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Chapter 12: The Wars of Religion. October 31, 2008. Catherine de Medicis and the Guises. After the death of Francis II, Catherine de Medicis became regent She was worried about the power of the Guise Family and wanted to protect the monarchy She allied herself with the Protestants.
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Chapter 12: The Wars of Religion October 31, 2008
Catherine de Medicis and the Guises • After the death of Francis II, Catherine de Medicis became regent • She was worried about the power of the Guise Family and wanted to protect the monarchy • She allied herself with the Protestants
Catherine de Medicis and the Guises • Issued the January Edict which allowed Protestant public worship outside of town and private within • In 1562, the Duke of Guise massacred a gathering of worshippers which launched the wars of religion in France
Catherine de Medicis and the Guises • Catherine moved closer to the Guises as the Protestants became more powerful • She was behind the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in which 20,000 protestants were killed in 3 days.
The Rise to Power of Henry of Navarre • Henry III, last son of Henry II was on the throne • Found France split down the middle with the Catholic Guises on one side (The Catholic League) and Huguenots who wanted revenge on the other • Henry was a politique who wanted to save France from itself
The Rise to Power of Henry of Navarre • He was forced into an alliance with Henry of Navarre because the Catholic League (meaning the Guise Family) had become too powerful • Henry III was assassinated and Henry of Navarre, who was the next in line for the throne • Henry IV, as he was called, wanted a stop to the religious wars. • He gave up his Protestant faith and converted to Catholicism. “Paris is worth a mass I think!”
The Edict of Nantes • Henry IV issued the Edict of Nantes which guaranteed minority religious rights to the Protestants • One of the first guarantees of religious rights from a ruling monarch. • This edict will be in effect until the reign of Louis XIV