Page:The life & times of Master John Hus by Count Lützow.djvu/425

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INDEX
389

from Bohemian nobles by, 240, 241; evasive answer sent by, 241; refuses to release Hus, but consents to his public trial, 243; its determination to condemn him, 245, 246; Hus’s trial, 246 seq.; Sigismund’s address to at its close, 259; its decree against utraquism, 266, 267; Hus’s letter about the Council, 273; its final proceedings against Hus, 278–282; its sentence upon, 282; was the council justified in accusing Hus of heresy? 286–288; summons Jerome of Prague to a public abjuration, 329; its fresh act of accusation against, 331; its condemnation of as heretic, 332; its correspondence with Sigismund and the Bohemians, 337; protest of Bohemian nobles to, 337, 338, 339; appoints John the “iron” to suppress heresy in Bohemia, 342

Contra Anglicum Johan. Stokes, by Hus, 165, 317
Contra Occultum Adversarium, by Hus, 165, 317
Contra Octo Doctores, by Hus, 318
Contra Palec, by Hus, 318
Contra Praedicatorem Plznensem, by Hus, 318
Contra Stanislaum de Znoymo, by Hus, 206, 318
Cosmas, Bohemian chronicler, 12
Cossa, Baldassare, Cardinal, elected Pope, 95; early life of, 96, 97; his “reign of terror” as papal legate, 97; his arrest of the Bohemian envoys, 99, 100 (see John XXIII.)
Cunegunda of Wartenberg, 76
D’Ailly, Cardinal, at the Council of Constance, 208; appointed to examine Hus, 237; reasons for his hostility to Hus, 237; his scholastic duel with Hus during the latter’s trial, 248; denounces Hus as an enemy of the temporal authorities, 251, 253; attacks him again about Wycliffe, 255, 256; his final charge to Hus, 256, 257; at the final trial, 279
Dcerka (daughter), one of Hus’s best works, 186, 315, 317
De Corpore Christi, by Hus, 84, 92, 316, 317
De Ecclesia, by Hus, 90, 199–202, 317; accusations against founded on, 222, 224, 252, 253, 254
De Sanguine Christi, by Hus, 84, 92, 316, 317
Didacus, the monk, sent to entrap Hus, 217, 218
Domazlice, Hussite victory at, 366
“Donation of Constantine,” 1, 7
Elias, John, at the Church Conference in Prague, 173
England, its sympathy with the Bohemian movement, 133, 134; is favourable to the Council of Constance, 183; altramontane attitude of its representatives, 183
Ernest of Pardubice, first Archbishop of Prague, 14, 22, 25, 26
Expositura Decalogi, by Hus, 316, 317
Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria, King of Bohemia, 370; endeavours to strengthen the Roman cause, 370; deprives the Bohemian towns of their privileges, 371; establishes Jesuits in Bohemia, 371
Ferdinand, Archduke of Styria, heir to the Bohemian throne, 371; his persecuting policy, 372
Filastre, Cardinal, appointed to examine Hus, 237
France, its struggle with the Papacy, 4; and the schism, 99, 101; embassy sent by to King Venceslas concerning, 104, 105; its opposition at first to the Council at Constance, 183; finally sends representatives, 183
Frederick II., Emperor of Germany, his struggle with the Pope, 2
Frederick, Burgrave of Nuremberg, at Constance, 226
Frederick, Duke of Austria, his agreement with John XXIII., 211, 212; arrives at Constance, 226; helps the pope to escape, 229; imperial ban pronounced on, 230; his defeat by the Swiss, 230; makes his submission to the Emperor, 230
George of Podebrad, utraquist king, takes city of the Taborites, 359; leader of the national party, 368; obtains guardianship of Ladislas Posthumus, 368; elected King of Bohemia, 369; war with King Matthias of Hungary, 369
Germans, in Bohemia, Hus preaches against oppression of, 73, 77; at the University of Prague. 77, 78; their attitude during the schism, 101, 102; their accusations against the “Wycliffites,” 102, 103; their anger at the king’s decree, 107; their departure from Prague, 109, no; racial antipathy between Bohemians and, 295; German inhabitants leave Prague, 348
Germany, its struggle with the Papacy, 2, 3, 4; and the Schism, 101, 225; German princes at the Council of Constance, 225, 226
Gerson, John, denounces the heretical