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did the peace of Augsburg and the peace of Westphalia allow for religious freedom
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1483-1500 are in the 15th century. 1501-1546 are in the 16th century.
London, Paris, Madrid, Rome, Florence, Frankfurt, Ghent, Naples, Augsburg, Lyon, Bruges, Antwerp, and many of them you could smell before you got to them.
It is a 200 year period of peace in Rome.
did the peace of Augsburg and the peace of Westphalia allow for religious freedom
What war did the Peace of Augsburg end?? The Peace of Augsburg, or the Augsburg Settlement, put an end to the religious wars in Germany. The Lutheran princes and Charles V, the Emperor.
1555
The Peace of Augsburg was signed on September 25, 1555. This treaty officially ended the religious conflicts between Catholics and Protestants in the Holy Roman Empire by allowing each prince to choose the religion for his territory.
The Peace of Augsburg was signed in 1555 to resolve religious conflicts in the Holy Roman Empire. It allowed German princes to choose between Catholicism and Lutheranism as the official religion of their territories, leading to a temporary period of religious toleration and ending the civil war between the Catholic and Protestant states.
The Peace of Augsburg ended a war between the supporters of Catholic and Protestant German princes.
peace of augsburg
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The Peace of Augsburg granted religious freedom to Lutheran princes in the Holy Roman Empire, allowing them to choose between Catholicism and Lutheranism within their territories. This peace treaty effectively ended the religious wars in the Empire for a time.
Neither the Anabaptists (followers of Ulrich Zwingli) or the southern reformed churches (followers of John Calvin) were included in the Peace of Augsburg.
Peace of Augsburg
The Peace of Augsburg formally accepted the principle of "cuius regio, eius religio" (whose realm, his religion), allowing German princes to choose between Lutheranism and Catholicism as the official religion of their territory. It effectively ended the religious wars between Catholics and Protestants in the Holy Roman Empire for a time.