Page:The life & times of Master John Hus by Count Lützow.djvu/423

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INDEX

Adamites, sect of fanatics, their orgies, 360; “turlupins” of France their forerunners, 360; destroyed by Zizka, 360; have been ignorantly identified with the church-reformers, 360, 361
Albert, Duke of Austria, succeeds Sigismund as King of Bohemia, 368
Albert of Unicov, elected Archbishop of Prague, 147; his early life, 148
Albik, Archbishop of Prague, resigns his office, 169; his traffic in ecclesiastical dignities, 170; royal commissioner at church conference, 173
Alexander V., Pope, 116; bull issued by against heretical preachers, 121
Anna, or Anezka, of Stitny, 43, 76
Answer to the Writings of Stanislas, by Hus, 206, 207
Antioch, Patriarch of, his answer to the Bohemian nobles, 242, 243
Appeal from the Pope to Jesus Christ, by Hus, 202, 203
Basle, General Council at, 366; Compacts accepted by, 367; and signed, 367, 368
Benedict XIII., Pope, (see church, schism in)
Bernard of Città di Castello, appointed by Council of Constance to report on Hus, 222
Bethlehem Chapel, in Prague, founded for preaching in the national language, 74; Hus appointed preacher, 74; account of, 75, 76; attack on, 161; famed for its singing, 300
Bible, reading of and devotion to among the Bohemian reformers, 3, 16, 27, 40, 48, 350; Bohemian translations of, 297, 298
Bila Hora, battle of, 336, 345, 372
Bohemia, its connection with the Eastern Church, 10, 11; persecution in 1620, 10; becomes part of the domain of the Western Church, 11; its state of semi-independence, 11, 12; sides with the German Emperors, 12; increasing power of Rome in, 12, 13; ill conduct of the clergy of, 14, 15; connection of reform movement with national movement in, 18; efforts of the Emperor Charles IV. to reform the clergy in, 22; Hus’s sermon on condition of, 73; Germans in, 77, 78; intellectual advance of in the beginning of the fifteenth century, 78; its attitude towards the Schism, 101, 102; liberty granted to the Bohemians in the university by King Venceslas, 105, 106; reform movement in, an indigenous one, 134; synod of Bohemian clergy in, 168, 170–173; fails to restore peace, 173; further religious warfare in, 176, 177; its evil fame as a heretical country, 179; the religious upheaval in, horror of simony a chief factor in, 187; nobles of, send remonstrances about Hus’s imprisonment, 220, 221; anxiety concerning Hus in, 234; efforts of the nobles at intervention, 236, 238–242; succeed in obtaining the promise of a public hearing for Hus, 243; further remonstrances from, to Sigismund, 260; Hus’s letter to the nation, 264–266; his further letters to the Bohemians, 269–273; last messages to his friends in, 275; national language of, Hus’s desire to preserve, 293, 294, 295; racial antipathy between Bohemians and Germans in, 295; question of language still prominent in, 296; Hus’s effort to introduce church-song in the vernacular, 301; women of, staunch adherents of Hus, 302; relations of with England, 304; rejoicings of national party at King Vladislav’s victory at Tannenberg, 305; indignation in at Hus’s death, 337; national movement in becomes more revolutionary, 337; protest of the nobles forwarded to the Council, 337, 338; confederation of nobles for the defence of liberty, 339; hostile confederation of nobles in, 339, 340; council appoints John the “iron” to suppress heresy in, 342; Taborite movement in, 346; death of the king, 347; short-lived Romanist reaction in, 349; Pope proclaims crusade against, 350; anger of people at this and Sigismund’s cruelty, 351; national uprising in, {{namespace link|352; iconoclasm and cruelty of people, 352; in possession of the Hussites, 356; development of Hus’s doctrines in, 356; fall of democracy in after the battle of Lipan, 359; communism and anarchy encouraged in by the Taborites, 361; almost entirely subdued by

387