The Edict of Compiègne (French: Édit de…
July 1557 CE
The Edict of Compiègne (French: Édit de Compiègne), issued from his Château de Compiègne by Henry II of France on July 24, 1557, applies the death penalty for all convictions of relapsed and obstinate "sacramentarians", for those who go to Geneva or publish books there, for iconoclast blasphemers against images, and even for illegal preaching or participation in religious gatherings, whether public or private.
It is the third in a series of increasingly severe punishments for expressions of Protestantism in France, which have for an aim the extirpation of the Reformation.
By raising the stakes, which now literally become matters of life and death, the Edict has the result of precipitating the long religious crisis in France and hastening the onset of armed civil war between armies mustered on the basis of religion, the series of French Wars of Religion, which will not be settled until Henry IV's edict of toleration, the Edict of Nantes, in 1598.