The
Hussites comprised an early
Protestant
Christian movement, followers of
Jan Hus.
The arrest of Hus had excited considerable resentment in
Bohemia and
Moravia.
In both countries the estates appealed repeatedly and urgently to Sigismund to deliver Hus.
On the arrival of the news of his death disturbances broke out which were directed at first against the clergy, especially against the monks. Even the archbishop saved himself with
difficulty from the rage of the populace. In the country conditions were not much better.
Everywhere the treatment of Hus was felt as a disgrace inflicted upon the whole country, and his death was looked upon as a criminal act. King Wenceslaus, prompted by his grudge against Sigismund, at first gave free vent to his indignation at the course of events in Constance; and his wife openly favored the friends of Hus. Pronounced Hussites stood at the head of the government. A league was formed by certain lords who pledged themselves to protect the free preaching of the Gospel upon all their possessions and estates, and to
obey the power of the bishops only in case their orders accorded with the injunctions of the Bible.
In disputed points the decision of the university should be resorted to. The entire Hussite nobility
joined the league, and if the king had entered it,
its resolutions would have received the sanction of
the law; but he refused, and approached the Roman
Catholic league of lords, which was now formed,
the members pledging themselves to cling to the
king, the Roman Church, and the Council. Signs
of the outbreak of a civil war began to show themselves. Pope Martin V, who, while still Cardinal
Otto of Colonna, had attacked Hus with relentless
severity, energetically resumed the battle against
Hus's teaching after the enactments of the Council of
Constance. He intended to eradicate completely
the doctrine of Hus. For this purpose the
co-operation of King Wenceslaus had to be obtained. In
1418 Sigismund succeeded in winning his brother
over to the standpoint of the council by pointing
out the inevitability of a religious war if the
heretics in Bohemia found further protection.
Hussite statesmen and army leaders had to leave
the country, and Roman priests were reinstituted.
These measures caused a general commotion which
hastened the death of Wenceslaus by a paralytic
stroke in 1419. His heir was Sigismund.
Hussism had organized itself during the years
1415-1419. From the beginning two parties were
found: the closer adherents of Hus
clung to his standpoint, leaving the
whole hierarchical and liturgical order
of the Church untouched; the radical
party identified itself more boldly with
the doctrines of
John Wyclif, shared his passionate hatred
of the monastic clergy, and, like him, attempted to
lead the Church back to its supposed condition during the
time of the apostles, which necessitated the removal
of the existing hierarchy and the secularization of
ecclesiastical possessions. The radicals among the
Hussites sought to translate their theories into
reality; they preached the
sufcientia legis Christi--
only the divine law (i.e., the Bible) is the rule and
canon for man, and that not only in ecclesiastical
matters, but also in political and civil matters.
They rejected therefore, as early as 1416, everything
that has no basis in the Bible, such as the adoration of
saints and images, fasts, superfluous holidays, the
oath, intercession for the dead, auricular confession,
indulgences, the sacraments of confirmation and
extreme unction, admitted laymen and women to
the preacher's office, chose their own priests. But
before everything they clung to Wyclif's doctrine
of the Lord's Supper, denying transubstantiation,
and this is the principal point by which they are
distinguished from the moderate party.
The program of the more conservative Hussites
is contained in the four articles of Prague, which
were agreed upon in July, 1420, and
promulgated in the Latin, Czech, and
German languages:
- (1) Freedom in preaching;
- (2) communion in both kinds;
- (3) reduction of the clergy to apostolic poverty;
- (4) severe punishment of all open sins.
The views of the moderate Hussites were
represented at the university and among the citizens of
Prague; therefore they were called
the Prague party; they were also
called Calixtines or Utraquists, because
they emphasized the second article,
and the chalice became their emblem.
The radicals had their gathering-place
in the small town of Austie, on the Luschnitz,
south of Prague. But as the place was not
defensible, they founded a city upon a neighboring hill,
which they called Tabor; hence they were called
Taborites. They comprised the essential force of
Hussism. Their aim was to destroy the enemies
of the law of God, and to extend his kingdom by
the sword. For the former purpose they waged
bloody wars, for the second purpose they established
a strict jurisdiction, inflicting the severest
punishment not only upon heinous crimes like murder and
adultery, but also upon faults like perjury and
usury, and tried to apply the conditions required
in the law of God to the social relations of the world.
The news of the death of King Wenceslaus
produced the greatest commotion among the people of
Prague. A revolution swept over the
country; churches and monasteries
were destroyed, and the ecclesiastical
possessions were seized by the Hussite
nobility. Sigismund could get
possession of his kingdom only by the power of arms.
Martin V called upon all Christians of the Occident
to take up arms against the Hussites, and there
followed a twelve-years' war which was carried on
by the Hussites at first defensively, but after 1427
they assumed the offensive. Apart from their
religious aims, they fought for the national interests
of the Czechs. The moderate and radical parties
were united and they not only repelled the attacks
of the army of crusaders, but entered the neighboring
countries.
At last their opponents were forced to think of an
amicable settlement. A Bohemian embassy was
invited to appear at the
Council of Basel. The
discussions began on
January 10,
1432, centering chiefly
in the four articles of
Prague. No agreement was
arrived at. After repeated negotiations between
Basel and Bohemia, a Bohemian-Moravian state
assembly in Prague accepted the
Compacta of Prague on
November 30,
1433.
Communion in both kinds was granted
to all who desired it, but with the
understanding that Christ was
entirely present in each kind. Free
preaching was granted conditionally;
priests must be approved and sent by their
superiors, and the power of the bishop must be considered.
The article which prohibits the secular power of
the clergy was almost reversed. The Taborites
refused to conform, and the Calixtines united with
the Roman Catholics and destroyed the
Taborites in a battle near Lipany (May 30, 1434). From
that time the Taborites lose their importance. The
Compactata were confirmed at the state assembly
of Iglau in 1436 and received the sanction of law.
Thus the reconciliation of Bohemia with Rome and
the Western Church was accomplished, and now
Sigismund first obtained possession of the Bohemian
crown. His reactionary measures caused a ferment
in the whole country, but he died in 1437. Wyclif's
doctrine of the Lord's Supper, which was obnoxious
to the Utraquists, was rejected as heresy at the
state assembly in Prague in 1444. Most of the
Taborites now went over to the party of the
Utraquists; the rest joined the "Brothers of the Law
of Christ" (see UNITY OF THE BRETHREN; also
BOHEMIAN BRETHREN).
The Utraquists had retained hardly anything of
the doctrines of Huss except communion in both
kinds. In 1462
Pope Pius II. declared the
Compactata null and void, prohibited
communion in both kinds, and
acknowledged
George of Podebrady as
king under the condition that he would
promise an unconditional harmony
with the Roman Church. This he refused, but his
successor, King
Vladislaus II[?]., favored the Roman
Catholics and proceeded against some zealous
clergymen of the Calixtines. The troubles of the
Utraquists increased from year to year. In 1485, at the
diet of Kuttenberg, an agreement between the
Roman Catholics and Utraquists was obtained
which lasted for thirty-one years. But it was
considerably later, at the diet of 1512, that the equal
rights of both religions were permanently
established. Luther's appearance was hailed by the
Utraquist clergy, and
Martin Luther himself was astonished to
find so many points of agreement between the
doctrines of Hus and his own. But not all Utraquists
approved of the
German Reformation[?]; a schism
arose among them, and many returned to the
Roman doctrine, while the better elements had long
before joined the
Unitas Fratrum. Under
Maximilian II., the Bohemian state assembly established
the
Confessio Bohemica, upon which Lutherans,
Reformed, and Bohemian Brethren agreed. From
that time Hussism began to die out; but it was
completely eradicated only after the
battle of the White Mountain (
November 8,
1620) and the Roman
Catholic reaction which fundamentally changed the
ecclesiastical conditions of Bohemia and Moravia.
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