Page:The life & times of Master John Hus by Count Lützow.djvu/432

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396
THE LIFE OF JOHN HUS

bribe, 226; conciliates the council, 227; neglects opportunity of releasing Hus, 229, 230; pronounces imperial ban against Duke Frederick, 230; his treachery to Hus, 236; remonstrances addressed to, by Bohemian nobles, 239, 242; revokes all letters of safeconduct, 242; determines that Hus shall not return to Bohemia, 244, 246; his feigned indignation with the council, 246; Hus’s answer to the Cardinal of Cambray increases his anger against the reformer, 252; his words to Hus after the latter’s speech about unworthy kings, 255; urges Hus to recant for his own political purposes, 257, 260, 261; his address to the council, 259, 260; receives further remonstrances from Bohemia, 260; his treachery referred to by Hus, 263; is present at Hus’s final trial and condemnation, 277, 279; orders the Count Palatine to lead Hus to the stake, 283; indignation against, in Bohemia, 291, 292, 337; discussion of his treachery, 290, 291; hatred of Bohemians towards, 291, 292; hostilities with King of Poland, 307; covert threat to by Bohemian nobles, 338; his letters to Venceslas and Queen Sophia concerning heresy, etc., 340, 341; heir to the throne of Bohemia, 347; his temporising policy after his brother’s death, 348; appoints Queen Sophia regent of Bohemia, 348; his answer to the demands of the Bohemian envoys, 349, 350; persuades the pope to declare a crusade against Bohemia, 350; his cruelty to John Krasa, 351; crosses into Bohemia, 352; marches to Kutna Hora, 352; his ungracious reception of the envoys from Prague, 352; attacks Prague and is repulsed, 354; attempts to relieve the castle of Vysehrad, 355; his defeat, 355, 356; returns from Bohemia, 356; his deposition pronounced by Bohemia, 363; reattacks Bohemia and defeated by Zizka, 363; enters into negotiations with the Hussites, 366; recognised as king by the Bohemians, 368; his short reign and death at Prague, 368

Simon, Cardinal of Rheims, begs Archbishop Conrad to extirpate heresy, 179
Simony, universal in Bohemia, 170; horror of a chief cause of the religious upheaval, 187; Hus’s treatise on, 170, 187; summary of, 188–195; Hus’s closing words, 195, 196; his letter to King of Poland concerning, 307, 308; 317
Slav and Teuton, racial animosity between, 295, 304, 305
Sophia, wife of King Venceslas, 76; appoints Hus her confessor, 82; strongly supports his party, 105; writes to the pope on behalf of freedom of preaching, 128; further remonstrance from, 130; her influence over the king, 182; her fervent adherence to Hus, 302; her indignation at the treatment meted to him, 337; letter from Sigismund to, 341; appointed regent of Bohemia, 348; calls German mercenaries to her aid against the Taborites, 348
Spitalske Pole” (Spitalfield), great meeting of Hussites at, 364
Stanislas of Znoymo, sent as envoy to Pisa, 99; arrested by order of Cardinal Cossa, and subsequently liberated, 99, 100; opponent of Hus, 140; at the disputation concerning the sale of indulgences, 151; at church conference in Prague, 173; his panegyric of the papal power, and Hus’s answer to, 206; his death, 213
Stokes, John, English envoy, his dispute with Hus, 146, 147, 165; at Hus’s trial, 249
Stransky, Paul, Bohemian exile, 10
Super IV. Sententiarum by Hus, 90, 91, 310, 316, 317
Synod, Bohemian, 168, 170; proceedings at, 171–173; failure of to restore peace, 173
Taborites, the, 344, 345; democratic character of Taborite movement, 346; they march on Prague, 348; build their stronghold of Tabor, 349; march to the help of Prague, 353; repulse the enemy, 354; their doctrines as distinguished from those of Hus and the Calixtines, 358; opposed to the hierarchy of the Roman Church, 358, 359; their political principles, 359; downfall of community after the battle of Lipany, 359; their fanaticism pernicious to the cause of reform, 361; Pribram’s work on, 361; Zizka joins the extreme party, 363; wage war with the Calixtine party, 364; their victories over, 364; truce with, 364; march under Zizka against Moravia, 365; adopt the name of “Orphans” after his death, 365; their defeat by the nobles at Lipany, 367
Tannenberg, victory of King Vladislav at, 305
Teuton (see Slav)
Thomas of Stitny, reformer, 29, 32, 38, 39; his views as given in his work