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Introduction, Michael Gandy South Africa’s Huguenots, Randolph Vigne The Dansays Family, Norman Bishop The Huguenot Refugee Family of Debonnaire, Emma Monson More Huguenot Families in Australia, Michael Gandy James Rondeau, Stan Rondeau Huguenots at the HEIC College at Addiscombe, Surrey, Tony Fuller Huguenot families researched: Girardot Le ...
The Huguenots were members of the Protestant Reformed Church of France during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Although subject to severe religious persecution in their native France, a great number of the Huguenots held their belief system intact.
He issued the Edict of Nantes in 1598 which gave the Huguenots widespread religious liberty. However, under his grandson, Louis XIV, the Huguenots' privileges were gradually eroded. In 1685 Louis revoked the Edict of Nantes, exiled all Protestant pastors but forbade the …
During the infamous St Bartholomew Massacre of the night of 23/24 August, 1572 more than 8 000 Huguenots, including Admiral Gaspard de Coligny Governor of Picardy and leader and spokesman of the Huguenots, were murdered in Paris.
The Huguenots were Protestants who generally followed the religious teachings of John Calvin. They were sometimes referred to as Reformed Protestants, though that term was also used for the followers of Martin Luther.
Huguenots were particularly experienced in viticulture and oenology (the growing of grapes and making of wine, brandy and vinegar). The Huguenots quickly proved their conscientious and industrious nature, and their efforts led to a marked increase …
Even though the French government allowed the Huguenots this freedom, seven religious wars were fought in France from 1562 to 1598, pitting the Huguenots against the Catholics.
The Huguenots fled to England, Germany, the Netherlands, and the New World between sixteenth and eighteenth centuries in order to escape religious persecution from the Catholic monarchy in France...
A precise database of where the Huguenots or Calvinists or Lutherans or members of the Église réformée de France resided and the precise dates these churches or pastors were serving in hamlets, villages, towns, townships, cities in many regions of France from the 16th to …
So clearly Huguenots were French Protestants, nothing else, and this word was used only to designate such persons, not German, not Swiss. The great Italian historian, Cesare Cantù (1804-1895), writing about the French Protestants under François II, stated
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