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* Support the release of new history lessons on the Patreon platform — / eidelman * Support the release of new history lessons by becoming a sponsor on YouTube / @tamaraeidelmanhistory Follow us on social networks, where we regularly publish additional stories: * Subscribe to our Telegram channel — https://t.me/eidelman * Subscribe to our Facebook page — / eidelmantn * Subscribe to our VKontakte page — https://vk.com/eidelmantn - Catherine de Medici is one of the greatest French queens, who tried to pursue a policy of religious tolerance in the turbulent and difficult 16th century, to maintain peace in a country where religious wars raged, but it so happened that she remained in history primarily as an evil and forged poisoner? How so? This is what the new issue of "History Lessons with Tamara Eidelman" is about -- List of literature for the issue: FICTION: 1. A. Dumas. Two Dianas 2. A. Dumas. Queen Margot 3. G. Mann. The Young Years of King Henry IV 4. P. Merimee. Chronicle of the Reign of Charles IX SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE 1. P. Uvarov. Under the Vaults of the Palace of Justice. Seven Legal Collisions in 16th Century France. 2. South Dossi. V. Shishkin. Religious Wars in 16th Century France.