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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aFoa, Jérémie
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aDo Protestants and Catholics have anything in common?
260 _c2017.
500 _a37
520 _aThis article questions the political ability of common actors from small towns in the kingdom of France to resist violence during the first wars of religion (1560-1574). When everything at the national level pushed them to consider themselves as enemies, as “Protestants” or “Catholics” who had nothing in common, how did the ordinary citizens of these villages live together? To answer this question, this article analyzes “friendship pacts,” signed between Protestants and Catholics when the wars resumed on a national level. In these agreements, the signatories promised to behave like “brothers, friends, and fellow citizens” and, by writing a heterogeneous inventory of “what they had in common,” they invented what, in spite of the religious rupture, would make them “stand together.”
690 _awars of religion
690 _aconfessional coexistence
690 _afriendship pacts
690 _apacification
786 0 _nPolitix | o  119 | 3 | 2017-12-11 | p. 31-51 | 0295-2319
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-politix-2017-3-page-31?lang=en&redirect-ssocas=7080
999 _c533769
_d533769