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Many Huguenot preachers denounced the Catholic Church as the Anti-Christ and called for an unending struggle against it. The Massacres made the French Protestants more committed to their struggles. As a result, the war became even bloodier and more brutal.<ref> Fernández-Armesto, and Wilson, p. 237</ref> The religious wars that followed the St Bartholomew Day’s Massacre became even bloodier and the rules of war no longer applied to the conflict. The Huguenots knew that they faced extermination if they were defeated and this prolonged the conflict. After the St Bartholomew Day’s massacre, France suffered through a series of religious wars until 1598.<ref>Fernández-Armesto, and Wilson, p. 229</ref>
====ConclusionHow did St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre change France?====
The St Bartholomew Day’s Massacre resulted in the death of up to 10,000 people. It changed the nature of the religious war in France. The wars became more vicious after the massacre the numbers of people killed rose greatly. This reflected the sectarian hatreds that were unleashed by the massacres. The massacre was intended to end the war or at least to weaken the Huguenot cause.
The massacre did weaken the French Protestants, but they rallied and fought fiercely. After the massacre, the Huegnots Huguenots knew that defeat meant extermination. They were also decidedly more militant and less willing, to compromise. The massacre did not end the war as expected by Guise and others it only prolonged the war. From a strategic point of view, the massacre was a complete failure. The religious wars dragged on until 1598 and by the time some historians based on parish records believe that some three million people died as a direct and indirect consequence of the sectarian conflicts.<ref> Dienfendorf, p. 155</ref>
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