The Huguenots were a group of Protestant Christians in France that were persecuted by Catholics. When the fled the country, it seriously hurt the French economy.
The Fall of France in June 1940 left Britain fighting alone in Europe.
The nobles who left France to escape the revolution were called "les émigrés", from the verb"emigrer", to emigrate.
She has left f(x).
He left her no she left him. i wathced it earlier
They were known as émigrés.
The great exodus of Huguenots did not happen after the Great Revolution of 1789. It happened more than 100 years earlier, under Louis XIV after he revoked the Edict of Nantes that had given Huguenots freedom of religion and freedom from persecution. That happened in 1685. Most Huguenots fled to The Netherlands, to the Dutch Cape Colony, to Switzerland and to England. Some emigrated to the then French colonies in North America.
Destroyed Henry IV's power base.
The Huguenots were forced to leave France starting from 1681, when king Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes and by the issue of Edict of Fontainebleau ordered an actual persecution of them, which lasted for about two decades . It was calculated that 800-900,000 Huguenots left France to migrate, seeking asylum in the Protestant states of Europe, in South Africa and North America.
the "huguenots" were the French protestants ; many of them choose to leave France and went away to the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, or the USA. The noun Forest Hill comes from instance from the huguenot Jesse de Forest who left northern France and settled in New York.
In general, Catholic Europe and the Catholic monarchies didn't want any heretics in their realm. The persecution started in the Middle Ages with the Albigensian Crusade, who were the ancestors of hte Huguenots, and didn't end until the Huguenots had left France. You can read more about this in a book entitled: 'Huguenots and Jews of the Languedoc'. In the late 17th century King Louis XIV threatened to execute anyone who didn't believe what he believed. The Huguenots fled to many different countries around the globe, but many did come to the U.S. and Canada.
They spoilt national unity as Louis wanted to create 'une foi' which was Catholicism and so they were not part of it and so challenged his absolutism. They were concentrated in the areas: Poitou, Dauphine, Languedocand Navarre.Louis wanted the title of the Most Christian King; he wanted to gain this title by persecuting the Protestants or converting them.Madame de Maintenon convinced Louis that his sexual promiscuity was unpleasing to God, and that he could only put matters right by converting heretics.The Holy Roman Emperor was regarded as the great Christian leader which irritated Louis as he wanted this title.The Holy Roman Emperor almost singlehandedly protected Europefrom the Turks (who were Muslim)He felt that he was doing them a favour as he felt they'd chosen the wrong spiritual beliefs and that they'd be damned if they didn't convert to CatholicismAt his coronation he swore he'd extirpate heresyHe was under pressure from the devots which was a pressure group (of devout Catholics) who were run by archbishop Bossuet to convert HuguenotsIt was an opportunity for him to demonstrate to everyone including the Pope how Catholic he wasThe memory of the siege at La Rochelle (1626-27 Louis XIII vs. Huguenots) when the Huguenots were attacked by the Catholics. Showed they had a strong military and posed a possible threat to Louis' 'une foi' and to security, felt they were getting too strong
people from France and Britain came defeat the Germanarme but the goodgus where defeated so they where Left on a beach and the beach is called dunkerck
Left Party - France - was created in 2008-12.
He invited Paul Gauguin to Arles. They tried to work together for a while, then gave up and Gauguin left.
After they were kidnapped and brought to france by Jaques cartier, they died later on because they were left homeless and killed by the royal dragoons,a type of elite french guards
they left France deeply in debt
Wherever kings maintained allegiance to the Catholic Church and had the power to do so, they persecuted and slaughtered those who had left the Catholic faith. For example, in the Netherlands, a series of proclamations made first the preaching or printing, later even the possession of Lutheran books a capital crime.In France, King Francis proclaimed his allegiance to the Catholic Faith and ordered the extermination of the Waldensians. The Protestants increased in number and from 1562 to 1598 there were eight religious civil wars, in which many Protestants died. On St Bartholomew’s Day in 1572, 8,000 Huguenots were killed in Paris, plus many more in the provinces. In 1576, by the Peace of Monsieur, the Huguenots were given permission to worship throughout France except in the vicinity of Paris. More persecutions followed and, towards the end of the following century, Huguenots fled the country.