huguenot - meaning and definition. What is huguenot
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What (who) is huguenot - definition


Huguenots         
  • broken on the wheel]] at Toulouse, 9 March 1762
  • The Huguenot cross
  • Expulsion from [[La Rochelle]] of 300 Protestant families in November 1661
  • Etching of Fort Caroline
  • French Huguenot Church]] in [[Charleston, South Carolina]]
  • Catholic League]]), by [[Toussaint Dubreuil]], circa 1600
  • The [[Huguenot Monument]] of [[Franschhoek]] in [[Western Cape]] province, [[South Africa]]
  • Cork, Munster]]
  • [[Huguenot cross]]
  • A Huguenot on St. Bartholomew's Day]]''
  • Obelisk commemorating the Huguenots in [[Fredericia]], Denmark
  • New Paltz, New York]]
  • The [[St. Bartholomew's Day massacre]] of French Protestants (1572). It was the climax of the [[French Wars of Religion]], which were brought to an end by the [[Edict of Nantes]] (1598). In 1620, persecution was renewed and continued until the [[French Revolution]] in 1789.
  • massacre of Mérindol]] in 1545
  • Huguenots massacring Catholics in the [[Michelade]] in [[Nîmes]]
  • Lutheran-majority area}}
  • [[François Mitterrand]] issued a formal apology to the Huguenots and their descendants on behalf of the French state in 1985
  • Relief by [[Johannes Boese]], 1885: The Great [[Prince-elector]] of Brandenburg-Prussia welcomes arriving Huguenots
  • Battery Park]], [[Manhattan]], New York City
HISTORICAL RELIGIOUS GROUP OF FRENCH PROTESTANTS
Hugenot; Parpaillot; Hugonaut; French Huguenot; French Huguenots; French Hugenot; Hugenotten; Huguenot descent; Hugenots; The Huguenots; Huguenot settlements in Ireland; Huguenot; Dutch Huguenot; Dutch Huguenots; Hugonauts; Calvinism in France
The Huguenots ( , also , ) were a religious group of French Protestants who held to the Reformed, or Calvinist, tradition of Protestantism. The term, which may be derived from the name of a Swiss political leader, the Genevan burgomaster Bezanson Hugues (1491–1532?
Huguenot         
  • broken on the wheel]] at Toulouse, 9 March 1762
  • The Huguenot cross
  • Expulsion from [[La Rochelle]] of 300 Protestant families in November 1661
  • Etching of Fort Caroline
  • French Huguenot Church]] in [[Charleston, South Carolina]]
  • Catholic League]]), by [[Toussaint Dubreuil]], circa 1600
  • The [[Huguenot Monument]] of [[Franschhoek]] in [[Western Cape]] province, [[South Africa]]
  • Cork, Munster]]
  • [[Huguenot cross]]
  • A Huguenot on St. Bartholomew's Day]]''
  • Obelisk commemorating the Huguenots in [[Fredericia]], Denmark
  • New Paltz, New York]]
  • The [[St. Bartholomew's Day massacre]] of French Protestants (1572). It was the climax of the [[French Wars of Religion]], which were brought to an end by the [[Edict of Nantes]] (1598). In 1620, persecution was renewed and continued until the [[French Revolution]] in 1789.
  • massacre of Mérindol]] in 1545
  • Huguenots massacring Catholics in the [[Michelade]] in [[Nîmes]]
  • Lutheran-majority area}}
  • [[François Mitterrand]] issued a formal apology to the Huguenots and their descendants on behalf of the French state in 1985
  • Relief by [[Johannes Boese]], 1885: The Great [[Prince-elector]] of Brandenburg-Prussia welcomes arriving Huguenots
  • Battery Park]], [[Manhattan]], New York City
HISTORICAL RELIGIOUS GROUP OF FRENCH PROTESTANTS
Hugenot; Parpaillot; Hugonaut; French Huguenot; French Huguenots; French Hugenot; Hugenotten; Huguenot descent; Hugenots; The Huguenots; Huguenot settlements in Ireland; Huguenot; Dutch Huguenot; Dutch Huguenots; Hugonauts; Calvinism in France
·noun A French Protestant of the period of the religious wars in France in the 16th century.
huguenot         
  • broken on the wheel]] at Toulouse, 9 March 1762
  • The Huguenot cross
  • Expulsion from [[La Rochelle]] of 300 Protestant families in November 1661
  • Etching of Fort Caroline
  • French Huguenot Church]] in [[Charleston, South Carolina]]
  • Catholic League]]), by [[Toussaint Dubreuil]], circa 1600
  • The [[Huguenot Monument]] of [[Franschhoek]] in [[Western Cape]] province, [[South Africa]]
  • Cork, Munster]]
  • [[Huguenot cross]]
  • A Huguenot on St. Bartholomew's Day]]''
  • Obelisk commemorating the Huguenots in [[Fredericia]], Denmark
  • New Paltz, New York]]
  • The [[St. Bartholomew's Day massacre]] of French Protestants (1572). It was the climax of the [[French Wars of Religion]], which were brought to an end by the [[Edict of Nantes]] (1598). In 1620, persecution was renewed and continued until the [[French Revolution]] in 1789.
  • massacre of Mérindol]] in 1545
  • Huguenots massacring Catholics in the [[Michelade]] in [[Nîmes]]
  • Lutheran-majority area}}
  • [[François Mitterrand]] issued a formal apology to the Huguenots and their descendants on behalf of the French state in 1985
  • Relief by [[Johannes Boese]], 1885: The Great [[Prince-elector]] of Brandenburg-Prussia welcomes arriving Huguenots
  • Battery Park]], [[Manhattan]], New York City
HISTORICAL RELIGIOUS GROUP OF FRENCH PROTESTANTS
Hugenot; Parpaillot; Hugonaut; French Huguenot; French Huguenots; French Hugenot; Hugenotten; Huguenot descent; Hugenots; The Huguenots; Huguenot settlements in Ireland; Huguenot; Dutch Huguenot; Dutch Huguenots; Hugonauts; Calvinism in France
n.
French Protestant.
Examples of use of huguenot
1. A few hundred yards away, there is a Huguenot church for 17th–century immigrants, now converted into a mosque.
2. His mother was a strictly brought–up and gifted amateur pianist from a middle–class Huguenot family.
3. Frederick Manus De Butts was born on April 17, 1'16, into a Huguenot family that had left the Netherlands for Ireland in the 17th century.
4. The Brick Lane mosque was once a chapel for Huguenot refugees and was later converted to a synagogue when the area had a thriving Jewish community.
5. Shortly before 1.30pm, the streets filled with men on their way to pray at London Jamme Masjid, a mosque that was formerly used as a Jewish synagogue and a French Huguenot chapel.