The animosity extended markedly in 1690, whilst Bayle’s anonymously-posted Important Advice to Refugees occasioned heated assaults with the aid of using Jurieu, who noticed the paintings as profoundly anti-Protestant. During his preliminary years in Rotterdam, nearly all of Bayle’s writings were centered on attacking Catholic theology and practice, which include General Critique of Maimbourg’s History of Calvinism (1682), Diverse Thoughts at the Occasion of a Comet (1683), and An Entirely Catholic France (1686). The loss of life of Bayle’s father and brothers in 1684 and 1685, and the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, supplied sturdy private motives for Bayle to assault Catholic intolerance. Jurieu noticed the Advice to Refugees, however,