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For a recent translation <strong>of</strong> the edict, see Richard L. Goodbar, ed., The Edict <strong>of</strong> Nantes: Five<br />

Essays <strong>and</strong> a New Translation (Bloomington, MN: The National Huguenot Society, 1998).<br />

31 In the late 1590s the Calvinist theologian, Jean de Serres, made the suggestion to unite the<br />

two confessions under one patriarch, who would develop a new liturgy <strong>and</strong> sacraments<br />

determined by reciprocal concessions. In 1607 Jean Hotman de Villiers suggested the model<br />

comparable to the Church <strong>of</strong> Engl<strong>and</strong>. For more on these two attempts, see Holt, French Wars,<br />

170; Venard, "Gr<strong>and</strong> cassure," 313.<br />

32 For France’s financial recovery, see Greengrass, France, 172-81; Mousnier, Henry IV, 184-98.<br />

33 For Henri’s marriage to Maria de’ Medici, see Mousnier, Henry IV, 152. Henri had been<br />

married to Marguerite de Valois since 1572. The pope, however, decided to annul the childless<br />

marriage, which allowed the king to marry Maria in April 1600.<br />

34 For Henri IV’s urban renewal <strong>of</strong> Paris, see Ballon, Henri IV.<br />

35 Henri had two other projects that were ab<strong>and</strong>oned after his death, the Place de France (1609)<br />

<strong>and</strong> the Collège de France (1610). For more on the unfinished projects as well as the completed<br />

ones, see ibid.<br />

36 Ibid., 12.<br />

37 Ibid., 5.<br />

38 For this legend <strong>and</strong> its meaning, see Beaune, Ideology, 77-79.<br />

39 Richard A. Jackson, Vive le roi! A History <strong>of</strong> the French Coronation from Charles V to<br />

Charles X (Chapel Hill: University <strong>of</strong> North Carolina Press, 1984), 22.<br />

40 For the history <strong>of</strong> the king’s ability to heal scr<strong>of</strong>ula, see Marc Bloch, The Royal Touch:<br />

Sacred Monarchy <strong>and</strong> Scr<strong>of</strong>ula in Engl<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> France, trans. J. E. Anderson (London:<br />

Routledge <strong>and</strong> K. Paul, 1973).<br />

41 Ibid., 69-81; Jackson, Vive le roi, 22, 33.<br />

42 For the history <strong>and</strong> meaning <strong>of</strong> this epithet, see Beaune, Ideology, 172-93.<br />

43 For an introduction to Gallicanism, see Jotham Parsons, The Church in the Republic:<br />

Gallicanism <strong>and</strong> Political Ideology in Renaissance France (Washington, D. C.: The Catholic<br />

University <strong>of</strong> America Press, 2004), 3-8.<br />

44 This definition <strong>of</strong> Gallicanism at the time <strong>of</strong> Henri IV is given in ibid., 97.<br />

45 Wolfe, Conversion, 48.<br />

43

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