Huguenots

(noun)

Members of the Protestant Reformed Church of France during the 16th and 17th centuries.

Related Terms

  • Lesser Antilles
  • poltroon
  • Pennsylvania Dutch
  • Hugenot

(noun)

The Huguenots were members of the Protestant Reformed Church of France during the 16th and 17th centuries.

Related Terms

  • Lesser Antilles
  • poltroon
  • Pennsylvania Dutch
  • Hugenot

Examples of Huguenots in the following topics:

  • The Conquest of New York

    • The British continued the Dutch policy of welcoming dissenting Christian sects, including the Huguenot founders of New Rochelle.
  • The Dutch Empire

    • Many New Netherlanders were Walloons, Huguenots, Germans, Scandinavian, and English relocated from New England.
  • The Demographics of the Middle Colonies

    • Other groups included the Welsh, Dutch, Swedes, Swiss, Scots Highlanders, and Huguenots.
  • Exploration and Conquest of the New World

    • The Spanish navy overwhelmed 200 French Huguenot settlers and slaughtered them, even as they surrendered to Spain's superior military.
    • Augustine as an outpost to ensure that French Huguenots were no longer welcome in the area.
  • The French Empire

    • Meanwhile, further to the south, French Protestants, called Huguenots, had the opportunity to leave hostile European lands while advancing French claims to the New World.
  • Unitarianism and Universalism

    • Another important figure in early American Christian Universalism was George de Benneville, a French Huguenot preacher and physician who was imprisoned for advocating Universalism and later emigrated to Pennsylvania, where he continued preaching on the subject.
  • The Carolinas

    • South Carolina was primarily settled by French Huguenot aristocrats, while North Carolina was settled by poor whites moving in from Virginia.
  • European Empires in North America

    • Meanwhile, further to the south, French Protestants, called Huguenots, had the opportunity to leave hostile European lands while advancing French claims to the New World.
  • From New Netherland to New York

    • Eighteenth-century New York City, meanwhile, contained a variety of people and religions—as well as Dutch and English people, and it held French Protestants (Huguenots), Jews, Puritans, Quakers, Anglicans, and a large population of slaves.
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