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Repression and persecution
of the Reformed Church (1685-1700) -
The sentences imposed
on Protestants -
Death penalty
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Sentenced to the galleys
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The prison sentence
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Inscriptions
sur des murs de prison -
The Tower of Constance in Aigues Mortes (Gard)
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Marie Durand (1711-1776)
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The Huguenot memorial
in Ile Sainte-Marguerite
Royal repression against the Protestants
The revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 made any Protestant worship illegal, for instance temples were demolished and pastors expelled. As for the Protestants, they were forbidden to leave the Kingdom.
The persecutions against them were deemed absolutely legitimate at the time according to the interpretation of Luke’s verse 14:23 ‘compel them to come in’: the Protestants were considered heretic and schismatic and had to be brought back within the Catholic Church. Death penalty, sentence to galleys for men, to prison for women…The repressive measures were varied, but failed to defeat Protestant resistance, as in the example of Marie Durand who was locked up in Aigues-Mortes for 38 years.