Huguenots
was the name applied to French Protestants in the 16th century and was
probably a corruption of the German eidgenossen. 'confederats'.
They
were severely persecuted in France under Francis I and Henry II, and following
the massacre of St. Bartholomew in 1572 many Huguenots came as refugees
to settle in England, mainly to London and to Canterbury where they founded
their church (now in the Black Prince's Chantry) in the Crypt of Canterbury
Cathedral.
The
thirty years war which followed failed to exterminate them. Although in
1598 Henry IV had granted tolerance by the Edict of Nantes, in 1685 Louis
XIV revoked the Edict and the forcible conversion and persecutions started
again with renewed vigour with the result that about 400,000 people left
France. Many migrated to England, others to Ireland, elsewhere in Europe,
and America
.
The
Huguenots were well received in England and they brought many skills in
finance, industry and arts with them, contributing to the rise of British
industry and trade.
More
information on Huguenots and Huguenot ancestry can be obtained from the
Huguenot Society and through the Huguenot Library held at University College,
London.

The
Proclamation of the Edict of Nantes 23rd February 1598 by Henry IV of
France, from a miniature contained in a triptych of the Huguenot Ancestry
of TRH Prince William and Prince Henry of Wales, researched by Royston
Gambier, F.S.G., engrossed and illuminated by D.N.Chesters O.B.E., Writer
to Her Majesty's Remembrancer, and photographed by Trevor J. Moore.
History of the French Hospital