The French Wars of Religion (1562-1598) were a series of eight conflicts between Protestant and Catholic factions in France lasting 36 years, The fighting ended in 1598 when Henry of Navarre, who had converted to Catholicism in 1593, was proclaimed Henry IV of France and issued the Edict of Nantes, which granted substantial rights and freedoms to the Huguenots. However, Catholics continued to have a hostile opinion of Protestants in general and of Henry, and his assassination in 1610 triggered a fresh round of Huguenot rebellions in the 1620s.
Tensions had been rising between Protestants and Catholics since 1534 but the religious and political situation worsened after Henry II (r. 1547-1559) died from an injury. His son, Francois II (Francis II, r. 1559-1560), crowned king at the age of 15, had been married to Mary, Queen of Scots (l. 1542-1587) who was the niece of Francis, Duke of Guise (l. 1519-1563) and his brother Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine (l. 1524-1574). Although Francis II was of age to rule on his own, his mother, Catherine de ‘Medici (l. 1519-1589) encouraged the Guise brothers to assume control as Francis II was inexperienced and sickly.
The House of Guise, devoutly Catholic, then exercised the power behind the throne and were hostile to the efforts of the Huguenots (French Protestants) who were advancing their vision in France. In March 1560, a group of Huguenots tried to kidnap Francis II to remove him from the influence of the Guise brothers. The plot, known as the Amboise Conspiracy, was discovered and anyone thought to be involved, as well as over 1,000 other Huguenots, were executed. In retaliation, Huguenots began vandalizing Catholic churches and rising tensions led to the Massacre of Vassy in March of 1562, in which Catholics killed more Protestants, starting the first war.
Conflict continued, with periods of armed peace between hostilities, until 1598 when King Henry IV, recognizing that France would never accept a Protestant king, converted to Catholicism (allegedly, with the famous line, “Paris is well worth a Mass”). His Edict of Nantes (1598), granting rights to Protestants in France while maintaining Catholic sovereignty, ended the French Wars of Religion (which had cost approximately 4 million lives) but did not address the underlying tensions which continued to erupt throughout the next century.
French Wars of Religion - World History Encyclopedia :france-cool:
French Wars of Religion - Comprehensive Documentary - Pike & Shot Channel :macron:
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I am now crossposting between megas. Be afraid
Unjust Depths posting except there's no spoilers, I'm just rambling about how good it is!
I'm not too worried about Unjust Depths' cast getting bigger and bigger anymore. I used to be, and it probably has over 40 named characters by now; while I was worried that it would lose the plot at various points, it doesn't really. There are long stretches here or there where you aren't with the "main cast" on the Brigand, but the fluid perspective that can follow anybody gives you a really wide variety of viewpoints on current events. Plus, UD is pretty much all killer no filler, like any pagetime that a Brigand crewmember gets is dense with stuff about them. We only spent maybe two or three chapters following Shalikova and I already wanna go back and know more! I'd also be excited to get into Zachikova's semi digitised brain. Or hang out with Valya, or go watch Sameer bug her crewmates with enthusiasm...
I guess my point is, there are pacing issues here or there, but the quality of story presented never drops below "goated" and I rescind my comments about the Vogelheim arc being boring. I just want more of everyone who's been introduced, other than Sawyer obviously :)
Anyway the current happenings circa 5.6 is that Murati is taking Zachilova and Shalikova into Serrano to extract THEIR VIP, and I'm so ready for the Brigand and the Vogelheim plotlines to finally cross paths...