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Huguenot
(redirected from Huguenot Weavers)

   Also found in: Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Hu·gue·not  (hyg-nt)
n.
A French Protestant of the 16th and 17th centuries.

[French, from Old French huguenot, member of a Swiss political movement, alteration (influenced by Bezanson Hugues (c. 1491-1532?), Swiss political leader) of dialectal eyguenot, from German dialectal Eidgenosse, confederate, from Middle High German eitgenz : eit, oath (from Old High German eid) + genz, companion (from Old High German ginz).]

Hugue·notic adj.
Hugue·notism n.

Huguenot [ˈhjuːgəˌnəʊ -ˌnɒt]
n
(Historical Terms) a French Calvinist, esp of the 16th or 17th centuries
adj
(Christianity / Protestantism) designating the French Protestant Church
[from French, from Genevan dialect eyguenot one who opposed annexation by Savoy, ultimately from Swiss German Eidgenoss confederate; influenced by Hugues, surname of 16th-century Genevan burgomaster]
Huguenotic  adj
Huguenotism  n
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.Huguenot - a French Calvinist of the 16th or 17th centuriesHuguenot - a French Calvinist of the 16th or 17th centuries
Calvinist, Genevan - an adherent of the theological doctrines of John Calvin
Translations
Huguenot [ˈhjuːgənəʊ]
A. ADJhugonote
B. Nhugonote/a m/f
Huguenot
adjhugenottisch
nHugenotte m, → Hugenottin f


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She points out that the Huguenot weavers who once lived in houses such as her own also built Tenter Ground when weaving at their homes became difficult.
Huguenot weavers settled in the south east and became part of English society.
The programme features interviews and reconstructions, including an account of the hostilities experienced by a family of Huguenot weavers who arrived from France in the 1670s
 
 
 
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