Frederick III | German, Calvinist & Elector | Britannica
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Frederick III

elector Palatine of the Rhine
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Also known as: Frederick the Pious, Friedrich der Fromme
Frederick III the Pious, detail of a portrait by an unknown artist, c. 1576; in the Historisches Museum der Pfalz, Speyer, Ger.
Frederick III
Byname:
Frederick the Pious
German:
Friedrich der Fromme
Born:
Feb. 14, 1515, Simmern, Ger.
Died:
Oct. 26, 1576, Heidelberg, Rhenish Palatinate (aged 61)

Frederick III (born Feb. 14, 1515, Simmern, Ger.—died Oct. 26, 1576, Heidelberg, Rhenish Palatinate) was the elector Palatine of the Rhine (1559–76) and a leader of the German Protestant princes who worked for a Protestant victory in Germany, France, and the Netherlands.

Frederick adopted Lutheranism in 1546 and Calvinism somewhat later. His Calvinism and his opposition to the Habsburg emperors made his electoral position insecure, because the Peace of Augsburg (1555) covered relations only between Catholics and Lutherans, and the German Protestant princes were unwilling to venture an attack on the emperor. Frustrated in Germany, Frederick sent his sons to aid foreign Protestants, John Casimir to the French Huguenots and Christopher to Holland. By the time Frederick died, the Palatinate had become the centre of German Calvinism.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.