This article aims to analyse the role of two religious men in the context of the Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre of 1572, which took place in Paris but shortly thereafter extended all over the kingdom, namely the Catholic Juan de Maldonado and the Protestant Hugues Sureau de Rosier. In the case of Maldonado, the focus is on his demonological ideas, but also on the way in which he dealt with Sureau’s vicissitudes after the massacre.
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