Treaty of Paris (1626)

The Treaty of Paris (1626) was a peace agreement between king Louis XIII and the Huguenots following the outbreak of the Second Huguenot rebellion and the Capture of Ré island.

The Treaty of Paris was signed between the city of La Rochelle and Louis XIII on 5 February 1626, preserving religious freedom but imposing some guaranties against possible future upheavals: La Rochelle was prohibited from keeping a war fleet and had to destroy a fort in Tasdon. The contentious Fort Louis under Royal control near the western gate of the city was supposed to be destroyed "in reasonable time".[1]

Notes

gollark: To some extent, sure, but I think some of it is "if this physical constant was wrong stars wouldn't work" and such.
gollark: Complete omnipotence is logically incoherent anyway.
gollark: Ongoing memetics campaigns.
gollark: Some things are apparently quite precisely tuned for human life, but that doesn't say anything because if they were not precisely tuned for human life there would be no human life observing that they are precisely tuned for human life.
gollark: As far as anyone can tell, it runs fine on physical rules with no ongoing interference.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.