1 / 17

Do Now:

Do Now:. Grab Agenda 2:7 ( Weebly and Out Box) Look up the most interesting fact about Huguenots. Objective: The Reformation in France. WHII.3b

nira
Download Presentation

Do Now:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Do Now: Grab Agenda 2:7 (Weebly and Out Box) Look up the most interesting fact about Huguenots.

  2. Objective:The Reformation in France WHII.3b TSWDK of the Reformation in terms of its impact on Western civilization by describing the impact of religious conflicts, the Inquisition, the Catholic Reformation on society and government actions.

  3. The Reformation in France • France and the Church • Religious Wars

  4. France and the Church “Most Christian King” • The French crown has always had a special relationship with the Church. • No concept of the separation of Church and State in France.

  5. France and the Church “Most Christian King” • The French crown has always had a special relationship with the Church. • No concept of the separation of Church and State in France. • Pope granted king of France the title “Most Christian King.”

  6. France and the Church “Most Christian King” • The French crown has always had a special relationship with the Church. • No concept of the separation of Church and State in France. • Pope granted king of France the title “Most Christian King.” • As the “Most Christian King,” the King of France promised to rid the realm of heresy.

  7. France and the Church Huguenots • Tolerance for Protestants?

  8. France and the Church Huguenots • Tolerance for Protestants? Yes. King was religious tolerant because he appreciated the spirit of inquiry and truly valued scholarship.

  9. France and the Church Huguenots • Tolerance for Protestants? Yes. King was religious tolerant because he appreciated the spirit of inquiry and truly valued scholarship. • Huguenots = French Protestants (Calvinists)

  10. Religious Wars Anti-Catholic Propaganda • 1534 – Many citizens in northern France woke one morning to find city plastered with posters denouncing the Catholic mass as “an insufferable abuse,” and other terrible things. • One of these posters appeared on the king’s bedroom door. • No longer a theological debate. It was now an attack on the fundamental social fabric. • Protestants were not only heretics, but rebels and traitors.

  11. Religious Wars Civil Wars • Some were rounded up and burned.

  12. Religious Wars Civil Wars • Some were rounded up and burned. • Sporadic suppression of Protestantism, but inconsistent.

  13. Religious Wars Civil Wars • Some were rounded up and burned. • Sporadic suppression of Protestantism, but inconsistent. • Catholic French monarch considered Huguenots a threat to national unity.

  14. Religious Wars Civil Wars • Some were rounded up and burned. • Sporadic suppression of Protestantism, but inconsistent. • Catholic French monarch considered Huguenots a threat to national unity. • 1562, Huguenots had to defend themselves in a series of bloody civil wars with the Catholics.

  15. Religious Wars Edict of Nantes • 1598 – King of France issued Edict of Nantes

  16. Religious Wars Edict of Nantes • 1598 – King of France issued Edict of Nantes • Huguenots given freedom of worship and some political rights… • …for now…

  17. Conclusion • Catholic France • Edict of Nantes

More Related