GEORGE OF PODEBRAD

pôdˈyĕbrät, 1420–71, king of Bohemia (1458–71). A Bohemian nobleman, he became leader of the Utraquists, or the moderate Hussites, in the wars between Hussites and Catholics. He seized Prague (1448) during the minority of King Ladislaus V, was elected (1452) governor by the Bohemian diet, and continued to rule the country after the formal accession (1453) of Ladislaus. His relations with Ladislaus were friendly. In Ladislaus's reign, George ended the anarchy of the interregnum that had preceded Ladislaus's accession, restored the power of the courts, recovered lost crownlands, and secured the recognition of the central government at Prague in the Bohemian dependencies of Moravia, Silesia, and Lusatia. Ladislaus died in 1457, and George was elected king in 1458. Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III invested him with the kingdom in 1459. When in 1462, Pope Pius II abolished the Compactata, by which the Utraquists had been reconciled with the Roman Catholic Church, George promptly declared his loyalty to the Utraquists. An immediate break with Rome was averted through his alliance with France and Poland, and the emperor's intervention delayed papal action. In 1466, however, Pope Paul II excommunicated George, declared him deposed, and enlisted the aid of the emperor and of Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary, against him. Matthias won Moravia and most of Silesia and Lusatia; in 1469 the Catholic party in Bohemia proclaimed Matthias king. George, at the head of the Utraquists, expelled Matthias. To strengthen his position George had signed a treaty with Casimir IV of Poland, naming Casimir's son as his successor. As a result, Ladislaus II (later, as Uladislaus II, also king of Hungary) became king on George's death. George of Podebrad unsuccessfully proposed a European alliance against the Turks. Bohemia recovered peace and prosperity in his reign, which, however, was marked by the persecution of the Bohemian and the Moravian Brethren, descendants of the more radical Hussites.

See studies by F. G. Heymann (1965) and O. Odlozilik (1965).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF CHARLES COLEBROOK SHERMAN AND GEORGE WILLIAM GILMORE, M...WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF CHARLES COLEBROOK SHERMAN AND GEORGE WILLIAM GILMORE, M...Theology, University of Greifswald. GEORGE WILLIAM GILMORE, M...
...Law No. 1 THE SOURCES OF MODERN INTERNATIONAL LAW BY GEORGE A. FINCH Assistant...inserted a dedication to George Washington, President of the United States of...and notes by Professor George Grafton Wilson, of Harvard University...
...imprisonment and ransom--Rise of George of Podebrad--Treachery of the Basel delegate...FALL OF TABOR TO THE DEATH OF GEORGE OF PODEBRAD 323 - 340...DEATH 313 IB PAGE GEORGE OF PODEBRAD, FIRST HERETIC KING OF BOHEMIA...
...Shestakova THE Musorgsky Reader A Life of Modeste Petrovich Musorgsky in Letters...Edition PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FOR THE PUBLISHERS BY THE VAIL-BALLOU...424 A List of Musorgsky Letters 438...
THE CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF POLAND TO 1696 THE CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF POLAND FROM THE ORIGINS TO SOBIESKI TO 1696...THE UNIVERSITY PRESS 1950 PUBLISHED BY THE SYNDICS OF THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS London Office: Bentley...
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encyclopedia articles on: George of Podebrad  - 9 results

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GEORGE OF PODEBRAD pod yebrat, 1420 71, king of Bohemia (1458 71). A Bohemian nobleman...Uladislaus II , also king of Hungary) became king on Georges death. George of Podebrad unsuccessfully proposed a European alliance against the Turks. Bohemia...
...Hungary (1490 1516) and, as Ladislaus II, king of Bohemia (1471 1516); son of Casimir IV of Poland. Designated by George of Podebrad as his successor, he was elected to the Bohemian throne. Matthias Corvinus , king of Hungary, invaded his territories...
...II, was involved in struggles with the Bohemian George of Podebrad and with Louis XI of France. He was succeeded by Sixtus IV...Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...won a reputation as a crusader against the Ottomans. He was persuaded by Pope Pius II to take up arms against George of Podebrad , king of Bohemia. Having conquered Moravia, Silesia, and Lusatia, Matthias had himself crowned (1469) king of Bohemia...
...Cilli, but Ladislaus governed none of his realms. George of Podebrad was regent in Bohemia, John Hunyadi in Hungary...Austria by his Hapsburg relatives, in Bohemia by George of Podebrad, and in Hungary by Matthias Corvinus...
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