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Answer for the clue "Embrace superior manner that’s upset French protestant ", 8 letters:
huguenot

Alternative clues for the word huguenot

Word definitions for huguenot in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Huguenot was a name given to French Calvinists from the 16th to the 18th century. Huguenot may also refer to: Huguenot, Staten Island , a neighborhood on Staten Island, New York Huguenot (Staten Island Railway station) Huguenot, Virginia , an unincorporated ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1562, from Middle French Huguenot , according to French sources originally political, not religious. The name was applied in 1520s to Genevan partisans opposed to the Duke of Savoy (who joined Geneva to the Swiss Confederation), and it is probably an alteration ...

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Huguenot \Hu"gue*not\, n. [F., properly a dim. of Hugues. The name is probably derived from the Christian name (Huguenot) of some person conspicuous as a reformer.] (Eccl. Hist.) A French Protestant of the period of the religious wars in France in the 16th ...

Usage examples of huguenot.

English Presbyterian divine, was born of Huguenot descent in Walbrook, London, in February 1600, and educated at Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, where his opposition to the Arminian party, then powerful in that society, excluded him from a fellowship.

French Huguenots, the Old Americans considered here are mostly of British ancestry, and their head form corresponds rather closely to that of the English of the present day.

I told him briefly, and he listened in silence, until I gave him information of De Ganache and the Huguenots at Richelieu.

Whilst waiting for Pierrebon he told me that Montluc had utterly broken the Huguenot leader De Ganache near Richelieu, and taken him prisoner.

Paul Mascarene, a French Huguenot of Boston, has mounted guard with two hundred and fifty New England volunteers.

The same letter gives the names of the three eminent French pastors ministering to the communities of Huguenot refugees at New Rochelle and New York and elsewhere in the neighborhood.

French Huguenots, which just before and just after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes brought to New York and its neighborhood a half-dozen congregations, accompanied by pastors whose learning, piety, and devotion to the work of Christ were worthy of that school of martyrdom in which they had been trained.

I am here to present to the queen regent a letter from our Queen Elizabeth, offering to act as a mediator between the Catholic government and the Huguenots, in the hope of bringing about a peace.

The throne, once the strongest ally of the church, was now supported chiefly by the Huguenots who had formerly been in rebellion.

Jesuits in the Clementinum, but since then it had been soundly refuted by Casaubon, a Switzer, a Huguenot who had come to England at the invitation of King James.

On such nights, the dingy dwellings of Spittalfields and Whitechapel still seem to belong to the Huguenot silk-weavers, the prim backstreets of Kensington appear eternally Edwardian, and the houses of the Chelsea embankment, primped with gothic trimmings and standing in Sunday finery like a charabanc of ruddy-faced matrons, remain the province of the Pre-Raphaelites.

Austin found her authority for saying that Priscilla Mullens was of a Huguenot family, in Dr.

From what I hear the soldiers say there is no chance of a battle at present, for the Huguenot army have drawn off to a distance, seeing that Paris is revictualled and that there is no chance of taking it.

And our wool that was sold in Rome in the time of Juvenal and our flax and our damask from the looms of Antrim and our Limerick lace, our tanneries and our white flint glass down there by Ballybough and our Huguenot poplin that we have since Jacquard de Lyon and our woven silk and our Foxford tweeds and ivory raised point from the Carmelite convent in New Ross, nothing like it in the whole wide world.

Vickars had borne his part in the charges of the Huguenot cavalry, but as the company to which he belonged was in the rear of the battalia, he had no personal encounters with the enemy.