French Wars of Religion
English Reformation
Catholic Reformation
Dutch Revolt and Thirty Years War
100
He converted to Catholicism when he became king of France, bringing the French Wars of Religion to an end.
Henry IV (or Henry of Navarre)
100
He wrote A Defense of the Seven Sacraments.
King Henry VIII
100
A new religious order in the Reformation period focused on education and loyalty to the pope.
the Jesuits
100
He experienced some success in suppressing the spread of Protestantism in the Netherlands, in part because he was a native of the region.
Charles V
200
The Protestants leaders killed in Paris during the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre had been assembled to attend this.
A wedding
200
Mary I’s marriage to the ruler of this country created tension in England.
Spain – Philip II
200
Name of the meeting of Catholic leaders (1545-1563) that made important decisions about Catholic belief and practice.
Council of Trent
200
This activity spreads in the Netherlands in 1566-67, signaling the popularity of Protestantism.
Iconoclasm – or destruction of images
300
This declaration in 1598 provided arranged for the temporary co-existence of Protestants and Catholics in France.
The Edict of Nantes
300
This ruler remained Catholic while their kingdom became Protestant.
Mary, Queen of Scots
300
Catholic missionaries faced brutal persecution here in the early 1600s.
Japan
300
Dutch leader known of tight lips and successful military conquests in 1570s and 1580s.
William of Orange, or William the Silent
400
This family led the die-hard Catholics in the French Wars of religion.
The Guise
400
The break-up (dissolution) of these brought significant money to the English crown.
monasteries
400
Protestant term for books written in Greek and included by Catholics in the canon of Scripture.
Apocrypha
400
Fancy name for the growth of Protestant and Catholic identities – especially in German territories.
confessionalization
500
The event that turned the king of France against Reformation ideas in 1534.
The Affair of the Placards
500
This ruler scared Puritans by marrying a Catholic, making Arminians bishops, and tolerating Catholicism.
Charles I
500
They were formed by the Catholic church to address particular issues of concern.
"congregations"
500
Not usually know for military conquest, this country dominated the third phase of the Thirty Years War under the leadership of Gustavus Adolphus.
Sweden
M
e
n
u