Jean Jacques Rousseau Citoyen De Geneve A Christophe De Beaumont Archeveque De Paris Duc De S Cloud Pair De France Commandeur De L Ordre Du Saint Esprit Proviseur De Sorbonne Etc


Download Jean Jacques Rousseau Citoyen De Geneve A Christophe De Beaumont Archeveque De Paris Duc De S Cloud Pair De France Commandeur De L Ordre Du Saint Esprit Proviseur De Sorbonne Etc PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Jean Jacques Rousseau Citoyen De Geneve A Christophe De Beaumont Archeveque De Paris Duc De S Cloud Pair De France Commandeur De L Ordre Du Saint Esprit Proviseur De Sorbonne Etc book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

The Huguenots and French Opinion, 1685-1787


The Huguenots and French Opinion, 1685-1787

Author: Geoffrey Adams

language: en

Publisher: Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press

Release Date: 2006-01-01


DOWNLOAD





The decision of Louis XIV to revoke the Edict of Nantes and thus liquidate French Calvinism was well received in the intellectual community which was deeply prejudiced against the Huguenots. This antipathy would gradually disappear. After the death of the Sun King, a more sympathetic view of the Protestant minority was presented to French readers by leading thinkers such as Montesquieu, the abbé Prévost, and Voltaire. By the middle years of the eighteenth century, liberal clerics, lawyers, and government ministers joined Encyclopedists in urging the emancipation of the Reformed who were seen to be loyal, peaceable and productive. Then, in 1787, thanks to intensive lobbying by a group which included Malesherbes, Lafayette, and the future revolutionary Rabaut Saint-Étienne, the government of Louis XVI issued an edict of toleration which granted the Huguenots a modest bill of civil and religious rights. Adams’ illuminating work treats a major chapter in the history of toleration; it explores in depth a fascinating shift in mentalités, and it offers a new focus on the process of “reform from above” in pre-Revolutionary France.