June 28 – Lemaistre, president of the Parlement of Paris, decides that the Salic law and the Catholic rule of the kings of France under the fundamental laws of the kingdom are to be judged equally.[2]
July 31 – Three-month truce was signed at la Villette between the king and the League.[3] One by one, towns rally to the king.
August 27 – Pierre Barrière attempts to assassinate the king at Melun; he is denounced by Séraphin Banchi, the Dominican priest to whom he confesses, arrested and on August 31 executed on the breaking wheel and suffers dismemberment.[2]
November 8 – Assembly of Protestants of the kingdom at Mantes (ends 23 January 1594).[9]
^ abcdMironneau, Paul (2005). Henri IV. Éditions Jean-paul Gisserot. p. 146. ISBN9782877477857.
^ abcdLe Roux, Nicolas (13 May 2013). La Faveur du Roi: Mignons et courtisans au temps des derniers valois (vers 1547–vers 1589). Éditions Champ Vallon. ISBN9782876737518.
^Hugo, Abel (1843). France Historique et Monumentale. Vol. 5. H.-L. Delloye. p. 51.
^Castex, Jean-Claude (2012). Dictionnaire des Batailles navales franco-anglaises. Les Éditions du Phare-Ouest. p. 59. ISBN9782921668194.
^Foucault, Martin (1875). Les Seigneurs de Laval. Laval: Imp. E. Jamin. p. 371.
^Bèze, Théodore (2010). Correspondance. Tome XXXIV, 1593. Librairie Droz. p. 165. ISBN9782600314688.
^Lacotte, Daniel (2016). Les Mots célèbres de l'histoire. Albin Michel. ISBN9782226379887.