Louis Napoleon was a nephew oh Napoleon Bonaparte. France thinks that the French were instable, so they think that Louis Napoleon will help bring peace to France, which he did with real prosperity & a better enlightment.
france
Albert Einstein
Versailles, France
1.Great Britain, 2.France, 3.United States, and 4. Italy.
1598 from the Edict of Nantes
He converted back to Catholicism.
Catholics accepted the Edict of Nantes in 1598 because it provided a measure of religious tolerance and peace during a time of intense conflict between Catholics and Protestants in France. The edict granted significant civil rights and protections to Huguenots (French Protestants), which helped to stabilize the country after decades of the French Wars of Religion. By promoting coexistence, the edict aimed to unify the nation and restore order, benefiting both Catholic and Protestant communities. Additionally, King Henry IV, a former Huguenot who converted to Catholicism, sought to strengthen his rule and reduce religious strife, making the edict a pragmatic solution for the monarchy.
Perhaps the most important factor that allowed France to join the 'scramble' of New World colonization in the Age of Discovery was the 1598 Edict of Nantes. Establishing a real if also shaky peace after years of war in France between Catholics and Protestants, the Edict was followed by the establishment of a variety of French colonies in the Americas -- and daring explorations of as yet uncolonized portions of the New World.
I think you have the question backwards. Who could possibly have the right to stop them, or anybody else for that matter, from practising their own religion? (But, certainly, the Roman Catholic church in France at that time did not agree with my viewpoint, as shown by their readiness to commit mass murder in the name of the Prince of Peace, when they set about their slaughter of the Huguenots.) Several inaccuracies in the above. We are talking about the legal right to practise, which was given by the Edict of Nantes in 1598. the King who made the edict was Henri IV, who had turned Catholic in order to succeed to the throne, thus ending the Wars of Religion - in which, incidentally, both sides committed mass murder at every opportunity. Unfortunately, the Edict of Nantes was revoked by Louis XIV less than a century later, leading to a mass exodus of Huguenots from France.
Henri IV
They never did such thing.
He Converted back to Catholicism
it restored peace to the catholic churches.
NovaNET : He converted back to Catholicism.
He converted back to Catholicism.
Henry IV of France rebuilt and reunited France after the long War of Religions, which lasted from 1562 to 1598. He made the first attempt to bring peace to the Catholics and Protestants in the Modern Era through the Edict of Nantes, which granted Protestants the ability to practice their religion in France, a Catholic kingdom at the time. Working with Maximilian de Béthune, duc de Sully, he regulated state finance, promoted agriculture, and made several commercial treaties with both Spain and the Ottoman Empire, increasing foreign trade for the nation. Also, he sponsored the expeditions of several explorers to the New World, ensuring that France laid claim to Canada. And that's really all I can think of right now.