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The Huguenots and other Protestant refugees, 1500-1750 - OCR BMigration to England

Walloons and Huguenots were mostly welcomed and had a significant, lasting impact. Destitute Rhineland Palatines were less welcome and seen as a problem.

Part of HistoryMigrants to Britain c1250 to present

Why Huguenots and other Protestant refugees migrated to England

A map of Europe which illustrates where the key Protestant refugees, Walloons, Huguenots and Paletines, came from

By far the largest group of immigrants in Early Modern England were Protestantrefugees fleeing persecution in European countries. They came in four main waves:

Timeline of the arrival of the Walloons, Huguenots and Paletines' arrival to the UK
  1. The 1560s from what is now Belgium were suffering under the Spanish rule of the Duke of Alba.
  2. After the Massacre of St Bartholomew鈥檚 Day in Paris in 1572, when over 10,000 Protestants were murdered, many fled to England.
  3. A second, larger, wave of Huguenots fled from France in the 1680s when King Louis XIV revoked a previous protecting Protestants and they were again attacked. Many Huguenots had difficult and dangerous journeys, escaping France and crossing to England by sea.
  4. The final wave of Protestant refugees were the from the Middle Rhine, part of which is now Germany. They were suffering under French Catholic landlords and very poor harvests. They came because of a 1708 law, the Foreign Protestants Naturalisation Act, which invited European Protestants to come and settle in Britain. Some Palatines also migrated because they hoped to travel from England to a new life in North America.

The Huguenots arrive in Sussex