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  1. The Peace of Prague, dated 30 May 1635 Old Style, was a significant turning point in the Thirty Years' War. Signed by John George I, Elector of Saxony, and Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor, the terms ended Saxony's support for the anti-Imperial coalition led by Sweden.

    • Peace of Prague

      The Peace of Prague (German: Prager Frieden) was a peace...

  2. Peace of Prague may refer to: Peace of Prague (1635) - a peace settlement on 30 May 1635 between the Holy Roman Empire and most of the Empire's Lutheran provinces during the Thirty Years' War; Peace of Prague (1866) - a peace settlement of 23 August 1866 between Prussia and Austria ending the Austro-Prussian War

  3. The Peace of Prague , signed on 30 May 1635, ended Saxony's participation in the Thirty Years War. Other German princes subsequently joined the treaty and although the Thirty Years War continued, it is generally agreed Prague ended it as a war of religion within the Holy Roman Empire.

  4. Ferdinand III’s advocacy. In Ferdinand III. …encouraged negotiations leading to the Peace of Prague (May 1635), by which the emperor Ferdinand II tacitly abandoned his centralist and absolutist plans and restored the status quo of 1627.

  5. The Peace of Prague, signed on 30 May 1635, saw Ferdinand II restore the status quo of 1627. It effectively brought an end to the religious aspect of the Thirty Years War. The main terms of the treaty were: It revoked the Edict of Restitution of 1629 and re-established the terms of the Peace of Augsburg of 1555.

  6. The Peace of Prague (1635) and the Counterreformation in Germany. in Germany* Robert Bireley, S.J. Loyola University of Chicago. The Peace of Prague between the Emperor Ferdinand II. annd the Elector of Saxony was concluded on May 30, 1635, and. subsequently entered into by most German states. It was a.