Page:The life & times of Master John Hus by Count Lützow.djvu/429

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INDEX
393

message concerning, 274–5; visits Hus in prison, 276

John the elder, Lord of Usti, upholder of reform, 168
John (titular), patriarch of Constantinople, appointed by Council of Constance to report on Hus, 222
John of Jandum, 5, 6
John of Jesenice, chosen as representative of Hus at the papal court, 132; protests against Palec’s statement concerning the Roman Church, 174
John of Maintz, Elector Archbishop, rides into Constance in full armour, 226
John (or Hanus) of Millheim, founder of Bethlehem Chapel, 74
John of Paris, 4
John of Pribram, his work on the Taborites, 361; his own idea of a national church, 361, 362
John of Reinstein, nicknamed “Kardinal,” sent by King Venceslas as envoy to Pisa, 101; represents the University of Prague at the Council of Constance, 208; not allowed a hearing, 208
John of Rokycan, chosen by Estates of Bohemia as archbishop, 357; at the meeting at “Spitalske Pole,” 364, 365; at the Council of Basle, 366; pope refuses to recognise, 368, 369
John of Stekna, famous preacher, 71
John of Zelivo, Hussite and utraquist, his popularity in Prague, 346; his sermon, 346; leads the faithful to the town hall, 346; struggle with priests at St. Stephen, 346; is struck by stone, 347; denounces Sigismund, 347, 348; his fanaticism, 359
Joseph II., Emperor, his “Toleranz Patent,” 10
Kanis, Peter, fanatical preacher, 360
Kaplir, Catherine, of Sulevic, 76
Konopist, truce between Taborites and Calixtines concluded at, 364
Korybut, Prince, of Lithuania, repre-sentative of the elected King of Bohemia, 363; mediates between the contending Hussite parties, 364; leads the Calixtines to battle, 365
Kozi Hradek, tower of, Hus at, 167, 175
Kralove Hradec (Königgratz) surrenders to Sigismund, 352
Krasa, John, cruel sentence passed on by Sigismund, 351
Kristan of Prachatice, rector of the university, conference held at house of, 173, 174
Kriz, part founder of the Bethlehem Chapel, 74, 139, 140
Kutna Hora (Kuttenberg), famous decree of, 105; French embassy at for discussion of Schism, 323; Hus and Jerome at, 323; Sigismund receives envoys from Prague at, 352; subdued by the Praguers, 363
Lacko of Kravar, Jerome of Prague’s letter to, 327, 328
Ladislas, King of Naples, supporter of Gregory XII., invades papal states, 149
Ladislas Posthumus, son of King Albert of Bohemia, 368; his death, 369
Lefl, Lord Henry, Hus’s last message to, 275
Leipzig, university founded at, 110
“Letter of majesty,” granting privileges to Lutherans, signed by Rudolph II., 371
Letters, Latin and Bohemian, by Hus, editions and translations of, 313, 314; Constance Letters, 318
Lipany, defeat of Taborites at, 359, 367
Lombard, Peter, his Sententiarum Libri quatuor, Hus’s great work on, 90–92
Loserth, Professor, on Hus and Wycliffe, 18, 20
Louis, son of King Vladislav, succeeds his father, 370; killed at the battle of Mohac, 370
Louis of Bavaria, King of the Germans, his resistance to Rome, 4, 5
Louis, Count Palatine, arrives at Constance, 225, 226; conducts Hus to the stake, 283
Luther, Martin, translation by of some of Hus’s letters, 312
Margaret of Moravia, 33
Margrave of Baden, at Constance, 226
Marik, or Mauritius de Praga, opponent of church-reform, treatise of Hus against, 165, 166
Marsiglio of Padua, his views on the temporal power of the pope, etc., as stated in his Defensor Pacis, 5–9
Martin V. proclaims crusade against Bohemia, 350; enters into negotiations with the Hussites, 366; consents to general council at Basle, 366
Matthew of Janov, reformer, 3, 4, 18, 27, 32, 42, 47; his birth and early life, 48; his academic honours and poverty, 49; receives a canonry of Prague, 49; other dignities conferred on, 50; views preached by, opposed to the teaching of Rome, 50; summoned to appear before the archiepiscopal court and forced to retract, 51; continues his bold preaching, 51, 52; further pro-