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French Religious Wars of the 16 th Century: 1562-1598 Kagan, Chapter 12.

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Presentation on theme: "French Religious Wars of the 16 th Century: 1562-1598 Kagan, Chapter 12."— Presentation transcript:

1 French Religious Wars of the 16 th Century: 1562-1598 Kagan, Chapter 12

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3 Europe after the Reformation  N. Europe mainly Protestant (Scandinavia / England / N. Germany / parts of France / Switzerland / Scotland)  Unity of Western Christianity shattered  Religious wars === 100 years!!!  Protestant Individualism: encourages independence, science, capitalism, nationalism U2.5 #13 – Protestant Resistance Theory, pp.356

4 The 16 th and 17 th Centuries  Different type of warfare: Larger (often State financed) armies Gunpowder & cannon – kills at distance – indiscriminately not as “noble” as one-on-one combat Expensive – so kings must find ways to finance war = increased taxation usually of the lower class  Numerous problems: Religious, Political, Social (Monarchy vs. Feudalism)

5 Religious Wars: France Habsburg-Valois Wars, 1521-1559  Francis I (1515-1547), House of Valois – fighting Charles V, House of Habsburg, King of Spain Concordat of Bologna (1516)– nationalized French Church (Gallican Church) – king has right to appoint bishops & abbots Humanist – patron of Leonardo da Vinci – how the Mona Lisa gets to Paris! rebuilds the Louvre (1528) as luxury palace

6 le Louvre

7 Francis I (1515-1547) con’t. Persecution of Huguenots for political reasons begins (threat to authority) See U2.5 #4- 5  Battle of Pavia, 1525 = French Protestants persecuted in the hopes the Charles V will release Francis I sooner  Oct. 18, 1534 mass arrests of Protestants  Edicts of Fontainebleau (1540) & Chateaubriand (1551)

8 Huguenots in South Carolina

9 Background Check  On your whiteboard. Indicate with a few words as possible and as quickly as you can what each of these “groups” in 16 th century France wanted: Henry II (vs. Philip II, Spain) Catherine de’ Medici Aristocratic families: Guise, Montmorency, Bourbon

10 Henry II & Catherine de Medici  Henry II (1547-1559) – marries Catherine de’ Medici (1519-1589)  Charles V abdicates (1556) and his kingdom splits: Spain to Philip / HRE to Ferdinand Philip also has Naples, Milan, Sicily +America!= POWER  1559, Habsburg-Valois War end w/ Treaty of Cateau- Cambresis Henry II accepts Habsburg rule in Italy and Flanders Philip II promises to leave ruling Valois family in peace (Does he stick to his promise?)  Meanwhile back in France… Con’t. persecution of Huguenots for religious reasons – ~40% of French nobles had converted to Calvinism Henry II accidentally killed in a jousting tournament (1559) Focus the fight against Calvinism !

11 Powerful French Noble Families  Monarchy weak so kings try to appease by promoting religious freedom (U2.5 #7) In eastern France – the Catholic Guise family (controls Francis II) – Francis, Charles and Louis Guise Who are their allies? In center of France - the pro-Protestant Montmorency- Chatillon family – Gaspard de Coligny (advisor to Charles IX) From central France to south & west– the Huguenot Bourbon family - Louis I, prince of Condé

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13 Charles IX (r. 1560-1574) Henry III (r. 1574- 1598) Francis II (r. 1559-1560) + Mary, Queen of Scots! (also related to Guise family) U2.5#6 & 9

14 Civil War breaks out  1560, at the age of ten Charles IX becomes king of France – his mother is regent (U2.5 #10) Tensions btw. Guise, Montmorency and Bourbon families rages undermining the authority of the king Guise family, devoutly Catholic, gains backing of Spain & Jesuits Huguenots take advantage of political chaos & become bolder in practicing their religion 1562 they seized the city of Lyon, forced Calvinism on the population and desecrated Catholic churches Francis, duke of Guise retaliates by executing Huguenots found worshipping on his land (Toulouse) = 3000 killed in fighting (1563 duke of Guise assassinated by Huguenot) U2.5 #11

15 Civil War Continues  1572 Catherine & Charles lend military support to Dutch against Spanish in attempts to weaken their rival Guise family sees this Protestant attempt to control the throne  Admiral Gaspard de Coligny (member of House of Montmorency who had converted to Protestantism & is blamed for murder of duke of Guise) gains influence over Charles IX  Catherine’s dilemma = how to maintain power and quell Protestant/Catholic infighting Marries daughter Margot to Huguenot Henry Bourbon, King of Navarre, but peace is not achieved because…

16 St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre (U2.5 #12)

17 St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre  Catherine with House of Guise attempts to assassinate Adm. Coligny - assassination fails, SO six days after her daughter’s wedding, August 24, 1572... St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre – Catholics attack Protestants Massacre rages throughout France for 3-6 days = 3000 dead in Paris; ~20,000 dead outside of city Henry of Navarre returns to Navarre to plan new strategy Henry, Duke of Guise forms Catholic League swearing to drive out all heresy (and hopefully become king himself)

18 Civil War continues  Henry III (1574-1598) – during his reign:(U2.5 #14) Huguenots rebuild their strength & consider Henry of Navarre the rightful heir to the throne (U2.5 #17) Henry, duke of Guise (w/aid of Philip II) plans to take the throne  Peace of Beaulieu, May 1576 (U2.5 #15 &16)  Henry Guise storms & seizes Paris = becoming Chief Minister  1587 Mary, Queen of Scots executed, Guise family outraged that King Henry III could not stay execution  Day of Barricades, 1588 (U2.5 #18)

19 War of the Three Henrys:  Henry III has Henry Guise assassinated(1588) & joins with Henry of Navarre against the Catholic League to retake Paris  1589 Henry III assassinated for his alliance w/ a Protestant  So Henry of Navarre becomes King Henry IV, the politique

20 King Henry IV, the politique 1593 “Paris is worth a Mass” – converts to gain the throne!!! 1595 declares war on Spain – his popularity grows 1598 Spain signs Treaty of Vervins – economic drain on both countries is too great EDICT OF NANTES 1598 – (U2.5#19) 1610 assassinated BUT his legacy? See pg. 358


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