- Edict of Beaulieu
The Edict of Beaulieu (also known at the time as the Peace of Monsieur) was promulgated from
Beaulieu-lès-Loches [Beaulieu lies directly across the Indre fromLoches .] onMay 6 ,1576 [Pierre Miquel, p. 314.] byHenry III of France , who was pressured by Alençon's support of theProtestant army besieging Paris that spring.The Edict, which was negotiated by the king's brother, "Monsieur"— François, duc d'Alençon, who was now made duc d'Anjou— ["...it was thought that the most important thing was to appease the duke of Alençon, "
Jacques-Auguste de Thou remarked in his "Histoire universelle", based on notes he had been accumulating. "Thus his apanage was augmented with the three richest provinces in the kingdom: Berry, Touraine and Anjou." (Quoted by Mack P. Holt, "The King in Parlement: The Problem of the Lit de Justice in Sixteenth-Century France" "The Historical Journal" 31.3 [September 1988:507-523] p. 310).] gave Huguenots the right of public worship for their religion, thenceforth officially called the "religion prétendue reformée" ("so-called reformed religion"), throughout France, except atParis and at Court. In eightparlement s there were also to be established chambers, called the "mi-partis" because they were composed of equal numbers of Catholics and Huguenots; eight "places de sureté" were to be given to the Huguenots; there was to be a disclaimer of theMassacre of St. Bartholomew , and the families which had suffered from it were to be reinstated. These large concessions to the Huguenots and the approbation given to their political organization led to the formation of the Catholic League, which was organized by Catholics anxious to defend their religion.The King held a "
lit de justice " in theParlement of Paris , May 14, to subvent pending opposition in the strongly Catholic "parlement" [Pierre de l'Estoile recorded in his diary "This was so odious to the Court, that if the King had not come there in person, it would never have been published" (Quoted Holt 1988:511).] and to ensure that the Edict was duly inscribed. [According to the papal nuncio, Antonio Maria Salviati, "La corte non voleva emologare le lettere, ma il Re in persona vi è andato..." Holt 1988, "eo. loc.".] In December 1576, however, the States-General of Blois declared itself against the Edict of Beaulieu. Thereupon the Protestants took up arms under the leadership ofHenry of Navarre , who, escaping from the Court, had returned to theCalvinism which he had abjured at the time of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew. The advantage was on the Catholic side, thanks to some successes achieved by the duc d'Anjou. In September1577 , theTreaty of Bergerac , confirmed by theEdict of Poitiers , left the Huguenots the free exercise of their religion only in the suburbs of one town in eachbailiwick ("bailliage"), and in those places where it had been practiced before the outbreak of hostilities and which they occupied at the current date.ee also
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French Wars of Religion
*List of treaties References
ources
*Pierre Miquel. "Les Guerres de religion." Fayard, 1980. ISBN 27274207858.
*Wilkinson, Maurice. "The Wars of Religion in the Périgord," "The English Historical Review" 21, No. 84., October 1906. (Oxford University Press).
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