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Jan Hus
(Also spelled John).
Born at Husinetz in Southern Bohemia, 1369; died at Constance 6 July, 1415.
At an early age he went to Prague where he supported himself by singing and
serving in the churches. His conduct was exemplary and his devotion to study
remarkable. In 1393 he received the degree of Bachelor of Arts from the
University of Prague and in 1396 the master's degree. He was ordained a priest
in 1400 and became rector of the university 1402-03. About the same time he was
appointed preacher in the newly erected Bethlehem chapel. Hus was a strong
partisan on the side of the Czechs, and hence of the Realists, and he was
greatly influenced by the writings of Wyclif. Though forty five propositions of
the latter were proscribed in 1403 by ecclesiastical authority, Hus translated
Wyclif's Trialogus
into Czech and helped to circulate it. From the pulpit he
inveighed against the morals of clergy, episcopate, and papacy, thus taking an
active part in the movement for reform. Archbishop Zbynek (Sbinco), however was
not only lenient with Hus, but favoured him with an appointment as preacher to
the biennial synod. On the other hand Innocent VII directed the archbishop (24
June, 1405) to take measures against the heretical teachings of Wyclif,
especially the doctrine of impanation in the Eucharist. The archbishop complied
by issuing a synodal decree against these errors - at the same time he forbade
any further attacks on the clergy. In the following year (1406) a document
bearing the seal of the University of Oxford and eulogizing Wyclif was brought
by two Bohemian students to Prague; Hus read it in triumph from the pulpit. In
1408 Sbinco received a letter from Gregory XII stating that the Holy See had
been informed of the spread of the Wycliffite heresy and especially of King
Wenceslaus's sympathy with the sectaries. This stirred up the king to measures
of prosecution and aroused the university to clear itself of the suspicion of
heresy. At the June synod it was ordered that all writings of Wyclif should be
handed over to the archdiocesan chancery for correction. Hus obeyed the order,
declaring that he condemned whatever errors these writings contained.
About the same time a new conflict broke out on national lines. The king
agreed to the neutrality
plan proposed by the secessionist cardinals at the
Council of Pisa and endeavoured to have it recognized by the university. The
Czechs fell in with his wishes but the three other nations
refused. The king
then decreed (18 January, 1409) that in the university congregations the Czechs
should have three votes, and the other nations
should have only one vote
between them. In consequence the German masters and students in great numbers
(5,000 to 20,000) left Prague and went to Leipzig, Erfurt, and other
universities in the North. The king now forbade communication with Gregory XII
and proceeded against those of the clergy who disregarded his prohibition. In
consequence the archbishop placed Prague and the vicinity under interdict, a
measure which cost many of the loyal clergy their position and property. Hus,
who had become once more rector of the university, was called to account by the
archbishop for his Wycliffite tendencies and was reported to Rome with the
result that Alexander V, in a Bull of 20 December 1409, directed the archbishop
to forbid any preaching except in cathedral, collegiate, parish, and cloister
churches, and to see that Wyclif's writings were withdrawn from circulation. In
accordance with the Bull the archbishop at the June synod of 1410, ordered
Wyclif's writings to be burned and restricted preaching to the churches named
above. Against these measures Hus declaimed from the pulpit and, with his
sympathizers in the university, sent a protest to John XXIII. The archbishop, 16
July, 1410, excommunicated Hus and his adherents. Secure of the royal protection,
Hus continued the agitation in favour of Wyclif, but at the end of August he was
summoned to appear in person before the pope. He begged the pope to dispense
with the personal visit and sent in his stead representatives to plead his case.
In February 1411, sentence of excommunication was pronounced against him and
published on 15 March in all the churches of Prague. This led to further
difficulties between the king and the archbishop, in consequence of which the
latter left Prague to take refuge with the Hungarian King Sigismund. But he died
on the journey, 23 September.
Hus meanwhile openly defended Wyclif, and this position he maintained
especially against John Stokes, a licentiate of Cambridge, who had come to
Prague and declared that in England Wyclif was regarded as a heretic. With no
less vehemence Hus attacked the Bulls (9 September and 2 December 1411) in which
John XXIII proclaimed indulgences to all who would supply funds for the crusade
against Ladislaus of Naples. Both Hus and Jerome of Prague aroused the
university and the populace against the papal commission which had been sent to
announce the indulgences, and its members in consequence were treated with every
sort of indignity. The report of these doings led the Roman authorities to take
more vigorous action. Not only was the former excommunication against Hus
reiterated, but his residence was placed under interdict. Finally the pope
ordered Hus to be imprisoned and the Bethlehem chapel destroyed. The order was
not obeyed, but Hus towards the end of 1412 left Prague and took refuge at Austi
in the south. Here he wrote his principal work, De ecclesiâ
. As the king took
no steps to carry out the papal edict, Hus was back again at Prague by the end
of April, 1414, and posted on the walls of the Bethlehem Chapel his treatise De
sex erroribus
. Out of this and the De ecclesiâ
Gerson extracted a number of
propositions which he submitted to Archbishop Konrad von Vechta (formerly Bishop
of Olmütz) with a warning against their heretical character. In November
following the Council of Constance assembled, and Hus, urged by King Sigismund,
decided to appear before that body and give an account of his doctrine. At
Constance he was tried, condemned, and burnt at the stake, 6 July, 1415. The
same fate befell Jerome of Prague 30 May, 1416. (For details see COUNCIL OF
CONSTANCE.)
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