Rayon Christianisme
Protestant resistance in Southern France, 1545-1945

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 180 pages
Poids : 193 g
Dimensions : 12cm X 19cm
ISBN : 978-2-35618-137-4
EAN : 9782356181374

Protestant resistance in Southern France, 1545-1945


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Broché 180 pages

Quatrième de couverture

Protestant resistance

The Huguenot tradition in southern France

Strategically located between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean, the South of France has always been a melting pot of people and ideas... No wonder then that as soon as the Reformation started, it received and enthusiastic welcome in many of the town and villages and soon swept most of the Southern half of France. In many of these villages, the descendants of the Cathars and the Vaudois had been living quietly and were among the first to join the new churches.

But challenging the spiritual, and in some cases the secular, power of Rome wasn't without danger ; soon the « heretics » were being persecuted, harassed and burned with their seditious books. As the French Kings (with the notable exception of Henry IV), sided with the Pope, a culture of resistance developed and has remained to these days.

Biographie

Richard Maltby, retired Professor of History at King's School in Canterbury, takes us through the villages, towns and hideouts of the Huguenots and follows their actions of resistance to tyranny, from the Renaissance to WWII. His book shows the clear link and shared ideas between the Huguenots who fought Louis XIVth and their descendants who hid Jewish children and fought nazi occupation forces.

Avis des lecteurs

Du même auteur : Richard Maltby

Protestant resistance in Southern France : 1545-1945

Camisards of the Cévennes : a lesson in resistance