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  1. The Academy of Saumur (French: Académie de Saumur) was a Huguenot university at Saumur in western France. It existed from 1593, when it was founded by Philippe de Mornay, until shortly after 1685, when Louis XIV decided on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, ending the limited toleration of Protestantism in France.

  2. 19 de sept. de 2013 · This is the first published monograph on Claude Pajon (1626-1685), the theologian at the origin of the greatest doctrinal controversy within the French Protestant camp in the mid to late...

  3. All those interested in intellectual history, theology, and the history of the church, as well as specialists of French Protestantism and the academy of Saumur.

    • Albert Gootjes
    • September 19, 2013
    • 2013
  4. 1 de dic. de 2016 · During the 17th century, Saumur was a compulsory stage on the Grand Tour of the Dutch, not only because of the local Protestant Academy active until the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, but...

    • Willem Frijhoff
  5. 12 de dic. de 2019 · 29 Placeus’s first offence was in the publication of De statu hominis lapsi ante gratiam [Concerning the State of Fallen Humanity Before Grace] (Saumur, 1640), but it was a common topic of disputation at the Saumur academy: Sarx, “Reformed Protestantism in France,” 227‒60.

    • Nicholas A. Cumming
    • 2020
  6. Moyse Amyraut was born in Bourgueil (Touraine) in 1596. He studied law followed by theology in Saumur, where he was later a minister and in 1633 he was appointed professor of the protestant Academy. He spent most of his life in Saumur and died there on 13 th January 1664.

  7. the Saumur triumvirate: pajon aS Student at the aCademy Claude (iii) pajon, sieur de la dure, was born on 17 February 1626 in France, in the town of romorantin which lies at some 30 kilometers’ dis-tance from Blois in the Loire valley.1 the oldest son of two protestant