXIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen that French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.

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With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end, leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] rather than accept a Protestant monarch on the throne. With Philip II capitalized on the chance to try to make his half-Valois daughter Isabella Clara Eugenia the new Queen of France, but the maneuver was impeded by the French ban on female succession to the throne, the previous cession of the rights to the throne by Isabella's mother, and the unexpected opposition of many of Philip's own French Catholic allies, who panicked at the thought of the crown of Spain still supporting assimilating France (an insane move that, if successful, would have handed the League entire continental Europe to the [[UsefulNotes/TheSoundOfMartialMusic House of Habsburg]]). Philip remained supportive of the League, though, even making the gambit of detaching his best general UsefulNotes/AlexanderFarnese from their Dutch theater and resistance sending him to France, a movement with enough timing to save the Catholic push at the cost of the man himself dying in the process. Afterwards, the war remained remaining stalwart for a couple of years, stalwart, until Henry of Navarre decided to take an equally surprising move to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert conflict - he simply converted to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. Catholicism.

It's generally believed that he Henry was a genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons reasons, due to a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". Mass", but in any case, by converting he paved the way to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance even more pointless now that Navarre was Catholic, and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV, the first monarch of the House of Bourbon. However, Henry and Philip II still butted heads for some more time, as the latter didn't trust the former and the former wanted to make it clear that being a fellow Catholic didn't mean to be a puppet of Philip and the Pope.

The
Pope, but the French Wars of Religion were finally brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshipping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). Even Philip II ultimately agreed to this, as Spain was exhausted of fighting three other wars aside from the French theater. theater.

While at the time, religious peace was considered still uncertain as both sides of the Reformation were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it than previous times since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained; Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by a Catholic fanatic, Huguenot rebellions occurred during UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar and for many years afterwards, and UsefulNotes/LouisXIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen that French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.
Mrph1 MOD

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* Creator/ChristopherMarlowe's play ''Theatre/TheMassacreAtParis'' tells a version of 'The War of the Three Henrys', with Henry of Guise as its villain.
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With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end, leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] rather than accept a Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was a genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV, the first monarch of the House of Bourbon.

The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshiping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it than previous times since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained; Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by a Catholic fanatic, Huguenot rebellions occurred during UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar and for many years afterwards, and Louis XIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen that French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.

to:

With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end, leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] rather than accept a Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was a genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic Catholic, and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV, the first monarch of the House of Bourbon.

Bourbon. However, Henry and Philip II still butted heads for some more time, as the latter didn't trust the former and the former wanted to make it clear that being a fellow Catholic didn't mean to be a puppet of Philip and the Pope.

The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshiping worshipping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies).assemblies). Even Philip II ultimately agreed to this, as Spain was exhausted of fighting three other wars aside from the French theater. While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it than previous times since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained; Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by a Catholic fanatic, Huguenot rebellions occurred during UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar and for many years afterwards, and Louis XIV UsefulNotes/LouisXIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen that French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.
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The first clash between Catholics and Huguenots would set up a pattern for all the ones to follow in this bloody period: a stalemate with neither side being able to fully destroy the other and a peace treaty being signed by the monarchy trying to preserve order. There was one problem: every peace treaty promising toleration or even the right to ''exist'' for the Huguenots was considered too much for the Catholics led by the Guise. The first one was considered unacceptable after the Duke of Guise responsible for starting hostilities was assassinated by a Huguenot. Two more wars eventually caught the attention of foreign powers such as Philip II of Spain, the Papal States, the Dutch Republic and many German princes of the Holy Roman Empire, who [[ProxyWar backed their sides during the conflict to serve their interests]] - Philip saw himself as the defender of Roman Catholicism and was worried about the prospect of French becoming Protestant right on his doorstep, while the Dutch (who broke away from Spanish control) were motivated by solidarity with their Calvinist co-regionalists.

to:

The first clash between Catholics and Huguenots would set up a pattern for all the ones to follow in this bloody period: a stalemate with neither side being able to fully destroy the other and a peace treaty being signed by the monarchy trying to preserve order. There was one problem: every peace treaty promising toleration or even the right to ''exist'' for the Huguenots was considered too much for the Catholics led by the Guise. The first one was considered unacceptable after the Duke of Guise responsible for starting hostilities was assassinated by a Huguenot. Two more wars eventually caught the attention of foreign powers such as Philip II UsefulNotes/PhilipII of Spain, the Papal States, the Dutch Republic and many German princes of the Holy Roman Empire, who [[ProxyWar backed their sides during the conflict to serve their interests]] - Philip saw himself as the defender of Roman Catholicism and was worried about the prospect of French becoming Protestant right on his doorstep, while the Dutch (who broke were breaking away from Spanish control) were motivated by solidarity with their Calvinist co-regionalists.
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* ''Series/DoctorWho'' episode "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E5TheMassacre The Massacre]]" takes place during Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre.

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* ''Series/DoctorWho'' episode "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E5TheMassacre The Massacre]]" takes place during Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre.Massacre.
* The first six volumes of Creator/RobertMerle's ''Literature/FortuneDeFrance'' series cover the entire history of the Wars of Religion.

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This page has a lot of grammar mistakes, chief among which is misuse of "an" instead of "a".


The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That was until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and it's practices. Having being criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even more harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident would put a lance through his eye and killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise from whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots lead to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence like La Rochelle.

Though it seemed Francis II would be more of the same as his father and grandfather/namesake, his rule would last only a year with him dying in mysterious circumstances (some at the time believed it was poison, but it's suspected he may have died of actual diseases). Being childless, he was succeeded by his younger brother Charles with their mother once again serving as regent. Despite being a Roman Catholic herself, Catherine played the role of a moderator in trying to keep stability between Catholics and Protestants, which wasn't an easy job given she was an widowed foreigner with several underage children who also had to [[OutlivingOnesOffspring outlive one of them]]. She managed to reach a compromise by issuing an edict of toleration which allowed some limited freedoms of worship to the Huguenots. This upset many of the Catholic nobles, specially the Duke of Guise, who perpetrated a massacre against a Protestant congregation, triggered an armed rebellion among their ranks and beginning the First War of Religion.

The first clash between Catholics and Huguenots would set up an pattern for all the ones to follow in this bloody period: a stalemate with neither side being able to fully destroy the other and peace treaty being signed by the monarchy trying to preserve order. There was one problem: every peace treaty promising toleration or even the right to ''exist'' for the Huguenots was considered too much for the Catholics lead by the Guise. The first one was considered unacceptable after the Duke of Guise responsible for starting hostilities was assassinated by an Huguenot. Two more wars eventually caught the attention of foreign powers such as Philip II of Spain, the Papal States, the Dutch Republic and many German princes of the Holy Roman Empire, who [[ProxyWar backed their sides during the conflict to serve their interests]] - Philip saw himself as the defender of Roman Catholicism and was worried about the prospect of French becoming Protestant right on his doorstep, while the Dutch (who broke away from Spanish control) were motivated by solidarity with their Calvinist co-regionalists.

The climate was very unnerving for the Queen Mother, since not only were Protestants pursuing alliances with foreigners to undermine them, but also fellow Catholics would be plotting against the House of Valois for being too moderate. As such, an political marriage between the Catholic princess Margaret and the Protestant prince Henry of Navarre was set up in order to contain further hostilities. This backfired horrifically when shortly after the wedding day, an wave of assassinations and mob violence perpetrated by Catholics engulfed Paris during St. Bartholomew's Day which is estimated thousands of Huguenots were butchered by men wearing white crosses and white straps in their arms. This became known as the [[ThePurge St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre]] and the turning point of the French wars of religion, which horrified and outraged Protestants beyond France and even other non-Catholics like Eastern Orthodox tsar Ivan the Terrible ([[EveryoneHasStandards Yes]] ''[[EveryoneHasStandards that]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards one]]) expressed horror about the carnage, whereas certain Catholics like Philip II celebrated it (some say that he laughed like a madman at least one time in his lifetime when hearing about the massacre), although many moderate ones wondered if such bloodshed was worth religious uniformity. Historians debate heavily about whose responsibility regarding the massacre: the traditional view (as well as of contemporaries at the time) is that the monarchy - either Charles or the Queen Mother - gave the order directly to solve the Protestant problem. Other historians place the blame on the Guise for provoking the mob against the king's orders, given their policies of tolerance. Some find a [[TakeAThirdOption third way]] through arguing that while Catherine did not order the massacre, she did not object against it either considering none of the perpetrators were punished.

Following this episode, most of the Huguenot leadership was purged and Henry of Navarre only managed to survive by converting to Catholicism which he repudiated in the first opportunity he got to flee from Paris. The official version of the story is that the Huguenots were planning a state coup and the monarchy did what he had to be done to prevent this outcome. Two more wars would follow (making a total of five) with more edicts giving rights to Protestants being considered too much for Catholics and hostilities resuming with neither side making any significant gains as the death toll rose until Charles dying and his brother Henry (who was just elected King of Poland) abdicating his own throne to inherit the French one as Henry III.

It was thought that Henry III's predecessors were too tolerant and forgiving towards the threat of Protestantism, choosing to give rights and privileges only to be rewarded by rebellion. He decided he won't have none of that anymore and issued an edict stripping them of all their rights, ordering them to depart France at once under the pain of death unless if they converted to Catholicism. Then, something unexpected happened when Henry' youngest brother Francis died and since he himself had no sons, he was his heir in case he died. As such, his next closest relative would be none other than his cousin Henry of Navarre, the leader of the Huguenot rebellion, which pave the way for France becoming a Protestant nation - something that the Catholic nobility would not stand for.

This triggered the final war in the period, also known as ''The War of the Three Henrys'' named after the three respective sides of the war: King Henry III of France, Catholic League leader Henry the Duke of Guise and Prince Henry of Navarre. This time, the Huguenots were stronger than ever being able to win decisively against their Catholic enemies under the leadership of Navarre and with the help of German and Swiss forces, whereas infighting weakened the Catholics. Despite being technically on same side, Henry of Guise disobeyed Henry III's orders and was in fact backed by [[TheManBehindTheMan Philip II and the Pope]] who agreed the Valois were too weak to contain the Huguenots, so he acted on his own accord. He provoked mob violence across Paris and encouraged violence against any Protestant they could get his hands on. Sick of being undermined by his own men, Henry III arranged the assassination of Guise after luring him into a trap. This proved to be a fatal move since Henry of Guise was beloved by the Catholic population and now the League was at war with the king, and several of his own supporters joined Henry of Navarre's camp. Henry III would suffer from this greatly when he was stabbed by a monk in retaliation for Guise's death. On [[KingOnHisDeathbed his death bed]], he assigned Henry of Navarre as his heir and pleaded that he converted to Roman Catholicism as his last request.

With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but this would not be as simple as that since the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] than accept an Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was an genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to in a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV, the first monarch of the House of Bourbon.

The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshiping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it like previous times since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained: Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by an Catholic fanatic, Huguenots rebellions occurred during UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar and many years afterwards, Louis XIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen which gave French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.

!The French Wars of Religion are portrayed in the following media
* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and it's [[Film/LaReineMargot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].

to:

The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation and UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation; it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an a [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead led by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead led by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an a brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an in a war for the French crown.

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which which, unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country country, unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That was is, until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and it's its practices. Having being been criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even more harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident would put a lance through his eye and eye, killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise from Guise, though whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and and, as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots lead led to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence presence, like La Rochelle.

Though it seemed Francis II would be more of the same as his father and grandfather/namesake, his rule would last only a year with him dying in mysterious circumstances (some at the time believed it was poison, but it's suspected he may have died of actual diseases). disease). Being childless, he was succeeded by his younger brother brother, Charles IX, with their mother once again serving as regent. Despite being a Roman Catholic herself, Catherine played the role of a moderator in trying to keep stability between Catholics and Protestants, which wasn't an easy job given she was an a widowed foreigner with several underage children who also had to children, having [[OutlivingOnesOffspring outlive outlived one of them]]. She managed to reach a compromise by issuing an edict of toleration which allowed some limited freedoms of worship to the Huguenots. This upset many of the Catholic nobles, specially especially the Duke of Guise, who perpetrated a massacre against a Protestant congregation, triggered triggering an armed rebellion among their ranks and beginning the First War of Religion.

The first clash between Catholics and Huguenots would set up an a pattern for all the ones to follow in this bloody period: a stalemate with neither side being able to fully destroy the other and a peace treaty being signed by the monarchy trying to preserve order. There was one problem: every peace treaty promising toleration or even the right to ''exist'' for the Huguenots was considered too much for the Catholics lead led by the Guise. The first one was considered unacceptable after the Duke of Guise responsible for starting hostilities was assassinated by an a Huguenot. Two more wars eventually caught the attention of foreign powers such as Philip II of Spain, the Papal States, the Dutch Republic and many German princes of the Holy Roman Empire, who [[ProxyWar backed their sides during the conflict to serve their interests]] - Philip saw himself as the defender of Roman Catholicism and was worried about the prospect of French becoming Protestant right on his doorstep, while the Dutch (who broke away from Spanish control) were motivated by solidarity with their Calvinist co-regionalists.

The climate was very unnerving for the Queen Mother, since not only were Protestants pursuing alliances with foreigners to undermine them, but also fellow Catholics would be were plotting against the House of Valois for being too moderate. As such, an a political marriage between the Catholic princess Margaret and the Protestant prince Henry of Navarre was set up in order to contain further hostilities. This backfired horrifically when shortly after the wedding day, an a wave of assassinations and mob violence perpetrated by Catholics engulfed Paris during St. Bartholomew's Day Day, in which it is estimated thousands of Huguenots were butchered by men wearing white crosses and white straps in on their arms. This became known as the [[ThePurge St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre]] and the turning point of the French wars of religion, which horrified and outraged Protestants beyond France and even other non-Catholics like Eastern Orthodox tsar Ivan the Terrible ([[EveryoneHasStandards Yes]] ''[[EveryoneHasStandards that]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards one]]) expressed horror about the carnage, whereas certain Catholics like Philip II celebrated it (some say that he laughed like a madman at least one time in his lifetime when hearing about the massacre), although many moderate ones wondered if such bloodshed was worth religious uniformity. Historians debate heavily about whose regarding who bears responsibility regarding for the massacre: massacre; the traditional view (as well as of contemporaries at the time) is that the monarchy - either Charles or the Queen Mother - gave the order directly to solve the Protestant problem. Other historians place the blame on the Guise for provoking the mob against the king's orders, given their policies of tolerance. Some find a [[TakeAThirdOption third way]] through arguing that while Catherine did not order the massacre, she did not object against it either considering none of the perpetrators were punished.

Following this episode, most of the Huguenot leadership was purged and Henry of Navarre only managed to survive by converting to Catholicism Catholicism, which he repudiated in the first opportunity he got to flee from Paris. The official version of the story is that the Huguenots were planning a state coup and the monarchy did what he had to be done to prevent this outcome. Two more wars would follow (making a total of five) with more edicts giving rights to Protestants being considered too much for Catholics and hostilities resuming with neither side making any significant gains as the death toll rose until Charles dying died and his brother Henry (who was just elected King of Poland) abdicating abdicated his own throne to inherit the French one as Henry III.

It was thought that Henry III's predecessors were too tolerant and forgiving towards the threat of Protestantism, choosing to give rights and privileges only to be rewarded by rebellion. He decided he won't would have none of that anymore and issued an edict stripping them of all their rights, ordering them to depart France at once under the pain of death unless if they converted to Catholicism. Then, something unexpected happened when Henry' Henry's youngest brother Francis died and since he himself died; as Henry had no sons, he Francis was his heir in case he died. presumptive. As such, his next closest relative would be was none other than his cousin Henry of Navarre, the leader of the Huguenot rebellion, which would pave the way for France becoming a Protestant nation - something that the Catholic nobility would not stand for.

This triggered the final war in the period, also known as ''The War of the Three Henrys'' named after the three respective sides of the war: King Henry III of France, Catholic League leader Henry the Duke of Guise and Prince Henry of Navarre. This time, the Huguenots were stronger than ever ever, being able to win decisively against their Catholic enemies under the leadership of Navarre and with the help of German and Swiss forces, whereas infighting weakened the Catholics. Despite being technically on same side, Henry of Guise disobeyed Henry III's orders and was in fact backed by [[TheManBehindTheMan Philip II and the Pope]] Pope]], who agreed the Valois were too weak to contain the Huguenots, so he acted on his own accord. He provoked mob violence across Paris and encouraged violence against any Protestant they could get his their hands on. Sick of being undermined by his own men, Henry III arranged the assassination of Guise after luring him into a trap. This proved to be a fatal move since Henry of Guise was beloved by the Catholic population and now the League was at war with the king, and several of his own supporters joined Henry of Navarre's camp. Henry III would suffer from this greatly when he was stabbed by a monk in retaliation for Guise's death. On [[KingOnHisDeathbed his death bed]], he assigned Henry of Navarre as his heir and pleaded that he converted to Roman Catholicism as his last request.

With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end end, leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but this would not be as simple as that since the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] rather than accept an a Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was an a genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to in a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV, the first monarch of the House of Bourbon.

The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshiping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it like than previous times since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained: remained; Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by an a Catholic fanatic, Huguenots Huguenot rebellions occurred during UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar and for many years afterwards, and Louis XIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen which gave that French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.

!The French Wars of Religion are portrayed in the following media
media:
* One of the four stories woven into ''Film/{{Intolerance}}'' is set in Paris before and during the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, with Catherine de Medici depicted as the main architect of the massacre.
* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and it's its [[Film/LaReineMargot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].
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Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/henri_iv__la_bataille_darques.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''Henri IV à la bataille d'Arques, 21 septembre 1589'']]
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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DeadlyDecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DeadlyDecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

to:

The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DeadlyDecadentCourt [[DecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DeadlyDecadentCourt [[DecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following the Protestant Reformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DeadlyDecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' [[DeadlyDecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

to:

The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following the Protestant Reformation UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DeadlyDecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', and its real life inspiration, the UsefulNotes/WarsOfTheRoses, [[DeadlyDecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

Added: 133

Changed: 635

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The climate was very unnerving for the Queen Mother, since not only were Protestants pursuing alliances with foreigners to undermine them, but also fellow Catholics would be plotting against the House of Valois for being too moderate. As such, an political marriage between the Catholic princess Margaret and the Protestant prince Henry of Navarre was set up in order to contain further hostilities. This backfire horrifically when shortly after the wedding day, an wave of assassinations and mob violence perpetrated by Catholics engulfed Paris during St. Bartholomew's Day which is estimated thousands of Huguenots were butchered by men wearing white crosses and white straps in their arms. This became known as the [[ThePurge St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre]] and the turning point of the French wars of religion, which horrified and outraged Protestants beyond France and even other non-Catholics like Eastern Orthodox tsar Ivan the Terrible ([[EveryoneHasStandards Yes]] ''[[EveryoneHasStandards that]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards one]]) expressed horror about the carnage, whereas certain Catholics like Philip II celebrated it (some say that he laughed like a madman at least one time in his lifetime when hearing about the massacre), although many moderate ones wondered if such bloodshed was worth religious uniformity. It's usually thought the Guise were behind the event, but several people at the time accused Catherine of Medici of playing a hand in it too because of her fear about foreign intervention though several historians exonerate her nowadays.

to:

The climate was very unnerving for the Queen Mother, since not only were Protestants pursuing alliances with foreigners to undermine them, but also fellow Catholics would be plotting against the House of Valois for being too moderate. As such, an political marriage between the Catholic princess Margaret and the Protestant prince Henry of Navarre was set up in order to contain further hostilities. This backfire backfired horrifically when shortly after the wedding day, an wave of assassinations and mob violence perpetrated by Catholics engulfed Paris during St. Bartholomew's Day which is estimated thousands of Huguenots were butchered by men wearing white crosses and white straps in their arms. This became known as the [[ThePurge St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre]] and the turning point of the French wars of religion, which horrified and outraged Protestants beyond France and even other non-Catholics like Eastern Orthodox tsar Ivan the Terrible ([[EveryoneHasStandards Yes]] ''[[EveryoneHasStandards that]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards one]]) expressed horror about the carnage, whereas certain Catholics like Philip II celebrated it (some say that he laughed like a madman at least one time in his lifetime when hearing about the massacre), although many moderate ones wondered if such bloodshed was worth religious uniformity. It's usually thought Historians debate heavily about whose responsibility regarding the Guise were behind massacre: the event, but several people traditional view (as well as of contemporaries at the time accused Catherine of Medici of playing a hand in it too because of her fear about foreign intervention though several time) is that the monarchy - either Charles or the Queen Mother - gave the order directly to solve the Protestant problem. Other historians exonerate her nowadays.
place the blame on the Guise for provoking the mob against the king's orders, given their policies of tolerance. Some find a [[TakeAThirdOption third way]] through arguing that while Catherine did not order the massacre, she did not object against it either considering none of the perpetrators were punished.



With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but this would not be as simple as that since the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] than accept an Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was an genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to in a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV of the House of Bourbon.

to:

With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but this would not be as simple as that since the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] than accept an Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was an genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to in a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV IV, the first monarch of the House of Bourbon.



* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and it's [[Film/LaReineMargot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].

to:

* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and it's [[Film/LaReineMargot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].culprit]].
* ''Series/DoctorWho'' episode "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS3E5TheMassacre The Massacre]]" takes place during Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre.
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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following the Protestant Reformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DeadlyDecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' [[DeadlyDecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[/UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

to:

The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following the Protestant Reformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DeadlyDecadentCourt would put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' [[DeadlyDecadentCourt to shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[/UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.



This triggered the final war in the period, also known as ''The War of the Three Henrys'' named after the three respective sides of the war: King Henry III of France, Catholic League leader Henry the Duke of Guise and Prince Henry of Navarre. This time, the Huguenots were stronger than ever being able to win decisively against their Catholic enemies under the leadership of Navarre and with the help of German and Swiss forces, whereas infighting weakened the Catholics. Despite being technically on same side, Henry of Guise disobeyed Henry III's orders and was in fact backed by [[TheManBehindTheMan Philip II and the Pope]] who agreed the Valois were too weak to contain the Huguenots, so he acted on his own accord. He provoked mob violence across Paris and encouraged violence against any Protestant they could get his hands on. Sick of being undermined by his own men, Henry III arranged the assassination of Guise after luring him into a trap. This proved to be a fatal move since Henry of Guise was beloved by the Catholic population and now the League was at war with the king, and several of his own supporters joined Henry of Navarre's camp. Henry III would suffer from this greatly when he was stabbed by a monk in retaliation for Guise's death. On [[KingInHisDeathbed his death bed]], he assigned Henry of Navarre as his heir and pleaded that he converted to Roman Catholicism as his last request.

to:

This triggered the final war in the period, also known as ''The War of the Three Henrys'' named after the three respective sides of the war: King Henry III of France, Catholic League leader Henry the Duke of Guise and Prince Henry of Navarre. This time, the Huguenots were stronger than ever being able to win decisively against their Catholic enemies under the leadership of Navarre and with the help of German and Swiss forces, whereas infighting weakened the Catholics. Despite being technically on same side, Henry of Guise disobeyed Henry III's orders and was in fact backed by [[TheManBehindTheMan Philip II and the Pope]] who agreed the Valois were too weak to contain the Huguenots, so he acted on his own accord. He provoked mob violence across Paris and encouraged violence against any Protestant they could get his hands on. Sick of being undermined by his own men, Henry III arranged the assassination of Guise after luring him into a trap. This proved to be a fatal move since Henry of Guise was beloved by the Catholic population and now the League was at war with the king, and several of his own supporters joined Henry of Navarre's camp. Henry III would suffer from this greatly when he was stabbed by a monk in retaliation for Guise's death. On [[KingInHisDeathbed [[KingOnHisDeathbed his death bed]], he assigned Henry of Navarre as his heir and pleaded that he converted to Roman Catholicism as his last request.



* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and it's [[Film/LaReineMargoot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].

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* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and it's [[Film/LaReineMargoot [[Film/LaReineMargot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].

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Changed: 406

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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following the Protestant Reformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that would put ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' to shame with three main factions driving it: the ruling House of Valois, the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Princes of Condé and Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That was until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and it's practices. Having being criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to Switzerland. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even more harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident would put a lance through his eye and killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CatherineOfMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control his nobles can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise from whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots lead to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence like La Rochelle.

to:

The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following the Protestant Reformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that [[DeadlyDecadentCourt would put put]] ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' [[DeadlyDecadentCourt to shame shame]] with three main factions driving it: the [[/UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi ruling House of Valois, Valois]], the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Princes of Condé and Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That was until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and it's practices. Having being criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to Switzerland.UsefulNotes/{{Switzerland}}. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even more harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident would put a lance through his eye and killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CatherineOfMedici UsefulNotes/CaterinaDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control his nobles the court can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise from whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots lead to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence like La Rochelle.



The climate was very unnerving for the Queen Mother, since not only were Protestants pursuing alliances with foreigners to undermine them, but also fellow Catholics would be plotting against the House of Valois for being too moderate. As such, an political marriage between the Catholic princess Margaret and the Protestant prince Henry of Navarre was set up in order to contain further hostilities. This backfire horrifically when shortly after the wedding day, an wave of assassinations and mob violence perpetrated by Catholics engulfed Paris during St. Bartholomew's Day which is estimated thousands of Huguenots were butchered by men wearing white crosses and white straps in their arms. This became known as the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre and the turning point of the French wars of religion, which horrified and outraged Protestants beyond France and even other non-Catholics like Eastern Orthodox tsar Ivan the Terrible ([[EveryoneHasStandards Yes]] ''[[EveryoneHasStandards that]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards one]]) expressed horror about the carnage, whereas certain Catholics like Philip II celebrated it (some say that he laughed like a madman at least one time in his lifetime when hearing about the massacre). It's usually thought the Guise were behind the event, but several people accused Catherine of Medici of playing a hand in it too because of her fear about foreign intervention though several scholars exonerate her nowadays.

to:

The climate was very unnerving for the Queen Mother, since not only were Protestants pursuing alliances with foreigners to undermine them, but also fellow Catholics would be plotting against the House of Valois for being too moderate. As such, an political marriage between the Catholic princess Margaret and the Protestant prince Henry of Navarre was set up in order to contain further hostilities. This backfire horrifically when shortly after the wedding day, an wave of assassinations and mob violence perpetrated by Catholics engulfed Paris during St. Bartholomew's Day which is estimated thousands of Huguenots were butchered by men wearing white crosses and white straps in their arms. This became known as the [[ThePurge St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre Massacre]] and the turning point of the French wars of religion, which horrified and outraged Protestants beyond France and even other non-Catholics like Eastern Orthodox tsar Ivan the Terrible ([[EveryoneHasStandards Yes]] ''[[EveryoneHasStandards that]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards one]]) expressed horror about the carnage, whereas certain Catholics like Philip II celebrated it (some say that he laughed like a madman at least one time in his lifetime when hearing about the massacre). massacre), although many moderate ones wondered if such bloodshed was worth religious uniformity. It's usually thought the Guise were behind the event, but several people at the time accused Catherine of Medici of playing a hand in it too because of her fear about foreign intervention though several scholars historians exonerate her nowadays.



This triggered the final war in the period, also known as ''The War of the Three Henrys'' named after the three [[MeleeATrois respective sides of the war]]: King Henry III of France, Catholic League leader Henry the Duke of Guise and Prince Henry of Navarre. This time, the Huguenots were stronger than ever being able to win decisively against their Catholic enemies under the leadership of Navarre and with the help of German and Swiss forces, whereas infighting weakened the Catholics. Despite being technically on same side by virtue, Henry of Guise disobeyed Henry III's orders and was in fact backed by [[TheManBehindTheMan Philip II and the Pope]] who agreed the Valois were too weak to contain the Huguenots, so he acted on his own accord. He provoked mob violence across Paris and encouraged violence against any Protestant they could get his hands on. Sick of being undermined by his own men, Henry III arranged the assassination of Guise after luring him into a trap. This proved to be a fatal move since Henry of Guise was beloved by the Catholic population and now the League was at war with the king, and several of his own supporters joined Henry of Navarre's camp. Henry III would suffer from this greatly when he was stabbed by a monk in retaliation for Guise's death. On his death bed, he assigned Henry of Navarre as his heir and pleaded that he converted to Roman Catholicism as his last request.

to:

This triggered the final war in the period, also known as ''The War of the Three Henrys'' named after the three [[MeleeATrois respective sides of the war]]: war: King Henry III of France, Catholic League leader Henry the Duke of Guise and Prince Henry of Navarre. This time, the Huguenots were stronger than ever being able to win decisively against their Catholic enemies under the leadership of Navarre and with the help of German and Swiss forces, whereas infighting weakened the Catholics. Despite being technically on same side by virtue, side, Henry of Guise disobeyed Henry III's orders and was in fact backed by [[TheManBehindTheMan Philip II and the Pope]] who agreed the Valois were too weak to contain the Huguenots, so he acted on his own accord. He provoked mob violence across Paris and encouraged violence against any Protestant they could get his hands on. Sick of being undermined by his own men, Henry III arranged the assassination of Guise after luring him into a trap. This proved to be a fatal move since Henry of Guise was beloved by the Catholic population and now the League was at war with the king, and several of his own supporters joined Henry of Navarre's camp. Henry III would suffer from this greatly when he was stabbed by a monk in retaliation for Guise's death. On [[KingInHisDeathbed his death bed, bed]], he assigned Henry of Navarre as his heir and pleaded that he converted to Roman Catholicism as his last request.



The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshiping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained and Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by an Catholic fanatic, and many years afterwards his grandson Louis XIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen which gave French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.

to:

The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshiping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it like previous times since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained and remained: Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by an Catholic fanatic, Huguenots rebellions occurred during UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar and many years afterwards his grandson afterwards, Louis XIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen which gave French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.citizens.

!The French Wars of Religion are portrayed in the following media
* ''Literature/LaReineMargot'' and it's [[Film/LaReineMargoot film adaptation]] feature the infamous massacre of Saint Bartholomew's Day, with Catherine being [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade placed as the main culprit]].

Added: 7551

Changed: 8

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That was until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and it's practices. Having being criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to Switzerland. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even more harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident would put a lance through his eye and killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CatherineDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control his nobles can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise from whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots lead to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence like La Rochelle.

Though it seemed Francis II would be more of the same as his father and grandfather/namesake, his rule would last only a year with him dying at mysterious circumstances (some at the time believed it was poison, but it's suspected he may have died of actual diseases). Being childless, he was succeeded by his younger brother Charles with their mother once again serving as regent. Despite being a Roman Catholic herself, Catherine played the role of a moderator in trying to keep stability between Catholics and Protestants, which wasn't an easy job given she was an widowed foreigner with several underage children who also had to [[OutlivingOnesOffspring outlive one of them]]. She managed to reach a compromise by issuing an edict of toleration which allowed some limited freedoms of worship to the Huguenots. This upset many of the Catholic nobles, specially the Duke of Guise, who perpetrated a massacre against a Protestant congregation, triggered an armed rebellion among their ranks and beginning the First War of Religion.

to:

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That was until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and it's practices. Having being criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to Switzerland. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even more harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident would put a lance through his eye and killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CatherineDeMedici UsefulNotes/CatherineOfMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control his nobles can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise from whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots lead to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence like La Rochelle.

Though it seemed Francis II would be more of the same as his father and grandfather/namesake, his rule would last only a year with him dying at in mysterious circumstances (some at the time believed it was poison, but it's suspected he may have died of actual diseases). Being childless, he was succeeded by his younger brother Charles with their mother once again serving as regent. Despite being a Roman Catholic herself, Catherine played the role of a moderator in trying to keep stability between Catholics and Protestants, which wasn't an easy job given she was an widowed foreigner with several underage children who also had to [[OutlivingOnesOffspring outlive one of them]]. She managed to reach a compromise by issuing an edict of toleration which allowed some limited freedoms of worship to the Huguenots. This upset many of the Catholic nobles, specially the Duke of Guise, who perpetrated a massacre against a Protestant congregation, triggered an armed rebellion among their ranks and beginning the First War of Religion.Religion.

The first clash between Catholics and Huguenots would set up an pattern for all the ones to follow in this bloody period: a stalemate with neither side being able to fully destroy the other and peace treaty being signed by the monarchy trying to preserve order. There was one problem: every peace treaty promising toleration or even the right to ''exist'' for the Huguenots was considered too much for the Catholics lead by the Guise. The first one was considered unacceptable after the Duke of Guise responsible for starting hostilities was assassinated by an Huguenot. Two more wars eventually caught the attention of foreign powers such as Philip II of Spain, the Papal States, the Dutch Republic and many German princes of the Holy Roman Empire, who [[ProxyWar backed their sides during the conflict to serve their interests]] - Philip saw himself as the defender of Roman Catholicism and was worried about the prospect of French becoming Protestant right on his doorstep, while the Dutch (who broke away from Spanish control) were motivated by solidarity with their Calvinist co-regionalists.

The climate was very unnerving for the Queen Mother, since not only were Protestants pursuing alliances with foreigners to undermine them, but also fellow Catholics would be plotting against the House of Valois for being too moderate. As such, an political marriage between the Catholic princess Margaret and the Protestant prince Henry of Navarre was set up in order to contain further hostilities. This backfire horrifically when shortly after the wedding day, an wave of assassinations and mob violence perpetrated by Catholics engulfed Paris during St. Bartholomew's Day which is estimated thousands of Huguenots were butchered by men wearing white crosses and white straps in their arms. This became known as the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre and the turning point of the French wars of religion, which horrified and outraged Protestants beyond France and even other non-Catholics like Eastern Orthodox tsar Ivan the Terrible ([[EveryoneHasStandards Yes]] ''[[EveryoneHasStandards that]]'' [[EveryoneHasStandards one]]) expressed horror about the carnage, whereas certain Catholics like Philip II celebrated it (some say that he laughed like a madman at least one time in his lifetime when hearing about the massacre). It's usually thought the Guise were behind the event, but several people accused Catherine of Medici of playing a hand in it too because of her fear about foreign intervention though several scholars exonerate her nowadays.

Following this episode, most of the Huguenot leadership was purged and Henry of Navarre only managed to survive by converting to Catholicism which he repudiated in the first opportunity he got to flee from Paris. The official version of the story is that the Huguenots were planning a state coup and the monarchy did what he had to be done to prevent this outcome. Two more wars would follow (making a total of five) with more edicts giving rights to Protestants being considered too much for Catholics and hostilities resuming with neither side making any significant gains as the death toll rose until Charles dying and his brother Henry (who was just elected King of Poland) abdicating his own throne to inherit the French one as Henry III.

It was thought that Henry III's predecessors were too tolerant and forgiving towards the threat of Protestantism, choosing to give rights and privileges only to be rewarded by rebellion. He decided he won't have none of that anymore and issued an edict stripping them of all their rights, ordering them to depart France at once under the pain of death unless if they converted to Catholicism. Then, something unexpected happened when Henry' youngest brother Francis died and since he himself had no sons, he was his heir in case he died. As such, his next closest relative would be none other than his cousin Henry of Navarre, the leader of the Huguenot rebellion, which pave the way for France becoming a Protestant nation - something that the Catholic nobility would not stand for.

This triggered the final war in the period, also known as ''The War of the Three Henrys'' named after the three [[MeleeATrois respective sides of the war]]: King Henry III of France, Catholic League leader Henry the Duke of Guise and Prince Henry of Navarre. This time, the Huguenots were stronger than ever being able to win decisively against their Catholic enemies under the leadership of Navarre and with the help of German and Swiss forces, whereas infighting weakened the Catholics. Despite being technically on same side by virtue, Henry of Guise disobeyed Henry III's orders and was in fact backed by [[TheManBehindTheMan Philip II and the Pope]] who agreed the Valois were too weak to contain the Huguenots, so he acted on his own accord. He provoked mob violence across Paris and encouraged violence against any Protestant they could get his hands on. Sick of being undermined by his own men, Henry III arranged the assassination of Guise after luring him into a trap. This proved to be a fatal move since Henry of Guise was beloved by the Catholic population and now the League was at war with the king, and several of his own supporters joined Henry of Navarre's camp. Henry III would suffer from this greatly when he was stabbed by a monk in retaliation for Guise's death. On his death bed, he assigned Henry of Navarre as his heir and pleaded that he converted to Roman Catholicism as his last request.

With Henry III's death, the House of Valois came to an end leaving Henry of Navarre free to take the throne, but this would not be as simple as that since the Catholic League still remained active and firmly in control of Paris, which was still fiercely Catholic - they were [[CorneredRattlesnake prepared to fight to the death]] than accept an Protestant monarch on the throne. With Spain still supporting the League and resistance remaining stalwart for a couple of years, Henry of Navarre decided to cut the unnecessary bloodshed and convert to Catholicism in order to gain the people of Paris' acceptance. It's generally believed that he was an genuine Calvinist all of his life and only outwardly became Catholic for political reasons due to in a famous alleged statement he made that "[Paris] was worth the Mass". The death of the remaining Catholic League leaders made resistance pointless now that Navarre was Catholic and he was eventually crowned as King Henry IV of the House of Bourbon.

The French Wars of Religion were brought to an end with the Edict of Nantes, which maintained Catholicism as the state religion of France, but allowed Protestants to exist with some curtailed rights (they still had to pay taxes, were forbidden from worshiping in certain locations, but were allowed to keep their arms and make their own assemblies). While at the time, peace was considered uncertain as both sides were unhappy with the edict's conditions, there was less resistance to it since they were both sick of [[ForeverWar fighting endlessly]]. That doesn't mean that peace was everlasting since religious tensions remained and Henry IV was assassinated in 1610 by an Catholic fanatic, and many years afterwards his grandson Louis XIV would revoke the Edict and re-start the persecution of Protestants in the name of religious uniformity as part of his centralized state agenda. It wouldn't really be until UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution with the Declaration of Rights of Man and the Citizen which gave French Protestants would gain equal rights as citizens.
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The French Wars of Religion were a period of sectarian civil war during the Kingdom of France from 1562 to 1598 and were part of the larger religious conflict taking place in Europe following the Protestant Reformation and it would only be surpassed by the UsefulNotes/ThirtyYearsWar in terms of horror and deaths. However, there was more to this war than just religious differences, for it was also an [[SuccessionCrisis dynastic dispute]] that would put ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' to shame with three main factions driving it: the ruling House of Valois, the Roman Catholics lead by the fanatical and ambitious House of Guise and the Huguenots lead by the Princes of Condé and Henry of Navarre. What started out as an brutal conflict fueled by people unable to coexist with each other culminated into an war for the French crown.

The Huguenots were French adepts of Calvinism, one of the Protestant branches which unlike Lutheranism, didn't receive recognition as an official faith. However, the French monarch at the time - Francis I - was tolerant of Calvinism in his country unlike most Roman Catholic rulers then. That was until 1534, when a series of pamphlets and placards were distributed denouncing Catholicism and it's practices. Having being criticized for his initial tolerance of Protestants, Francis began a campaign of persecution against them by [[BurnTheWitch burning them at the stake]]. It was during this wave of persecution that John Calvin barely escaped with his life to Switzerland. After Francis' death, his son Henry II was even more harsher, escalating the repression by stripping them of rights to worship, assemble and even discuss their faith in public. His reign wouldn't last long because a jousting accident would put a lance through his eye and killing him. This left his 15-year old son Francis II as the new king, but his mother UsefulNotes/CatherineDeMedici would be his regent. A young monarch on the throne unable to control his nobles can only lead to the rise of factionalism with the fiercely Catholic nobles from the House of Guise from whom UsefulNotes/MaryQueenOfScots was betrothed to Francis and as a result, had huge influence over him. At the same time, the persecution of Huguenots lead to radicalization among their ranks where they engaged in iconoclasm by vandalizing churches and destroying statues in areas where they had huge presence like La Rochelle.

Though it seemed Francis II would be more of the same as his father and grandfather/namesake, his rule would last only a year with him dying at mysterious circumstances (some at the time believed it was poison, but it's suspected he may have died of actual diseases). Being childless, he was succeeded by his younger brother Charles with their mother once again serving as regent. Despite being a Roman Catholic herself, Catherine played the role of a moderator in trying to keep stability between Catholics and Protestants, which wasn't an easy job given she was an widowed foreigner with several underage children who also had to [[OutlivingOnesOffspring outlive one of them]]. She managed to reach a compromise by issuing an edict of toleration which allowed some limited freedoms of worship to the Huguenots. This upset many of the Catholic nobles, specially the Duke of Guise, who perpetrated a massacre against a Protestant congregation, triggered an armed rebellion among their ranks and beginning the First War of Religion.

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