Louis Xiv's Freedom Of Religion

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In addition, to government control Louis XIV wanted religious control. He felt that the French Huguenots and the Protestants did not belong in France due to the fact that France was predominately Catholic (447). He abolished the Edict of Nanes, which allowed Huguenots and Protestants rights in France. In 1685, he published the Edict of Fontainebleau, which destroyed freedom of religion (447). Although, he was able to placed France in a powerful position, to the common people it meant nothing, as eventually France dealt with financial issues (447). Throughout the 17th Century, scientific learning had become extremely popular. It was a different way that skilled Europeans looked and thought about the natural world (476). It was based

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