Document 9
 In this excerpt, Barbara Tuchman is commenting on the effects of Louis XIV’s policy toward the Huguenots.
 … Recent [196os and 197os scholarly] studies have concluded that the economic damage done
 to France by the Huguenot [French Protestants] emigration has been overrated, it being only
 one element in the larger damage caused by the wars. Of the political damage, however, there
 is no question. The flood of anti-French pamphlets and satires issued by Huguenot printers and
 their friends in all the cities where they settled aroused antagonism to France to new heat. The
 Protestant coalition against France was strengthened when Brandenburg entered into alliance
 with Holland, and the smaller German principalities joined. In France itself the Protestant faith
 was reinvigorated by persecution and the feud with Catholics revived. A prolonged revolt of the
 Camisard Huguenots in the Cévennes, a mountainous region of the south, brought on a cruel
 war of repression, weakening the state. Here and among other Huguenot communities which
 remained in France, a receptive base was created for the Revolution to come.…
 Source: Barbara W. Tuchman, The March of Folly: From Troy to Vietnam, Alfred A. Knopf, 1984
 According to Barbara Tuchman, what was one political consequence of Louis XIV’s policy toward the
 Huguenots?