Paris is well worth a Mass

E176974

"Paris is well worth a Mass" is a famous phrase attributed to Henry IV of France, reflecting his pragmatic decision to convert to Catholicism in order to secure the French crown and peace in his kingdom.

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Label Occurrences
Paris is well worth a Mass canonical 1

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Statements (26)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historical quotation
political aphorism
approximateDate late 16th century
associatedWithCountry France
associatedWithEvent French Wars of Religion
associatedWithPlace Paris
attributedTo Henry IV of France
certaintyOfAttribution disputed
commonlyCitedIn biographies of Henry IV of France
studies of early modern European politics
works on religious conversion and statecraft
context Henry IV’s decision to convert from Protestantism to Catholicism
end of religious conflict and consolidation of royal power in France
describes trade-off between religious conviction and political necessity
hasReputationAs symbol of compromise for power
language French
notionallySpokenBy Henry IV of France
surface form: Henry of Navarre
oftenClassifiedAs apocryphal quotation
refersTo accession of Henry IV of France to the French throne
conversion of Henry IV of France to Catholicism
political pragmatism in matters of religion
relatedTo Catholic–Protestant conflict in France
Edict of Nantes
theme pragmatic monarchy
religious tolerance as a means to political stability
usedAs proverbial expression of political expediency

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Henry IV of France notableQuote Paris is well worth a Mass