Edict of Fontainebleau (1540)
The Edict of Fontainebleau was issued June 1, 1540[1] by the French King Francis I while at his Palace of Fontainebleau. It occurred after the "Affair of the Placards" turned Francis I's policy from one of tolerance to the persecution of the Protestants.[2] The Edict stated that the Protestant heresy was "high treason against God and mankind" and so deserved the appropriate punishments of torture, loss of property, public humiliation, and death.[3] Thus, the Edict of Fontainebleau codified the persecution of the French Protestants or Huguenots and was the first of many edicts in France to persecute the Huguenots. The next major edict was the Edict of Châteaubriant issued by his successor Henry II.[2]
Notes
- Armstrong 1986, pp. 167
- Jones 1997, pp. 157
- Shepardson 2007, pp. 21
References
- Armstrong, Elizabeth (1986), Robert Estienne, royal printer: an historical study of the elder Stephanus, Cambridge, England: Cambridge University, ISBN 0-900721-23-5
- Jones, J.A.P. (1997), Europe, 1500-1600, Cheltenham, Britain: Nelson Thornes, ISBN 0-17-435064-3
- Shepardson, Nikki (2007), Burning zeal: the rhetoric of martyrdom and the Protestant community in Reformation France, 1520-1570, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania: Lehigh University Press, ISBN 0-934223-87-4
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