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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HuguenotsHuguenots - Wikipedia

    Há 6 dias · Huguenot rebellions in the 1620s resulted in the abolition of their political and military privileges. They retained the religious provisions of the Edict of Nantes until the rule of Louis XIV, who gradually increased persecution of Protestantism until he issued the Edict of Fontainebleau (1685).

  2. Há 2 dias · This is a list of wars that began between 1500 and 1799. Other wars can be found in the historical lists of wars and the list of wars extended by diplomatic irregularity. Major conflicts of this era include the Italian Wars and Thirty Years' War in Europe, the Kongo Civil War in Africa, the Qing conquest of the Ming in Asia, the ...

  3. Há 1 dia · History of Spain - Wikipedia. Contents. hide. (Top) Prehistory. Early history of the Iberian Peninsula. Roman Hispania (2nd century BC – 5th century AD) Gothic Hispania (5th–8th centuries) Islamic al-Andalus and the Christian Reconquest (8th–15th centuries) al-Andalus Reconquest. Early Modern Spain. Spain under the Bourbons, 1715–1808.

  4. 15 de mai. de 2024 · Pilgrim Fathers, in American colonial history, settlers of Plymouth, Massachusetts, the first permanent colony in New England (1620). Of the 102 colonists, 35 were members of the English Separatist Church (a radical faction of Puritanism) who had earlier fled to Leiden, the Netherlands, to escape persecution at home.

  5. 29 de mai. de 2024 · He has also mined the Parliamentary materials from the 1620s, those for the Great Council of Peers which met in the autumn of 1640 and those for the early stages of the Long Parliament in 1640–2 to good effect.

  6. Há 2 dias · 2.The 1620s: Dr Mortimer argues that the book neglects to provide a detailed account of the 1620s, a period of ideological polarisation (patriots and royalists, in Filmer’s terms); and so leaves the reader ‘wondering how a civil war could possibly have occurred’.

  7. Há 5 dias · Sir Dudly Diggs, knight, prisoner in the Fleet. SP 16/47 f. 10 (1627) Peter Canon. SP 16/47 f. 14 (1627) Sir Robert Killigrew, knight, captain of the fort of Pendennis in Cornwall. SP 16/49 f. 10 (1627) James Wallace, Scotsman. SP 16/49 f. 16 (1627) Simeon Fincham and John Dover, prisoners in the Fleet.