For the full article, see: http://churchmousec.wordpress.com/2013/08/14/a-huguenot-timeline/#comment-17206
A Huguenot timeline
John Calvin decided to become a Protestant in 1533. In 1536, he published the first edition of his apologetic work, Institutes of the Christian Religion. That same year, he fled France for Basel, then Geneva.
By the 1550s, the Reformed faith was gaining more converts in France. This is a summary of what happened next:
25 May 1559 | First Synod of the French Reformed Church held in Paris, followed by persecutions and issuance of Edict prohibiting “heretical” worship | |
1559 | Attempt to replace Catholic Guises with Huguenot Condé as regent | |
1560 | Huguenots petition the King and threaten revolt if persecution persists | |
1 March 1562 | Massacre at Vassay begins French religious wars; Condé assassinated | |
1562 | Huguenots sign manifesto saying they were forced to take arms | |
1 May 1562 | Arrival at St. John’s River, in Florida, of the first pilgrimage by Huguenots to North America | |
1564 | Death of John Calvin | |
1565 | Huguenot colony massacred at St. John, FL | |
24 August 1572 | St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre in which tens of thousands of Huguenots were killed | |
1585 | Huguenots/Protestants expelled from France | |
13 April 1598 | Edict of Nantes by Henry of Navarre which granted religious and civil liberties to the Huguenots promises protection | |
18 October 1685 | Revocation of the Edict of Nantes by Louis XIV which was published 22 October 1685, and resulted in persecution of the Huguenots; 400,000 flee France to other countries | |
28 November 1787
For the rest of the article, see:
| Promulgation of the Edict of Toleration http://churchmousec.wordpress.com/2013/08/14/a-huguenot-timeline/#comment-17206 |
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