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Protestantism in France From Death of Francis I to Edict of Nantes - James Aitken Wylie

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Chapter 10<br />

Cather<strong>in</strong>e de Medici and her<br />

Son, Charles IX<br />

Conference at Bayonne<br />

The St. Bartholomew<br />

Massacre Plotted<br />

THE Pacification <strong>of</strong> Amboise (1563) closed the<br />

first Huguenot war. That arrangement was<br />

satisfac<strong>to</strong>ry <strong>to</strong> neither party. The Protestants it did<br />

not content; for manifestly it was not an advance<br />

but a retrogression. That <strong>to</strong>leration which the<br />

previous <strong>Edict</strong> <strong>of</strong> January had extended over the<br />

whole k<strong>in</strong>gdom, the Pacification <strong>of</strong> Amboise<br />

restricted <strong>to</strong> certa<strong>in</strong> bodies, and <strong>to</strong> particular<br />

localities. The Huguenots could not understand the<br />

pr<strong>in</strong>ciple on which such an arrangement was based.<br />

If liberty <strong>of</strong> worship was wrong, they reasoned,<br />

why permit it <strong>in</strong> any part <strong>of</strong> <strong>France</strong>? but if right, as<br />

the edict seemed <strong>to</strong> grant, it ought <strong>to</strong> be declared<br />

lawful, not <strong>in</strong> a few cities only, but <strong>in</strong> all the <strong>to</strong>wns<br />

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