Edict of 19 April

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Portrait of Charles, standing in formal dress
Portrait of Charles IX of France, under whom the edict was issued, by François Clouet
Picture of the queen mother, Catherine de Medici in a formal black dress
Portrait of Catherine de' Medici

The Edict of 19 April was a religious edict promulgated by the regency council of Charles IX of France on 19 April 1561. The edict would confirm the decision of the Estates General of 1560-1 as regarded the amnesty for religious prisoners. The edict would however go further in an effort to calm the unrest that was sweeping France, outlawing the use of religious epithets and providing a pathway for religious exiles to return to the country. Despite not being an edict of toleration for Protestantism, the more conservative Catholics would interpret the edict as a concession to the Huguenots, leading to the Parlement of Paris to remonstrate the crown. The edict would be endorsed and furthered in the more sweeping Edict of July a few months later, before it in turn was superseded by the first edict of toleration, the Edict of Saint-Germain.

Prior edicts

The growth of Protestantism in France, under Henry II of France was of great concern to the king. He passed several edicts, hoping to stamp the religion out, with first the Edict of Châteaubriant in 1551, then the Edict of Compiègne in 1557, and finally the Edict of Ecouen in 1559.[1][2] He was not however able to devote his full attentions to the stamping out of the new sect in France, distracted as he was by the Italian Wars. With their conclusion at the Peace of Cateau Cambresis King Henry hoped to change his attentions to matters at home, but an accident during a joust took his life.[3] With the kings sudden death, the young François II took the throne, his policy directed by his maternal uncles, François, Duke of Guise and Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine.[4] They initially sought continuity with the prior regime, passing four more edicts between the death of Henri and February 1560, in which they decreed any house found to have held Protestant worship, would be razed, landlords who harboured Protestant tenants, would be prosecuted.[5]

The crisis that ensued from the Amboise conspiracy offered an opportunity for them to change tactics in the face of concerted opposition. The first Edict of Amboise (1560) published a week before the attempt on the castle separated the concept of heresy from that of sedition as two separate crimes, with those convicted of the former prior to the edicts publication, to be freed on amnesty.[6] The Edict of Romorantin continued in this more liberal framework, transferring the trial of heresy cases to the purview of the ecclesiastical courts, which lacked the ability to sentence defendants to death. While this did not abolish the death penalty for heresy as they could still refer cases to the Parlements for sentencing, it acted as a de facto abolition of the death penalty for heresy.[7]

Estates general and the death of François II

The Italian wars had pushed France into serious debt, which combined with the religious crisis and young king, left the government of France on very shaky footing.[8] As a result in August the Guise oversaw the convocation of the Estates General, to meet in December, to help solve France's various issues.[9] Before they could meet however, the young François acquired an ear infection while out hunting, his condition worsened, and he died on 5 December.[10] This created a new crisis as while he had been young, he had been technically old enough to rule, whereas now, his brother Charles would require a regency council. Catherine de' Medici using the leverage of the imprisoned Louis, Prince of Condé, negotiated Antoine de Bourbon out of his rights as first prince of the blood to the regency, securing it for herself.[11]

While the estates were unable to come to any broad solution to France's religious crisis, it was agreed, that an amnesty, upon the lines of that of Amboise be issued for all religious prisoners, of which there had been a considerable increase during the tumult that followed the conspiracy of Amboise across France.[12]

Crisis

Courtly crisis

Protestant growth in France, continued apace in early 1561, and with it a violent Catholic backlash.[13] The Catholic fear was only furthered by what they saw at court, with the return of Condé to council in early 1561, and the more open Protestantism of Gaspard II de Coligny and Odet de Coligny.[14] This turbulence peaked in the month of April, during Easter, with the crown selecting Jean de Monluc as the courts Lenten preacher, a bishop known to be highly sympathetic to Protestantism. This, combined with libellous rumours about the young king singing psalms (an activity Catholics would not engage in at this time) convinced many conservative Catholics in the court that the monarchy was becoming Protestant.[15]

The religiously conservative Anne de Montmorency and the duke of Guise, outraged at Monluc's sermon, travelled together into the servants quarters on Easter Sunday, to hear a more reliably Catholic sermon. They would follow this up with an exchanging of the kiss of peace under the auspices of François de Tournon, temporarily putting their long running feud on hold to work together against the crown becoming Protestant. Shortly thereafter, both families and their retinues departed court, leaving Catherine politically isolated with Condé and Coligny.[16]

The situation in Paris in particular was fast deteriorating in April 1561. Protestants, growing in confidence from their influence at court, began more openly meeting to worship in the city, gathering in the Pre-aux-Clercs to hear Easter sermons. Noble Protestants also met in the house of the Duke of Longjumeau, among them Léonor d'Orléans, duc de Longueville, to hear sermons, to the knowledge and apathy of the court. This infuriated many Catholic students, who marched on the residence. Longjumeau, aware of this, stocked arms in his house, and when the angry crowd approached, he and the others inside, fought their way out of the building, leaving several dead and dozens wounded. Longueville, angry at this popular intrusion on his residence, appealed to the Parlement to punish the students responsible. The Parlement prohibited the students from further attempts on his property, but also declared to Longueville, that his property would be forfeit if he did not leave Paris, and exile himself to his chateau, which he promptly did.[17]

The Parlement, distraught at the crisis in the city, deputised President Christophe de Thou and Procureur Général Bourdin to travel to Catherine to implore her and the chancellor, Michel de l'Hôpital to find a solution to this wave of unrest, and restore order to the kingdom. On 18 April l'Hôpital presented the edict they had drawn up in response to quiet the unrest.[15]

Terms of the edict

Legacy

References

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